HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1910-06-09, Page 31.
• .:Ara K FQ le:teredwheodpsf,r°cmhoZ I
barley malt and
pure spring water,
with the utmost
care. Bottled at
the brewery depot°
to ensure proper
handling.. That N
India Pale- Ale why Labatt's Ale
ie eguat.to the
est, surpassed by
none, though it
costs consumersonly about half as much as imported gooda
June 9th, 1910
King George and the'Sailor.
•
The Londoa correspOndent of the
Star haeniaele it clear that a -certain
anemia ef gossip respecting King
George lute bee a in, eirculaigon, •and
tares' pains to cornhat it. Gossip, so
far from being a respecter d persons,
faetreas especially upon those wbo'are
highly plaCed, a,nd one of the :penal-
tiee a the honorable reticeace of the
British prese with regard to private
affairs is. that it tends to en -
•courage a tendency to wordoamouth
eine:ars, whisperinge and deprecia-
tion. Thew aspersions the Stara
coreespOndent meetwith Vigor and
directness ; and it is encouraging to
recolletet how sudclealy the talk Which
prevailed about Xing Edward, while
he wits Prince of Wales, died amity
When he assumed the throne clad de-
votecrhimeelf to its duties with the
high serioreenees and broad hurnaaity
which were his peculiar centribueion
to the craft of kingehip,
Aa .a matter of feet, the authentic
stories about Xing ICheorge's early
life, reveal bine hi the light ot a man
'who has conscientiausly fitted We-
sel! for hie duties ; and to the list
The Star is pleased to add one which
tere is reason to, believe has not
hitherto been published. It conceens
his.life as a sailor. On one oi the
ships in which he served as a junior
officer, was a /seaman who was con-
stantly in trouble. He was an ex-,
eellent sailor, but headstrong and un-
governable, and his temper brought
him tato such frequent collision with
his superiors that he ecemcd in a
fair way to become incorritt:ble. Oue
evening Prince Gouge, as he then
was, dined with the captain, and this.
• tnan's character andprospeets eame
up i the course of the conversation.
ive him to me," asked the Prima-
lieutenaut, "and let we see what I
can do with him." The captain cent-
• plied ; the necessary champ was
made in the internal economy ef the
ship to place the maa especially un-
der him; and Prince George under-
took his reformatiou. Haw he ac-
tioniplished his purpose we are ea -
able to pay ; thepoint is that ese
succeeded. The matt reformed, ceeeed:
to fall toed of the reetrietious
cipline, applied his (energy elect eshill
ineproper directions, aad anen • pro-
motion. King 'George VAt win, great
sticeesses in the magnificent path-
way which opens hefore bho today;
Mit not Jeaot in thelist of bis eue-
OeSSCS. must be counted hie rescue
from lawlessness •and disgrace) or this
individual fellow man. A sador
ei-
cer. he saved a sailor man from his
worst ,self and caused his life to be
a success Instead of a failure. -Mon-
treal Star.
Better Stag on the Farm.
t.)
Very few farmers of Ontario root -
ate how well off they are compared
with city people. In estimating the
Income they derive from their farm.
they usually allow 'nothing for ahouse
rent and nothing for the food taro-
duoed on their farms which they
consume. If they would keep an
account book, putting down in et all
the vegetables, fruit, poultry, eggs,
milk; and other farm products tbey
consume, charging retail city prices
for there, they would get same • idea
of what it costs to liv,c• in the city.
Many farmers sell beautiful farnis
and fine houses to remove to Ontario'
cities or to tae Northweet.
A. correspondent of the Weekly Sun
says :
"MI over ilea province :there tare
beautiful farm. residences' which; if
situated in the cities, would be valued:
higher than they are now with the
•
• .
1 hundred acres or fertile and upon
which tiny ere situated . thrown in.
This state cf thaigs cannot last for
all time. There must come; sooner
or leter, an equalizing of values..
Taking values as they exist, the farm-
ing class, I believe, is the wealthiest
class. I think it -is sate to• say that
90 percent. of farmers are solvent ;
that e. 50 percent. of thes,e are worth
upwards of $5,000; that 25 percent.
are worth upwards, of $10,000, and
prebably 10- percent upwahrls of
$25,000.. I an aerating .now of old-
er Oaten°. If it .could be knoWn
the amount ot moray on deposit in
:the banns by farmers, the general
public, and farmers themselves,
would he startled.. If farmers all
'decided: to wilthdraw their deposits
there would be a pareic. If this be
• true what 'would farmers be evoeth
at City valeations?"—Galt 'Reporter.
