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The Clinton News-Record, 1907-03-07, Page 6I* - • �st..ot ce Fur AefI‘after 'you buy it and pay for it, It conhf s illi ,tile: anion nt of fuel you fed to it and in repairs. e best furnace is actually the cheapest, • e i Clint r igew'Recorld 18 with abpper; Hank inlite bay in I, THE 111t TREASURE with a lose of thirty lives. Although searches have been •madefor her, the location of the Coburn hl atilt one of "tile unsolved mysteriesof the Lakes. Whiskey Cargoes Lost. Of the 'treasure which is awaiting discovery in the inland seas, whiskey forms quite a part. Scores of vessela with cargoes: of this liquor, have been lost, and while whiskey does not age under water, it would be ,fully as good as when it went down. In 1846 the Lexington, commanded. by Capt. Peer, cleared from Cleveland for Port Huron, freighted with 110 bar rale of whiskey, In midlake the ves- sel foundered with all on board, and though' sixty years have passed since ,then she has never been located. To- day her Cargo of whiskey would be worth $110 a barrel. In 1850 the An- thony Wayne went down in Lake Erie With 300 barrels of wipe and whiskey, and five years later the Westmore:' land sank near Manitou Island with a similar cargo, These are only a few of the many cargoes of whiskies and wines which are now at the bottom of the Great Lakes. It is estimated that at the present time there are several hundred thou SUNKEN WEALTH nBENEATH WATS :SRS OF THE GREAT LAKES. reaaure. Hunting Expeditions Usual. ly Only Businesslike Ventures, But Occasionally Some of Them Have a Tinge. Of Romianae or AO - venture In Them - .The Tragic Story of the "Erie" -Whiskey .Lost, While the oceans and islands in them undoubtedly contain the greater part of the hidden treasure of the world, there .are other places which are beginning to attract those infest- • ed by the germ of "treasure}tis," and among' these are. the (eat Lakes. Front tithe to. time treasure hunting , expeditions have , been fitted , out at various ports, but they have been gets - aridly regarded as suifh business -like ventures that only now• and then. hae one seen much of romance or adven- ture in them. The majority of these Jr, Sectional View of Buck's Leader Furnace , Buck's -"Leader" Furnace is built to give cheap heat, tots of. it, and to last a lifetime. . Its 5repoti� insections—it never wearout . Its proportions of firepot and radiatingsurface are exact, every heat -t in the fuel' being extracted and. used.: Its radiator is of solid stet" and' every joint in it itt absolutely air and gas-tight. ` It can. bumwoo'l-as sou ccessfullq'a bat, the feed -door being very large. It requires no expert to run it and will stand rough usage. make it principles . Its massive construction and scientific the most durable, powerful and economical heater ever built. An absolute guarantee goes with every , ' , Bud's "i,eader2- Furnace - Ask us for our Heater Catalogue. It is full; of informa- tion on house heating. The WM. BUCK STOVE•CO., Llanited' Brantford Montreal Winnipeg HARLAND BROS., Clinton, Ontario. Victorious Thro' Merit OXYDONOR triumphs Through inerit- for years it has been ..the 'life g(rird of more than o million persons. It. is the embodiment of the highest• law known to•.. -hunywtn science. In itis concentrated -the. experience of the greatest scientist of the .Hoot ta.auoseruia ,,alCaa s age. A laborug 4t love forhu rninit - • No other agency for htlth has so ntry faithful .f ieedi- ae other -deserves so many. OXYDONOI't;instils new life into the system; regener-' ates, reinvigoeatey and vitalizes every organ into the proper:diyeharge.. of the function for which Natare intended them. its use brings vigorous health with all the physical activity I:het mikes hte.worth living. No matter what disease you hive+ this io the only . nreter,if cure for ft • There is no danger, no pain, no doctor nor medicine In using.OXYDO.YOR. It will last a lifetime and serve the whale family. ;Send todayy for book' .No. 53, mailed free. Write us a descriptionof of your •case.' •_•. NERVOUS PROST1 ATlON. HEART TROUBLE. - Mr. E. Graham. 