HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1907-08-08, Page 3a,
1947 -
IMPAMMENTS.
A steadily ireereasing interest ?has
tbeen 4lown through the Provitee 4‘tr.
ja$ "tb# past year in the queStton .4,e et
road iMprovement. This jnet
• ys ten:Attend managemen,
mar2agement is in tUtkile.
tee roads. Statute 1j.
place.
plaee,to businesariirthada,Alleyinehipie
are putting their7i44 c.ft
are centra1izhg tbe ision
in. from one to foliri,00 netes,lare
(using labor-saving leetiztalabeerye' ' are
banding better bridges:00-.4rd in teeny '
ways seeking greater permanence and
durability. While this applies to many I
it does not as yet illeleode aU Inuud*I.
• panties, ba the good roads.inOvement
is one which, from necessity, mest he,
takenup in every section of Ontario.• • ;
, The • total outlay on country • roads
in. Ontario during the ten years, 189'3-
1905„represents a value of twenty-one
• million dollars. This is Made est of a
•eish •expenditerve of $10;432,902,. anti
• 10,51(),900 days of statute labor. The •
value o two mil-
lion. dollsereea:Tear.' This includes tiJa
expeediture of townships, and only ee
portion of that 'made by Comities on
countryThe xpeithturc
on teiien 'end -city "Streets'renteSeirtS a
large additional ameent. From this
it Le.,evident thatathe.roaciseatresby no
means being maintained by statute
labor alone. The magnituee of these
figuths is concealed from year to eras
by these distribution arnahg a large
number of• municipalities. They. etteW
'however, the great, extent,of the work
and ;the eecessity foi intelligent daces(
tion.. . .
• .rwa, -777.'""rsliF"1"111147
' 1.* '11 ' ' • 4 4
rmer an.
The Clinton
T▪ 4
own8mati Proft.
Alinosti Equal Proportions bu Having Goo!:1 Roads.
.0
The results from the expenditare on,
the roads of Qatari() ter the past ten
year.; are not an arguir.enti in favor al
'0'1- ns•oe.-0( faindeipal ownership.
tor no hitter
rn loon, ci , toll
T for the roads by
liut 14Qr VA taXes, a
treMinidoes nutetey, ,Would result, .
..
,
Good roads are largely a rigeetion of
•coste The greater the expenditure the
more rapidly can the highways be eine
• proved....But by adoptipg the best end
-most, efficient methods, the. cost, can
be rduced. One dbllarproperty spent
is mere . effective - than two Ateliers
(squandered. Good methods. Aral geed
management are the aim *f 1 t reads
'movement. By this means or.ly can
the best results be derived item the
available expenditure. To encourage
a larger outlay before peeper systems
elif construction and management are
'welt,' understood is. to eneourege a
;greater waste.
oeslutY sYstetn. of • "roads rst4b-
listed under the Ilighweiy improvement
Act, whereby the ekOviiice contributes
one-third Oil the pest, is Productog ex-
cellent reS014.-NOt only is subotan.
tial work tieing accomplishedon the
county roads themselves, but they are
affordiag models in construction and
manegeritent which are being fellewed
by 'thetownships. In this" wsy a
double benefit is derived.
Wherever. gap(' rods are being
Wilt, in Englande.France, "Germany,
'the Vatted States tr elsewbere, it is
eecognized print lle that tits high.
ways 'must be cies rifle4 according to
traffic, and -given to separate •orgard-
zations• tie manage • and construct.. In
Oatario it is a simple matfer to select
certaia roads to every district to %oral
main market lines, these to be in
charge of theeounte eemseile.. The res
maiader comprise' a class to be cell,
:trolled. by the townships. •
The Highway Improvement Act is
the only plan heretothee adopted in.
Ontario Whereby the towns can assist
in .constructing couatry roads. In or-
der to perfect -a-syshem • of main high -
Ways thbsughout the Proeince, it is
essential,that the old liesea be given up,
that eountry roads • are of value to
farm o*ners only. The Act provides
that towris and villages shall bear
tbeir share ef the cost, in the general
county sate. Only through a, &mite
system *can. towns and, villages assist
the construction of country roade.