0
• The Newfoundland
Fisheries Dispute.
Tae arbitration tribunal • at The
• Ifigue last Wednesday afternoon takes;
up the Newfoundland fisheries' taloa-
tion, which for over fifty years' has
proven one of the most potent sources
of disputes and misunderstandings be-
tween this country. and Great Brit-
ain an the one side and the United
States on the other. The tribunal
for this case consists of Dr. •
rich Lamenasch, of Austria, who acts.
as president ; His Excellency, Louis
M. Drago, of the Argentine Republic;
• Jonheir A. F. De Se.voenin •• Loh-
man, of the Netherlands ; • Hon Ge-
orge Gray, for the United States.,
and Sir Charles Fitzpatrick, -for Can-
. ada. The case for each side bas
been carefully prepared, they Will be
argued by special counsel chosen from;
the most distinguished lawyers of the
two countries, and there ie every' rea-
son for expecting a settlemeet of the
points at issue which will he conclue
saw as well as satisfactory.
The dispute takes its orighl as far
back as 1783, when certain concessions
were made . to United State" •fisher-
men, which .weee reconsidered and
modified after the war of 181. The
:treaty of 1818 put them in definite
ttnd formal 'shape, and it is the inter-
• pretation of its provisions which has
given opportuaity for the innumer-
able disputes white) have arisensince
that time. The 'United States, its own
fisteunen having beenprotected from
• foreign competitioniby a high tariff,
has naturally 'been desirous of stretch-
ing the provisions of the. Newfound-
land ceaet treaty to the limits of their
elaeticity, and,-,4,we special- clauses.
• have been selected as sanctioning the
especial privileges claimed. The first
provides that United States fishermen
: shall have the. right to fish along cer-
toe/I.-specified parts of the coast Of
Nesafoutidland "in eonution" with
•
• British stubjoeti, This must be inter-
preted, the Washington authorities
-claims as exempting the visitors from
the operation of whatever local regu-
lations may have been enacted pre-
scribing by what means and at what
tithes fishing is permitted. New-
foundland, for example, forbids the
use in her • waters of the deutructive
"purse seine;" and prohibits fiehing on
-Sunday., American fishermen accord-
ing to the Washington contention, are
bound to observe neither 'of these
reaulatiotis when fishing in .Newfound-
land waters. • The second • clause •in
the treaty on Which the United ,itates
puts • its dependenoe is that watch
specifies that her fishermen shall be
allowed to enter the ports of Canada
and Newfoundland for wood, vete),
shelter aud repair,, "and for no other
purpose whateoevers" Since, however,
there are no restrictions on trading
vessels entering any Canadian c• r
Newfoundland port for trading pur-
poses, it is claimed that, once it bas
beei recognized that fishing boats have
the right to enter fishing coast ports
• for, any purpose whatever, . they
mast • be. given. all the rights and
privileges of trading winch commere
•Oal vessels possess. One other con-
tention completes the essential case
of the Washington Government. It
is that the pbrase conceding the right
to take fleh to "inhabitants or the
United •States" must be interpreted
as permitting any "inhabitant of the
United States" who: owns a nshing
vessel to equip it with a crew- of
Canadians, Newfoundlander's or men
of any 'other ration, send it to trea-
ty waters, and still claim exeniption
from the local regulations., The de-
cision of The Hague tribunal on these
points will be awaited with scarcely
lees interest in - Canada than in New-
foundland.