62 Robinson St., Tornntu, Orrt...wriite§ Licr,; Di, • 1905 - "1 hereby cer tfY that I have used 0s don r N0. 2 for more thee it for nryons prostration and heart trouble. I feel tow• fally restored to health, and from careful observation 1 have no hesttatioti in; s wing.- that ' my complete recovery is entirely doe to- the.+ipltlication'of O:cytlottor."' • RHEUMATISM. Mr. John Martin, Arnprinr, Ont., can., writes Febrivery 14th, 1991:—. "After seven months' use of Oxydonor, I have been -:greatly relieved and.' .almost entirely cured of ,heumatisnrfrom which [.have sri'tfered for -forty. years, I gained ten pounds while using Oxyihin,►r. I aiir ;seventveight •years of age. Would not he withoutOxydonor•for any.uhoney." • Beware of Dangerous and Fradulent imitations. . The Genuine•has the • .•.name of "Dr. H. Senates& Co„” plainly stamped in its metal parts.' 11T A E . H. SANG -H E. &Cee 364 ST.CR liAHiNE ST. WEST,. MONTREAL '•. The Nova Scotia m S ti Govern etut have embarked on an extensive scheme of technical sc'boots. • Arrangetnents aro being '.:made for the issue of the •'Rossi rifle to the militia., expeditions were uusucce S1ul•intheir. efforts, but a few of them have reaped rich rewards: • Probably no similar area of any ocean, if suddenly robbed of its wat- ers, would expose to human eyes more sunken ships or more valuable .car- . goes•than would the five Great Lakes. This is easily understood, says• The Detroit News -Tribune, when one knows that duringthe twenty yeara between 1878 and 1898 only one less than 6,000 vessels were wreaked on the inland seas, and that 1,093 of these were to- tal losses. The• loss of cargo during those years, which represent but. a little more - than one-fourth 'of the years' of navigation on the La es, was 6,548,900, and from:. this it ' s quite safe'to-r-easen-that the total amount of property which has gone to the bottom of the Lake0, -aeuntifrg-:-€ my-. cargoes, would makethe enormous --total 'of at least $12,000,000. -Of course,. the greater part of e1l. this sunken property has': been. de- stroyed by time and water,. hut mush. _of it was indestructible, and is. as good to -day as when it was lost. It is also' true that at • the bottom of the Lakes would be found. valuables of leas. romantic interest than the: gold and plate of Spanish galleons . and the riches of pirate chests. There is little doubt but that there are large sums -of-money-sitidden_iisthe intend •ssas,- -but most of their lost treasure is made up of copper,. steel, iron; coal, mach- inery andother,practieally indestruct- ible things which go to make up Lake cargoes: . • • Tragic Storyof the "Erie." How a ship .may lose .herself in the. Great Lakes and for . years, perhaps forever, defy all attempts to discover- ing her ie illustrated in the 'tragic story of 'the Erie, a treasure ship which • was lost In Lake Erie „during /the'sea'sen. of 1841, -This vessel, un der the command of Capt: T. J. Titus, left' Buffalo• for Chicago 'on the after- noon of Aug.. 9, • When about 33 miles . from' Buffalo ,off Silver Creek,' a slight explosion was heard and .almost .mediately thewhole vessel was en- •veloped in flames.. On board the Erie. were .scores of immigrants• bound for. the West and ;specie amounting --to • $180,000; 'but .in the excitement and appalling loss of life which followed, • no thought was given to the treasure. The `steamer De Witt Clinton. 'came • up in" time to save' many lives, but in going down the .Erie,' Carried' 100, soule with her. For years after" this the t,easure-ship-lay-half-buried-ih the sand ,.70 feet under water. Not until i • ea later 4. years a in I85b . was a y , successful attempt made to raise her. In that year.a treasure seeking party left Buffalo and towed' the hull into Mhallow water, A, fortune in foreign oney' was secured, mostly in .five franc pieces. Other •stories of .treasure. recovered from. the bottom of the lakes are quite numerous: In 1902 the steamer Wil-. liana Ii. Stevens,;loaded with $1.01,880' Worth ofcopper, caught' fire • and sank between Con sant °hie, a nd• Por t • Bure,ell'.Ont. Underwriters'worked on her all one autumn, securing' only 19 tons pf copper.,' Then Capt• Daker,• of. Detroit, began operations which re - suited in the recovery of nehrly'.