Ceuntry'road builehie is a pablic work
of greae magnitude Zit'. expense, and
if left solely be farm owners it must
be year ,before the condition of the
roads is suffieleat for 'the complete • de -
Velem -lent of the country's resources,
The residents:of towns know how
impoetant it is to ,have free and • lin-
interrupted commueication with the
surrounding farm "districts at all sea -
sons of the year. Trade is dependent up
on it. If the farmer mist come over
the roads to the centres, el ,
tion and the- railway stationto dia.,'
pose of hisjfarm produce, it is equally
iMPOrtant that he should We the rClavkl
.to draw the merchant's goods back to
the farm. Country•roads are nearly
ff not, aa intielv.beeeet to the towns-
man as to, the farmer. Beeause
farmer proVides the wagons and teams
.
and.doei the /lyin. g, oea not,
low "that he ' should pay the whole
cost of the roads as well.
The progress of • the towns in every
agricultoral disteict is dependent up-
on the progress ot the'scountry. The
town is the product of the country.
The town, as a matter of self-interest,
should accept their pertiOn of, the task
of imprbving the eountry roads.
The kineiple, of government .aid is
one which. is regarded as the only
means of meeting the rapidly geewing;
, demand for better reads., -practically
the world • over. Since 189s, 'When
New Jerseyd t's•s pie' of Stae
aid, the list has increased until at the
present tithe twenty-one staees are
contributing in this way. .The State
f New Y rk in 1005 ethotized a
bend istele of $50;000,000 for country
road improvement. The "long haul" is
being well ptovided for in Canada by
the constructor. 0.1 railways aril
canals but the construction and sinairi-
terance of the egierneri roads 'is a
public work cf equal importance. The
railways cannot exist witherit comnion
roads to reed them. Commerce • nom-
iidied without • railwayse-bet never
withont goodecountry , roads.—Ridge-
stown Dominion. '
The Irsentof • Of the Split -Log D
Missouri is the State whcse native
are supposed, as the slang phrase goes
"to require- to be shown," but in 0.
Ward King, ,of' CO.; the enventor
, of the split -log drag, she produced a
man who has returned the compliment
by showing the rest of Anieriea how
to make good earth road's • without
money or if the eolunteer labor be
Feeding Cattle can .be Bought' at
Moderate Prices on Mani-
toulin Island,
eltig, who
a Was in Toronto last week, reports
'that thereare a large 'number of 'teed -
ling cattle on the Island and buyers Pan
:secure a lot of this clasp at veri'mod-
,era.te prices. "I was," he saki; "offer-
ed a ,buneh of two -year -Olds the Other
day at twentydollars a head. ,
Buyers seem to be holding hack in
the expectahon that farmers will be
glad to sell at lower prices liter on.
A similar report Comes,' 'too, by
mail from a Manilowaning subscriber
.,of The Sun, who says that buyers on
the Island say that cattle „are
,elown and .they will not buy at all.
The cause of the peculiar Situation
eexisting on the Island is that last
winter was exceea.ngly hard and
Iced was exhaueted before ehe spriq
tame, This has been followed by Prcies
rects o .a short harvest'; hay was
very late to begin with and 'grass hop-
pers shave caused exteneive damage' in
this and ether growing crops. •Buyers,
iMoYvieg the sitUat ea, think if ' thee
0
counted, as it should be, at aeost of
•toae to six dollars per mile per year.
Mr. King is a farmer and has lived on
one larrn, he says, for tea iteseflve
yeah.. At least, he was living on it
till the. work of the split -log drag
made him famous and created a de,
,mand for his services or. the lecture
platforms. When he went to Volt
County, the roads were simp;y trails
over' the country. liater they were
a.nd made into hlghways
This was the starting of bad roads,
Rains and travel made them bad.
They soon became lower than the ad-
joining land, and served as ditches.
Our friend studied the road question.
becoming what he calls a, "road crank.'