;141 Alfalfa, ii Over Canada
Will alfalfa. eome day he grown as
' far north in Canada as the ,agricul-
tural aerca of the Dominion extends?
tie discovery recently made ha. .orie
alf the crop explorers on the staff ot
'Vie United States Department of Ag-
riculture indicates that this is pos-
sible. There are in the employ (it the,
•American Dreartment of' Agriculture
a number of expert; whose chief' duty
it Is to scour the world's Out-of-the-
way places in seareh of .plapts that
give prbmise of being able to add to
the agricultural wealth •of the tatted
States. One at these exatorers has,
areOrdilig to at artiele In the
June magazine number of The New
York Outlook, recently made a most
importabt diseovery, This is nothing
less than thet a species; or alfalfa
thrives In a wild state at a point so
tut north in Siberla that the' theta
mbineter freezes solid. It is believed
by the author of tbe article quoted
front that this plant, erosted 's with
the luxurient alfalfa of the South-
western States, will give a Ireland, at
god productive power, that will not
winter kill even where the thermom-
eter registers forty .degreee below
/1 the story as given Is verified jhy
redrSequent developments, the find' 'it
one or the most important in an age
that startles us almost areIly. with
, some. revolutiotiary development. If
a crot) is about to be predueed which
will yield three to five tone of hay
- per annum., with a feeding velue that
le ',radically equal to that if titan,
that does not, require re-eeeling more
limn otee in five years at mo.)t, and
that ean be grown all over ea. Loa,
• it.will render poesible• a fabioims tat-
dition to the agricultural wealth f
the Dominion.—Sun.
•
Clinton News -Record
Farm or Timber Laird, Which
Ontario has probaWy the finest
farming land in the world. in the
great clay belt, part of which has
diem apeaea up in the four town-
ships inunediately surrouuding Coch-
rane. The T, and N. 0. Railway is
the natural approach to this country,
so that for the sake of the popula-
tion and for 'the sake of supporting
the railway, the province has two
•eeeenent reasons for promoting the.
Settlement of the district.
The first question to be deckled, ac. -
cording to the general opiniou of . ev-
erybody on the spot, is vvhether the
land in Wee* and adfoining ,toehnships
is to ibe treated as lam land or as
timber land: Ilpoti: that decision de-
pends. Veftetahliels the regalations that
ebould.ifewleifited, and the results in
'seflihhoehf that will fellow. It . is
quite etear that while the timber re-
• mains on the ground, as at present,
prospective settlers are Inclined to
treat it as a, liability rather than
an asset..
It rnay be said at once that the pro-
vincial regulations for eettlement are
• as fair as could be imagined under all
ordinary eircumetanecs. After locate
ing a farm the settler has to clear
awe acres a year, 'build a house' and
live six months in it. 'When he bas
cleared 15 acres, after four years, he
gets his patent. A very large num-
ber of farms have been located, but
onlY in •a very few has any settle-
ment work been done, The govern-
ment has been • very lenient, desiring
to encourage settlers, while diserim-
inating againet mere speoulatore. Any
settler who. me.kos any kind' of show
of doing his work, and speeding his
money in the new country has • not
been harshly dealt with. The whole
difficulty has been to discriminate
among those who are rally anxious
to throw in lbeir lot with the new
country, and those who are trying
16 slam the eurface profits. Tho gov-
ernment officers have a goad deal of
responsibility, but it is safe to • say
that no injustice will be done.
The chief 'difficulty bas arisen over
the timber, on the land. It costa ac-
cording to contra.cla that have beea
Jet by the railway- contractor§ and
by the town of Cochrane, not less
• than $100 art acre to dear and stump
• the land. The timber is all soft
• wood, the growth of the thirty years
or•se since the Net burning over of
the district. Tim settler, atter he
has been aix montha settled, can do
anything he pleases with it, sell it
for p,ulp wood, sell it for fuel, or
bum it up after be has eut it down,
But he eannot burn. it On the amp.
.There aro fire rangers' paid to prevent
that vourse. For it as pulp wood
with. a 'railway rate that would make
the cost about $4.30 a. cord, at
Niagara, there is no market. • There
are no rnills at Coehrane of any kind
yet, though a sawmill bas tem arrang-
ed for at the Freelerichrhouse byM.
l3refse, The wood, being soft, is not
regarded as a baegain in Cochrane at
$2.50•a cerd, coal, even at ,the im-
ported priees'beiug preferred, and
to sell it at $2.50 is not very profit-
able,' even if there were e market.
There are no roads yet to haul' it
over, but this is being remedied by
the government, •
If the land was clear of the timber
it would sell Me Teroeto real es.
tate for it is put up at 50 cents an
acre. But with the trees upon it
requiring yeers ot work to elear, it
will not be attractive until there 19
a pulp wood ma'rket for the tamarac
and spruce and white ,birch, of which
these chiefly, consist.