$1'00,= 000 worth• of property. In 1895,, the William Home, loaded with $20,000 worth of; steel billets, sank in 96 feet of water off Swishwah Point, Lake Michigan. In 1901 she . was raised, one diver being .killed in the work and"another •paralyzed, • 'Capt. Baker. also.reco:ere v d treasure in steel' billets amounting to $31,000 from the Alva • Bradley, which sank ' in deep water off North Manitou Island. Capt. Quinn, of Detroit, has also recovered many ,valuable ca r oes. g Sunken Tre^.sure Careoss, Soniewhcre along the south shore. of , Lake Erie between,Dunkirk and Erie lies ons reasure sip which will bring a for .- ie •to her lucky discover- er, if she is, ever found: One night the Dean Richmond, with $00,000 worth of pig zinc on :board,: myster- iously disappeared between those two pkaces. Every hand. aboard was lost and their bodies were picked up ashore. ; In 'Vain have searching par- ties. -spent much time: and motley in. the hunt tor the, lost 'vessel. The last attempt was . made be the Murphy Wrecking Co. of Buffalo, "which had a vessel and -several divers searching all one year without success. Somewhere in the deep winter of. Saginaw,• Bay lies the steamer ray, which went down with'$ 0,0b0 worth of steel billets. • Efforts have been made to locate her,: but like many other treasure ships in the .Great take she is so deep down that no diver . can live to reach her. 'tinder sea workers cannot go deeper than 100 feet and work; for, while they.. Can deteend•to 130 feet they must rise imp Mediately or suffer a terrible death. Near «'shift Creek; • in ' Lake Brie,,, lie the V'otrnttScion, with a"valuable. 'n t to of railwayssirchesaleee.. eold water. off Point Pelee is also tate .;tent, with a .small treasure in.mnney in her hulk and the skeletons of eight human beings in her eabinte Sonle- `;WENTYrFI�1E YEARS' SUCCESSFUL RECO1tD ONEY can buy advertising epees► but it can't bay a • ' quarterren� yy'+g successful record of wonderful and almostadiloue cures, of the most diff cult and, intricate casae of throat, hang and stomach trottbleis. Such hi •Psyehlite's record. Tboueande of cases given ,ti by 104 14 ; doctors as hopeleasand- ineurable.hive been, quickly and. � • ixtanentiy Cured by ,P chine; It is lin infallible remed . foie coughs, cold?, bronchitis, pneumonia, oonsurrlptaon, indigos loll, •lose of appetite and all wasting diseases,, "My eon huts terrible cough and again worth living." -Mrs L RICh•, Was wasted to. a shadow. Doctors arch, Morons Cove, Nes. • add he Courtttof live. ne ueed.psy. My junga are now sound arra bell Chine, iteuredhim.".-Bra. J. Rang. atter u,ing,Paychitae."•• 11, Bobbins, er,Btoeitville,- Brldgeti g, Ont. " Alto taking 15109 worth of Pay- „Psychine navels my A. iIfe."—,Wai. . chino my lungs are well and lila is don, 7 Cordwa11 et., Toronto Psychine Never Pails Psychitits hast 00 Substi! lith A'r Alt. Df3Att:ItS, sbc *ad $1.00 A fotrl.0 DR. l.A. SLOCLIM, Limited, 179 King" St. W., Toronto' a sen p ars worm Ot coal at the bot- tom of the Lakes,:and that the day 18 approacl}ing when modern invention' will make it possible to xeeover. Muoh of this there is little doubt, In Tober- mory Bay a device isnow being used whistle 'acbording to the description of its work, might be employed success- fully to bring up cargoes of • coal. This invention is a long pipe which can be thrust down deeper than divers can. work, and which„by means of power fail suctidie apparatus, draws up sand, stones and • articles small enough to find passage through it. . O1 treasure in lost coil, that of the filcher one and of Osttherich, ; a steamer.he antwod' . tow. that disappeare 4 in Lake Michi- gan, is argent. veesels carried 3;000 ions, an as yet they have not been located.' In 1895. the steamer Africa ent do n in a gale on Lake Huron, - ng 2,000 tons of coal with herr and in 1898 the St. Peter sack *in Lake Ontario. with a valuable cargo of fuel. These ' big cargoes are only a few of 'the many which may some day be recov. ered. Romance: of Treastne Hunting, The history, of