He eeard of a, road machine in the
East—a ' reversible grader. He .ero-
cuyed one, but it did not answer the
purpose. One spring day. in 1890 he
hitched to a cheap contrivance
something like a three -rung ladder,
and, stepping onto it, drove down the
road toward his neighbor's froat gate
and back, one horse of the team on
each side of the right-hand rut, the
drag following at an angle of eboat 45
degrees. The road had been badly
, cut up by travel durieg a spell of wet
weather and was iustr-drying.,..The
drag . scraped the surface ot the rough
, road, brae down, the dgee ot the nil
and deposited the loose earthin the
i
ruts and • other places, leaving t
• smooth. The largeet clods were zees' -
ed to the center. The road was better
at once. After the next 'rain 'le iepeat
ed the operation, andela,s done so, or
had his hired man do so, with few ex -
center's, after every rain, to the pres-
ent time.. The road continued o ire -
second season ..he made a drag out of
the trunk of at old box -elder tree. It
' was very crooked, but be split it, and
niade a fairly good drag. Ile usiel
this for dee years and made his road
famoos. Not only was it kept smooth
and hard, but it became graded, so high
that the neighors objected, and ht
had to reduce it a little:
The worelerfel.•imprevenent wroug'ht
by the drag: was Inc:eight to the' notice
of the Sectetate Ellisof the Missouri
State Beard • of Agriculture, who our 'yoking Men.
vestigated thoroughly, and then ex -
ranged with him to go mit into the
State for the purpose of spreading the
prove and became •lomily faineus 1.0
cause it never got very bad, and be-
cause it dried and became infine con-
dition se quickly atter the rain ceased.
The first drag was made out of an old
pump stock and some other stuff. The
information gained by the experiment.
Since then he has' been more and more
occupied in explainieg and demons-
trating this simple method of road-
maldng.
Notwithstanding his self character",
zation the inventoe of the drag'is not
a crank; He does not claim that no
means of road iinprovernent 'should
be ased except the split -log drag. On
the contrary, he advises the ieerough
enacadamizieg of a email percsatage of
the leading highways, and argues 'that
"no community can afford to do with-
out storm on its main thoroughfares
When land is worth thirty dollars per
acre, and rook can What' within three
mile," But to macadamize the whole
or even the greater fleet of the road
mileage 'under these conditions is no
desirable. On the less travelled roadie
leave the -earth surface,and improve• t
by dragging ter. or twelve times a
year,
Mr. Kieg is described as a man of
splendid physique, as well as mentality
and eppea,ra to 'nave a inoet favorable
impression _wherever he delivers an
addrese. He is the stamp of citieens
of whom we never have;enoUgh. 'A less
*enterprising man would have wadee
'through the mire from year to year
without cudgellieg his brains to floe
a xeme('l'; and finally have sunk into
a seven-by-eix-foot grave, leaving his
children and' neighbors t� do the same,
A less thoroughgoing' man wan1 !. have
beer. content, with irnproveng the toad
a little, and letting it go at that.
Not so 'with Mr. King.' ele knew he
had hit upon a pod thing, and made
the most of it. The result Was such
striking •improvement as to ittraCt
the attention Of the State officials,
and since then of the *hole: continent.
There is a` lesson in this example for
•
Mark Twain the Philosopher Seaforth. 1 They Were Reall) Agreed
• .
No humorist has . ever won perman- Mr. J. J, •Fitzpatrick of the Grip, Timothy Woodruff tells of the effokte
ent fame by virtue 'of Ile humor alone' Hotel; intends leaving Shortly for the on • the part of a kindly. disposed matt
The jokes . of ,Aeistophanes were ex- West He is applying for a transfer of in Albany • to arbitrate between
cruciatingle fteir.y in their day, bet if hs license fee the Grip Hotel to ' lvIr.• and his viife who were airing their
a man' druggist
•
Scote.F" Emulsion strengthens onfeetiod
nursing. mothers by inereming their flesh and
nerve„tercik
It provides baby with the necessary.,
and mi./kerma food for healthy growth.
44.1. DrfuoDmillf, *Do. AND
•
-FURNACE
j fills the demand for a fur-
nace possessing the.lart
est amount of grate sur-
face in proportion to the
diameter of the ,top &the ,
fire pot. It possesses all •
the advantages of a re-
turn flue construction.