• The point thee is whether the land
is to be treated as farm land or tim-
ber land. If It is te be farm land,
then the sooner It is deered off the
• better, either by contracting the
pulp wood to any who will purchase
it, or by letting the settlers do so
for theraselvee. If it is to, be treated
as tineher limits, then the usual teg-
illations may be put in force. But it
is a mistake to treat it partly • as
farni land and partly as timber land.
!he sooner the timber is cleared off
it the sooner the settlers will 'turn
It into wheat fields and pasture
and root acreage. • While it is under
the scrub bust the prairie farrns com-
pete heavily with the north •coun-
try. And yet it is tne liaest land in
Caeadti, as the term already .settled
demonstrate.--1Teronta‘Wor1d.•'
. '
11•111.14.4100114
The New Ship of'State
• eTeeday the, curtain rises on i; fiew
het in that most interesting of
tees, . South • A f The 41 raina ' tintil
quite recently has been almost uninh
terrupted tragedy. Heft ten taes, ha
firs,. Zulus and Matalbelet,, Boers • an
Btittsh, have been engaged in repeat -
'ode haed-to-hand. struggles for mae-
tery. The Poetugese .weei epeerently
the first Europeans to .visit the covne
try. 'They had ensiled down the west
ern coast pt Africa, ineuccesseee tely-
ages, • and in 1.496 a. daring veet age ot•
Bartholomew Diaz,. sea1,01 elet
,passage . to India, brouerit him, amid
wild tempests, to the ?gild la attiond
facing the southern • reran, asluch . he
named Cabo Terrinentoso—tetbe . Cap
.or Storme.' .It was visited the rouow
lig year liy.the great Vasco ita Gam
who landed,elamined the etenery
and obtained iresh provietone
Indian voyage, after -whiciii he head
lead. gained . a mere pleashig tilt
'13uon Eaperanza--the .Ceee ot. Goo
Hope. The Poetugese took •little in
terestin: the 031.1.11,ry, (..<C:.1)t- :Is it at
forded. a • useful astoePing• thace n th
voyage to India, ' and in .1620 ew
lenglist captains; named Sailtaige an,
Fitzherhert, hoisted tlie British fie
and took PoSseeSlon la the • nettle'•
King James, without 'any oppositio
or Objection being offered. The • othe
-voyagiug 'nations—the Preach an-
Duteh—visited ' the South :Africa
ca
oecasic,nally, and nn April
1652, Surgeon Jan Van leielbeek, and
his Hollanders, estahlished a littl
eettlement .and •tort in -Table Bay
The ti tile' deeds Ofe South .A trice; at
• therefore somewhat complicatc'd, and
they became more and .more compli
'eated as. tinie went on ; there • wer
purchases, lights, treaties and • al
sorts ot tangled eigneenainte• betw.een
the various •-white • mid the ,variousblack and brown peoples, In 1794th
hrench 'entered Holland and •the .Stad-
holder fled to England, and while in
exile signed an order e,:eariiring the of-
...
fimale at the Cape. to hand ..over
the fortifications to the English. It
was returned to the heteh. at the
Peace',• ot Amiens, but was tahen.
again during 111C! Duteh war of 1.806
and finally' confirmed to Britain at
the genera,' peace of 181e,
st9QA around as if watching ' their
•chance to assail the old and.wopnded
Yam. How troops •of colonists hast-
ened to the aid of • the Matherland'
t" were practically ignored till the ad-
vent of Lard Roheite. and then fan-
dered rerearka'ble service in time of
need. How our own Canaelians dis-
tinguished therneelves, and how a
Frencheapcialeing ,company stowed cop-
spicuous bravery at the decisive bat-
tle of Paardeberg: That gave a new
meaning to Imperialism in the mind
of many •Englishnien and a prophecy
was made that s,ome time there. would
be a Dutch -speaking Prenlier 'of South
Africa, and Boer and 13ritan would
e stand shoulder to shoulder, ••
. • .
e
The propheek has had fulfilment'
, sooner than any one dared' • hope at
:3 that time. The.republies were annex-
e' ed to Britain, the most generous.
terme known in history(atti
, being re-
d ed the Boons, Too generous, said
- many &orally, but the sequet hes
• ,vindiea,ted e3ritish magnenimity. The
c colonies were shortly granted repre-
Ontative government and now • the
1 ship of South African fe,deration" has,
g been launched, with, Louie Botha as
f eeptain. •. It is -more. than probaolo
tr that all will not be plain sailing.
r There are .many• who think that he
d did not ehow the highest wisdom in
n giving his compatriots such a -pre-
, ponderating representation in •• his
cabinet, One of the most serious, pro -
e blenis which the new governtnent will
• have to isee is the natiVe question.