Lake treasure hunt- ing el not without its romance: 1865 the Pewabie was lost with a for , tune in copper' aboard;. She disappear -ed-as--completely----as-though- she -bad •been lifted above the clouds. Expedi- tion after expedition was fitted out to search for her-asearch which .con- tinued over a period of 30 years. In 1897 a party: of fortune seekers from'. Milwaukee were successful, and locat- ed the long lost ship six miles south- 1 Oast from . Thunder Bay. As yet, an account -of 'the depth of the water in which she. lies, only :$7,000 worth of copper has been recovered from her. One of the most terrible events in Lake history was the .loss: of the At- lantic; with' 300 lives, off Long Point, Lakes Erne, in 1852. She went .down ...with -it valuable cargo, and for many years searches for her were made from. time to time Shewas not found until a few years ago, when . cargo to. the 'value of $30,000' was raised Another' lost treasure ship, the loca-: tion of which remained a mystery for more than a quarter of a'eentury, wag' the propeller Ironsides, "which -went • down with .a . valuable cargo ands- 23 lives, near Grand Haven,. in • 1871 She was discoveredifew years' ago, but. is in such deep water that In tlt- ine:can be done -with her: Perhaps -the--most--remantie of--4i-- disappearances of ships from the Great T.akea *fig that of the Griffin. built by La Salle .at the head of Lake4On tario. in January 1679. The .Griffin. :sailed across Lake Erie, up the •De- troitriver, and continued until she 'entered Lake Michigan. In • the au- . tumn of 1680 she .started on her return trip lortded with fuss:and with $12,000' in gold coin Ins board, She, was never heard of.attain, 'and historians are gen- erally. of the opinion that the little vessel sank during a storm on Lake Huron M1•' • • A Happy Celebration.' - t CARL-Yi.E`ON JUSTiCE. "Nothing le Ever 'Settled Until It ie Settled Right.” " From Carlyle's "Past and Present": "Parchment records, fixed towns and poor terrestrial justies, with or without horsehair ---what nano gran will not reverence these? And yet, behold, the man is not sane, but insane, who considers these alone as venerable. Oceans of horsehair, continentsof parchment and learned sergeant elo- quence, were it continued till. the learned tongue wore itself small in 1'the indefatigable learned mouth, can- not make unjust just; The grand 1 question still repains,' Was the judge Ment just? If tfrijust it will not and. I cannot get harbor for itself or con. Il tinue to have footing in this universe, i which was made by other than one i unjust. Enforce .it by never such sax luting, three readings, royal assents, f blow it to the four winds with all manner of quilted trumpeters and pursuivants, in- the rear of them never 1. 140 many gibbets and hangmen, it will. not stand, it . cannot stand. "From all souls of men, from all - 1 ends of nature, from the throne of Godabove, there are voices bidding ita ittakeno aw ~,.away ! Does warn- ing? . Does it stand, strong in its three readings, in"its gibbets and artillery -park?- The -mote -woe -is 4o it, _the 1rightfuler woe. It will continue standing, for it:ii day, for its year, for I its century, doing evil all the while. Butit has one enemy who is almighty; . Dissolution, explosion and the ever- , lasting Uwe of nature incessantly ad vanao toward it, and the deeper its 1 rooting, more obstinate its continuing, the deeper; also -and huger will its • ruin and overturn be.. • • "In this, God's world, with its wild •whirling eddies and `Mad foam 'oceans, where men andnations perish as if without.lew and judgment for an unjust. ' thing ,is, sternly delayed, dost thou think that there • is there- fore no justice? It . is what the fool hath said in his heart. It is what the wise, in all times, were wise '.be cause they denied and knew forever 1thee a ai there notbe. •Ito 1 n is tog,, nothing else but .justice.' Where between Cleveiafhd end the De- troit Elver are a deckload. of locotno. byes, lost from the Clarion .in 1851, in Lake Huron, itt the neighborhood of Saginaw •Bay, are said to be :more lost ships ;than in any other part et the