O The ideals of tge British in the Mo-
ther ccuntry and of the floes in Africa
- regarding 'the status ot the negro are
• diametrically opposed. The cauSc of
1 justice is bound to come out victor
in the end. United South Africh is ,
in many ways fortunate in her Gov-
• ernor-General, although hi bailee does
remind the jingoes of unpleasant Ma-
jttba Hill, and what they regarded as
an inglorious surrender en the part
of Mr. ;Gladstone, whose policy was
always considerate towards etrug-
gling peoples. Viscount Gladstone
has not the brilliaocy , or the many-
sided genius cif hi great father, Ile,
hohvever, is a man distinctly honest
and p'ainetating, and has shown more
than once that he has the courage ot
his cenvictions. As Heine Secretary
• of the Liberal Goverement lzo has
been responstble for Melly important
'measures of social reforni, and he has
always had a keen interest in the
country OM whose destinke be has
rtow bren called to preside. There are
many grounds for frith that as the
Cape of Storms changed its name to
Good Hope, so South Africa, dice
known as the grave of British repu-
tations,' may instead become one of
the finest living monuments to tbe
British ideals of courage, freedom
and magnanimity that has over been
erected since out Anglo -Celtic people
embarked on their misekat of enter-
prise and eivilization.—Witness.
,e In 1835-6 occurred. 'the Great Trek,'
. when a large- number ot 'Boer. families
tett" Cape Colbny and Natal and went
otit into the wilderness ratter than
submit to 13ritieh rule. They found
their Land of Prolater in the tWo dis-
tricts afterwards known to the world
as the Orange Froe State and, the
Transvaal Republic. In 11177, hz con-
segifence of trouldes with the Zulus
and other imitate, the Transvaal was
annexed by the British ; but in 1880,
the Meta dm ended their hedepen-
(knee, and thcre followed humiliating
strife, and the reeopnitien of tte Re-
public by • Mr. Glaastane's Govern-.
meet. SucceedieghistorY is, fersh 111
•every one's mind. How the discovere
of acid and dNironds broueht British
and others settlers into the Orange
Free filet& and the Tratievaal. How
these Titlanders' were taxed heavity
and tricked • out of the franchise.
• . • iTow Dr. Jam•son ettempted his- raid
on Johannesherg.. How the gathering
• war clouds broke in storm ot shot
i.and shel! In 109. The rights and the
. wrongs of tin' war are As complicat,
.oft as mest 'South African matters.
Tenn patriotic Englishtnett were Pro-
ws, end , some of the most. efar-
OMNI Doers— ,notably General Jou-
crt—were li'amest Pro -British in their
vmpathies, although they followed
)1.% call of t theft government to war.
e all rintlember the dark months
nit follow6d each other atter the be -
fining ef tie war. How picked and
seiplined m
teps were burn-
ed Again atpd eget*, by a .handful of
riners. lir the bations .of Europe
AT I V ES ARM D.A.NGEROUS.
They grippe, eam burning pains
andmake the constipated. condition
even worse. Physicians say the ideal
laxative is Dr. Hamilton's Pills oi ",t
Mandrake and Butternut ; they are 13
exteedingly mild, composed only of ad
health -giving vegetable et:tracts. Dr. b
Itamilton's Pills restore replier s
movement of the boavle strengthen '11
the stonaut and 'Purify the blood. W
For constipation, sick headache, billi- •tl
°mess and •disardered digestion no gi
medicine on earth makes such re- di
Markbble tures as Dr. Hamilton's bl
MN. Try a 25e box yourself.