Great Lakes, and for that reason. Huron has frequently been referred to as the "Lake of Sunken. Treasure."' In the days- when the country along the bay was filled with lumber camps, large' sums of money were brought up in 'small vessels, and many of these vessels were lost. in the deep water of Saginaw Bay, it is believed, lies the City of Detroit, wlikch went down in 1870 with about $50,000 worth of eop- 'per aboard. All bends were.loat"and no wreckage of tbo vesttel was ever found, The R. G (obut a, also Udell • On the last day. of 1856 James Stew- art,- master of the '.Iludson's Bay post at Fort Garry, was married to the daughter of a fellow -servant, Robert .McKay. On 'the first day'of January, 1907, •Mr., and Mrs. Stewart celebrated. their golden wedding' at .Prince A1- . best, Sask. The wedding took platy in the . historic old Presbyterian church at 'Iildonan, . Rev. lir. Bleats the :first Presbyterian 'missionaryriac the west; :performing the ceremony. Mr. Stewart was one of those un-' prisoned by B_ iel in the winter of 1869 and 1870 and his wife cooked' the daily meal for the prisotiers dur= ing the two months.: Many friends of the aged .couple called' to extend` congratulation,. and telegrams were received from George H. Ham, of the C.P,R:, and others. A party of olds. timers surprised them with the 'pre septation of a purse containing' $400 in gold, accompanied with a suitable expression of 'good• wishes and of. ap- preciation of ,many good `deeds. AId. Andrews, who figured in, the presen- tation; Mr. J. 4M. Cooinbes, a. fellow- prisoner with Ittr. Stewart in 1869 and 1870, and ex -Speaker J. F. Botts of the Legislature. another Fort Garry friend, made short speooheit. SOMEBODY., • Somebody's courting Somebody .. Somewhere or other to=night; Somebody's whispering to Somebody. Somebody's listening to Somebody. Under this clear moonlight. Near the bright• river's flow, Running so still and slow, Talking' so soft and low, She sits with Somebody. Pacing, the ocean's shore, Edged by the foaming roar, to.A wHaar,.•ynart,,, hiafn�s-.:. _ Sound sweet toSontebodr. • Under the maple tree, • 'Deep though the shadow be. ,PIalnenough they can see Bright eyes, hes Somhboa,,• No tine `'site up to wait; Though she is out so late, All know she s at the gats. Talking with ebinebodyy. - Tiptoe to parlor door; Two shadows on the floor Moonlight, reveal no more- Busy 'and Somebody. Two, sitting side by side, Float with the ebbing tide, "Thus, dearest, may we glide Through life,' a says Somebedy, Sdhnewhere Sbh>'tebody Makes lare : to Somebollr The O'Gorman's Retort, Major O'Gorman,"the man "of stu- pendous • girth and volcanic voice," r was a notable figu e in the House of Commons. "Ile was Indescribably funny," says Toby, M.P., "the real' Irishman in, flesh and blood -end a good-deal--of-both-whom.4Charles _Lev, er used to .dtaw.'When , he stood up! the House -began to laugh. If he coughed, it hilariously cheered; When ;he • cried; ' • `Hear, hear !" everybody roared.": He was the only menwho could, always •be relied on to. make Dizzy's sphinx -like face: relax into a gmile. The major ,(there was•obly one "major" in his day) said many a wit- ty thing, .but: the cleverest of thein all was his' retort.; to a member who querulously .demanded -in the House, "Why are Irishmen . always laying bare the wrongs of their country?" "Because," thundered' the : O'Gor- man, "they want them redressed." An Alaslcan:Romance. A touching reunion between :lies- • band and wife,' after 'a separation of more than 22 years, was effected re-' cently, says, The Nome Gold, Digger, When . Michael,'Kobevitch;, the pro- prietor of a miners' hotel on the Pil- grim Biver, . was re -introduced to his wife; whom he had• last seen in Prus- - sia more than. a score of years . ago: - Mr. Kobevitch left : Prussia at that time fo_Ir•the purpose .of seeking his • fortunen• America, anz•1sheAlas- :pa --1- t' return ever singe. his r rn 'gently Y wa;ted Husband.. and wife corresponded all the time, and a year ago Mr. ' Kobe- vitch sold some property in the Kou- gazok district . anit' sent for his wife with a portion of ; the proceeds. 'Ilse couple' had 'changed so greatly since their parting that .it wasnecessary to introduce husband and wife to each other. A TREE OF ILL. REPUTE. March 'th, 1907 0 lc The Freers ,tutee or the Vpaa 40* as IF, ileadiy Pelee*. An evil reputation has long been borne by the upas tree, Ant;arls text. caria, which .grows in Borneo and oth- er East Indian lelands, It is still 0 common belief. that •birds flying with. In the influence of its poisonous va• pors instantly perish. and that It la fits tal for aninte.laor men to rest *be- neath Its shade. It.,reeerables certain thus plants (like the poison Ivy). Ig emitting a volatile substance which affects the skins orocerteln suscepti- ble persons, though others are Unaf- fected; The sap is very poisonous and Is the chief substance used by the' Dyeing of Borneo for poisoning the tips of their darts. In this process an incision is made In the bark Of the tree and the milky exudation collected on a paint leaf and dried `first in the sun and then over a Ore until a thick brown mass. is left: In this state It can be keel without deteriorating, and when re, quire(' for use it is made Into a thin paste with .thejuice juice 'of "tuba" root, Which is used to stupefy flab, or with tobacco or lemon juice, and the ends of the darts dipped into the mixture and dried; These darts are made front the middle stemof the pain; leaf and, are about Six or eight inches in length and of- about the thickness of a -•knitting needle. They areused witha wooden sump'- tan, or blowpipe, which is about seven or eight feet is length and has.lut_ftas_ ternal', diameter of about. one-quarter Inch. • A. bird struck by one of -these little, darts .is insntly killed, and. a oig dies in about ,twenty %minutes: She, fresh juice- of the Upas tree, 'whether "swallowed or injected into the blood, acts as a violent poison, causing* convulsions and death. 1,1t A Fie From the Ameer. ` a physician and li. g. shwomen P Y En Twoher sister, were .attending the woesen- of the, palace of. the Ameer of Afghanis - ten. One day- when Miss Brown was sitting with ,the Queen the Ameer came in. He chanced to have got a bit ,of Coal in his eye and was suffer- ing considerably.' Miss Blown offer-. ed'to remove the irritant and .did so deftly',• her sister holding a lamp to enable her to see. His highness at once called for his purse and forth- with presented Mist' Brown with 50 gold titles (about $1.75) and her sister with : 30 tills. : , The Caller, • . "Mary, bas any one: called while 1 • was out?," "Yes. ma'am; Mr. Biggs was here:" "Mr.' ,Biggs? . I • don't 'Mail' the. name."' .• : • . "No, a a'am; he called to pee me, ma'am:" trail ,Gate. Heli Gate, at the entrance of Long Island sounds in. the East river; was not so named because of Its dangers and turbulence, as is generally sup- posed, but quite the contrary. The early Dutch settlers called It "Hell Gate" becauseit was a pleasant, beau- tiful eau- s l passageway, p asageway, lth allusion to its plc-, turesque scenery,""heW'-conveying-•the-- '.ea of pleasantness. Your Doctor Can cure your Cough or . Cold,. no.•question about that, but-- why :go to .411 the trouble and • ' inconvenience of 'looking him up,, andthenof havinghisprescriptien - filled, when you can step into any. drug store in Canada and obtain a bottle of SHILOH'S CURE. for a quarter. Why pay two to five dollars when a twenty-five cent bottle of SHILOH will cure you , asquickly?t Why nodo as hundreds of • thousands of Canadians • have .' ' done for the -past thirty-four .. years : letSHILOH be your dor- whenev_er a •Cough. or Cold, appears. SHILOH will cure you, and all druggists back up this statement with a positive guarantee. The next time you have a • Cough. or Chid cure itt with --IL fsimitiammoommomarr waver -sow rtzzipa. Among the interested visitors of the marine barracks at Washington on one occasion there was a'party of young girls from a Maryland town, friends of one .ef the officers of the barracks. They proved remelt interested in every- thing pertaining to the`tife and disci- pline of the post. "What do you mean by Ins?" ask- ed one young woman. , "Taps are played every night on the bugle,"; answered the officer. "It paeans 'lights out' Tbey play It :over the bodies of dead soldiers." ' A puzzled look range to the face of the questioner. Then she asked: "What. do you do if yoti haven't a' dead soldier?" 