"It cured me," or "ft saved the
life of my child," are the expressions
you bear every day about Chambers
lain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy, This is true the world ov-
er where this vrauabld remedy has
been introduced. No other teriedicine
• in use for diarrhoea or bowel come
plaints has received Such general aps
proval. The secret of the sueeees ot
• Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy Is that it cures.
Sold by all dealers.
Lame ,shoulder is almost invariably
caused by rheumatiero of the muscles
t and yields quickly to the freo applica-
tion of Chambetlain's Liniment. This
liniment is not only prompt and ef-
fectual, but in no way disagretuble to
use. *Id by all &dere.
a
Rev. R. Millyord, Formerly
of.Clinton, Elecied Presi-
I dent of London Confer-
. COCO,/
Chatham, June .2.—Two hundred
and sixty ministers and laymen were
•present when tbe London conference
of the Methodist Church opened. its
twenty-sevmth general session in
Park Street (Atwell this •atternoori.
The members of the conference ocew
pled the ground floor, while the visit-
ors occupied the gallaries. Am 4:4.
latter were three represeatathves of
the Western Association, of Baptist
Churches, ,appointed to pay respects
to the conference.
Rev, Reuben Millyard or Goderich
for forty years a rneraber of the Lon-
don conference, and one of the most
widely known ministers in western
Ontario, is tire now President et the
conference. Rev. Mr. Itaillyard won
after a hard fight with Rev. R. D.
Hamilton of 14stowel, two ballots be-
ing necessary .to reach a .docision. On
the first ballot the Goderich pastier
received 114 votes, and big opponent
80. As the total poll was '244, and
as 12:3 votes were eacessary kir elec-,
tion, ballots were distribated again.
On the second ballot Rev, Mr. hall -
yard received 107 votes, givinghim
a clear majority,
Tbe new President, in reply to a
tribute of Rev. A, K. Birks, the re^
tilling President, gave a short address,
assuring the conference that Ile would.
do his best to prove worthy of the
honor done bine.
LIFE.
The poet's exclamation : "0 Life t
I feel thee bounding in my veins,' is
a joyous one. Persons that can
rarely or never make it, in honesty
to themselves, are among the most
unfeatunate. They do not live, but
• exist.; for to live implies more lbw'
to he. • To live" is to be • well and
strong—to arise feeltrig •equal to the
ardinare duties of the day, and to
retire not overcame by them—to feel
Iffe boundingin ethe Veins. A medi-
cine that has made thousands of
people, men and women, well and
strong, has .accornplisbed • a great
work, bestowing tbe richest blessings
and that medicine is' Hood's Sarsep-
arilla. The weak S run-down, Or •de-
bilitated, from any .cause, should not
fail . to take it. It builds up the
whole system, changes existencc. into
life, and makes life mare abounding.
We are glad to saythese words in its
favor to the readers of our colinans.
•
• Lovers of the out et ordinary am-
asements will be interested in the
announcement that the Mighty Haag
shows are coming to Clinton for af-
ternoon and evening of Saturday on
June 18b1e, peesenting decidedee the
largest and greatest program, el or-
iginal, unique and thrilling featured
act known to -day to the show world.
Thih vast teated amusement enter-
prise is alone in ,a class by ,• itself,
without a rival. ** .
Nothing like •the imperial peeforme
ance provided by Ernest Haag was
ever before decanted. or darc,d by the
boldest managers. •
Whatever your preterende, you will.
find plenty to interest, astonish and
edify you ; there are thrilling aerial
acts during every moment of Which
you expect to gee the intrepid per-
formers hurled into eternity, artistic
•and sensational equestrianisth, incred-
ible and bewildering athletic and ac-
robatic numbers, blood chilling jock-
ey, hurdle and ,chariot races, amazing--
Venturceonie bieylists, and • phen-
omenal 'eabibitions by fierce • wild
beasts. In fact; so numerous and
varied are the novelties offered •in
the rings • and .upon • the elevated
stages, and upon the manunoth hip-
podrome . tea& by these shows, lack
of space Will net permit each . of
these to be mentioned. :Tlsc quanta'
ty . and quality ot the features are
such as to really stagier comprebene
sion.
It matters • not What shows you
have sten or how big the Mighty
Haag showhave been in years gone
by, this season they completely over-
whelm all pant Worth.