'mime vonr'a. A milk white ;cobra same five teat 'ing was killed with great dif iculty, eq1 SeYS a vernacular paper, by semel• peasants at -a jhular near the canal bridge on the Lahore -Mian Meer roads recently. Hooded snakes of We tint . . and size are very rare in. the. Punjab. Let Inc 'Bell you a CHATHAM IIieubator On 'line Do you know there is big Y in mons ' raising elsigpoultry?- n: , Do you know my incu- s Bator will payy' ou`iibig= ger profit than any other thing you can ve on-your-ptace- • Well these things are true:. Thousands of people all over .Canadahave proved it every year for the last five years. I want to- quote you a price on my Chatham Incubator, - sold ON TIME and on a 5 -year, guarantee 1 wants to send you my Chatham book. This ince' bator book •is .free --I'1.1 send it to you,for just a postal card chio Itkeas. tettsyou bow to make money out of Chatham • Incubators and Brooders. wilt mit,akein21 yondaysm. oney, for a Chatham Incubator, will batch' a live, healthy chicken out of every fertile egg put into Will you write for my book today? Just say on a postal "Please :end nut: Your incubator Book"—that's all; Address me personally. ' • Mansoni Campbell President Tie Mame Campbell Co., Ltd. Delft.•'' Chatham. Ont. MOT* -•h largeatoeksaa ship promptly. from branglt honed at Chi- Alta.;Moa• • ��pQae.;ena. doa.Maa,;Han- far. H. S.; ate• t aC ort , 8.C:thad at c t►ae ru a Corrected. Teacher -,What are .parallel 'lines' • Riieky Mulberry,', what, are you. grin- ning rinBing at? tricky Mulberry -Souse me, Miss Sharpe, •belt any: loidy ;night make . de same mistake, iter' means parallel bars, .don't yer2-Puck. • The secret of being tlresoine lt+ In' telling everything. -Voltaire. m st:ftr own Oban. M To mark bis gratitude a man who„ was acquitted on a charge of coup • terfeiting coins In' India added $10 to. his lawyer`s fee o!. $50, but the lawyer ;afterward found that the whole, sues consisted of counterfelt rupees. - A3 lettatent Pioneer, - .Established 1'870 Whooping Cough, Croup; Bronchitis Cough,: Grip, Asthma, Diphtheria Cresolenc is a boon to Asthmatics noes it not seem: mote effective to breattie .la 9. remedy to cute disease of the breathing otgans tbac to take the remedy into the stomach ? +; sates because the air tendered strongly anti• septic is carried ovet the diseased surface with every breath, g;ving prolonged and constant treat. merit. It a invaluable to mothers with small ohikltea. i'hose.ofaconsutnptive 6 e tendency find bnmtdiate i Sie relief from c.,aghs or in O0 flamed conditions of the ij06 throat. aohi by druggist'✓, ;;end postatf>nc�oktet, isiomtric;, Meals Co., Lira:ted, Agents, Doric. teal, Canada. goy WesternCanada . ': , friends in. Western If you have 'Canada; if you are seeking inforina- -tion` concerning the West, this • fer will appealto . you. .OFFER NO..1 . of-' . . . $ - ' an teba . Daily Free Press Winnipeg e ,3 Months; News Record, Clinton, 'Oat. . . 3 Months Postage prepaid to•any address in the Dominion. OFFER 4vo. 2 Winnipeg Weekly Free Press and Prairie .Farmer 3 Months* 50 News Record, Clinton, Ont. 3 Months • ' Postage prepaid to any address In the DOrnf ion; OP . _ If you want information in re- gard to Winliilieg and ' Western cities and towns, information about the weather conditions; the chances for a situation,the cost of board, business opportunities, take offer `' No. 1. If you, are more interested inthe agricultural Situation, and in quest of information in regard to fa ini lg fhud fart i ands ` iii ir3fe1:• — No. 2. You may, if you wish, kith- , out extra expense, have the 1 ree Press sent to your address and -the News-Reeoh`d forwarded to a friend 111 Western Canada. . • To tHE 'NEWS•RECORDr LINCYON. Enclosed find .,., for which send nig Mani• tabs li rce Press and Newawltecord, as per otter No.... t Natne........a.......:+ra.,.'..r.....a.rt.... Addressa...a.,i.4...♦ Y.. a. It.... *4.41.'...4