•
• DOCTORS DON'T KNOW ALL:
When they any. Asthma is incurable.
• Every day had cases are -cured by
"Catarrhozone" ; this scientific treat-
ment is a perfect sureess—Try Cat-
arrhozone yourself.
• STOMACH AGONY..
Abolish the Cause, and Misay and
Distress of Indigestion will Vanish.
•Can indigestion. be Need 7 • Hun-
dreds of thoupands cf people .who
suffer from belching of gas, bilious-
ness, sour stomach, fullness; rialisea,
,Silertiless of breath, lad taste in
mouth, foul 'breath, nervousness and
other distressing symptoms, are ask-
ing themselves that question daily.
And if these same dotibting dys-
pepticcould only .read the thousands
Of sincere letters from. people who
suffered as badly as they do now; lett
who have ben (prickly and pennant
-
4? cured by the use ot Mi-oem, the
mighty dyspepe:a remedy that cures
by removing the cause., they would
gee to W. S. It. Holmes this very .day
• and get a large • box of Mi-o-na 4atab-
it ts, and start themselves on the
road to health at ono.
The price of Mi -o -nn tablets is on-
ly 50 cents, and W. S. R. HoLues
guarantees them to euro indigestion,
or money back. ,„
Thin or lean, -serawriey people will
find in Mi-o-na a maker of flesh and
blood, because it eausee the stomach
to extract more nutritious mattor
from the food,, which quickly enriches
the blood.
E
Ormigtoctoileie•olog)
CURES CATARRH,' AST1A1A,
tttlitilitts. Croup Cougils and Cob* et
tuaney beer. Sold and too.ts.ateut bi
• 'W. S. It notaas,
Eat what you want whoa, you want to
e'Veri although no kind a 'food looks good to you. The
cause is simply this: Your stomach is not working properly.
• DYSPEPSIA TABLETS •
supply a temporary process of digestion and 'their use for
a short time will restore the natural vigor to your digestive
organs. Eat wlaat you like. Nyes Dyspepsia Tablets will
do the. rest. 25c and 50c.
haiethinir
eau
bur with
the
wool
Sold anti aueranteed by rear
W, R. Holmes, W. A. McConnell, J. E. Hovey
CLINTON
will sive
eve
entire
seesaws
nee
•
elellenelielleaeneeelentenessaneaseteeemealee
T'
Is a general nuisance
• and causes sickness,
but it can be avoided
by using
on sweeping (ley. Dustbane moreover, disinfects the room
end restores Rugs to their original freshness, The mimeo
swear by Dustbane when. once they have used it,
• Don't have another dusty sweeping day,
but get a 35c package of Dustbane
We are eethotized hy the manufacterers of Dustbane t'n •
send yeu 8,35e can of their Sweeping uoniemind. Ws -want
you to use this on trial for - one week. At the end or thie
. period, if not found- satisfactory, we will take it hack, and
there will be no charge foe finer:01.y used., • • , • • -
ti does away with, Dast..on' Sweeping Day
• YOU WANT IT•
• Sold in barrels, half baxrelS and quarter barrels, for
'stores, schools, churobes, hospitals, banks, arid public
buildings
- HARLAND BROS...
DISTRIBUTORS FOR CLINTON
Canadian Factoiles—St; John, N. 8„ Winnipeg, Man.
I
'ADVERTISED G-OODS ARE BEST
Because scientific shoppers know
that advertised goods are best they
will not take anv substitute,'
though urged.
I3ecause or the volume of busi-
ness resulting, the manufacturer
who advertises puts better value
into his goods.
Because an inferior article is sel-
• dom advertised, you can
• nate between the best and. the
imitation.
Beca-use you want to get best
returns for your money, you should
always• • , ,
BUY ADVERTISED GOODS.
• Inansuirsim—ainsionssism--
•
TIE 41ST YET
By Arrangnte;:we ye able
to olfTHE NEWS -RECORD
• and •
The Weekly Mail and Empire
—wotthe together -from now to San. 1, 1911, for
,
75CENTS
Sent to any address irt Canada (except Toronto)
England or United States.
The regular rate for each paper is $1.00 alyear.
Just calculate the money advantage the dove
bargain combination means.
Send in your ordeis to the office of
THE NEWS..RECORD, CLINTON, ONT.