The "Admiral has
the largest ash pit of any
furnace on the market,
• thus. permitting the free re-
moval of ashes.
• ' Wood or coal may be burn-
-ed in the"Admirar fun:lace.
Write for Catalogue 102
THE RECORD FOUNDRY& MACHME CO.
4ef
Foundnes at MONCTON, N.B & MONTREAL, RQ.
'es!.
For Sale by HARLAND BROS.
CLINTON,
voommoib010•11
A mai named Galley climbed on. the Playing with matches, at Indian Hee&
call of a boat at Chatham, N. B., while Sask,, little Magdalene `Brabant set '
Intox'e t d fell b d bd fire to hee clotting and was, fa -Sally ,
1 a ees oar a Was
burned. •
drowned, '
•
Joseph Hatton,. the well-known En-.
glish author and journalist, is dead:
The Moreccan Wax Minister has
drawn oft all the troops that wece
harass'n Rki uli
g s • —
•
Those unsightly niniples: can he
entirely ;removed' by, the use. of ,
Compound Iron Iron Ping; 50 doses
for fifty cents. Far sale Clinton by
• W.' A. hIcContell,' druggist. 7
Eigbt carS were derailed ale'. badly
'salVflililnerorslinGtroi;tp derby W As., stOcizo,Foriinell,. R.
near Milv brton. Fireman FisLer
smashed in a collision on tut
• was seriously injured.- ,
our appreciation this old Attu. WilliamlIamilton, of Stratford. I troubles on the 'sidewalk on • Saturday
comedy depended. on ia Power to keep Me. John Stanles, .who has been ser- evening. . ' •
laughiag now, the., shelves whereon misly ill, underwent an operative; "LOok-here, ray Mare'''. exclatmed the
it reposes •Would-ee even seistier than for the removal of an ettscess; Which .Albany inan, at once intetvening in
they are. • Mark Twain hods his. place had termed on the eppendiii.• He has. the alteration, which was growing
beeause--he has thought deeply mei since been: gradnally improving but 'more and more violeaf, "this. won't
can hold" off long enough thee sem ee serietedy, ahout mankind and its neecie it will be some , time before he will do, you knoWl!' • '
able to ljay . cattle from owuees weo This thought bas been 'Colored, ' Of be able to attend to besiness. ."What business is it .Of your ?" de-
aresunable to hold there over the win- e.°ur•se, by 'his own. situation and ex- Mr. and Mrs. John' Murray:el Steal:- Mended the male- combatant anerily.
ter at any price buyers Choose to of- perience, 'Once, when he was young ford Were here for a few dees the . "It's my Cusinese onle solar as 1
fee. • As our Manitowapting correspond,
ent ,pays prectically all the cattle in
Manitowaning ;Ugh grade short-
horr.s ,of ,good type, animals that
will make. feeders' much superior
the average etoe'•offered in ' tee Torciete
Market •
Ontario. feeders who wish to buy for
fall and Winter • feeding. would' make
Money by going to the Island for th
stook the d. . •
wm. Hare, president of East. Mani:
t•oulin Faiebers • Institute, SandIeld
P. ,O. ; • A. J. yirasege Mindemoya., Sr
retary of same, and W. , J. Tueker,
Past Secretary, elmiltewening, will
doubtless , be glad to tarnish inforam-
lion to aziyeee on enquiry. ' ,
•
•
An Ontario Chicken Farm
A little east of Oshawa is found one
of th: large chicken farms which can
stitute one orthe recent netable de-
velopments in connection with poultry
production in Ontario..
Th a origin of tide farm is interts•
dug, The _propertes:_beloegs to-Dt.
Farewell, who we lo a, feW years ag0
was actively engaged as. a medical
practitioner. The dector found • , the
night Calle eiceeciftgly trying, and, as
he always, had a fancy for poultry, lie
'deckled to give up his practice and
turn his attention in this other dirae-
tion. Ile. has now quite an extensive
plant with abash one thousand m.ature
lowle on hand, pnd he hope.s to double
his holdings in a short time.
, •
50c a dozen for Winter
. ,
Dr, Farewell has been singularly sac.-:
tesstril in production of .w_int•..r,
eggs and in the. marketing of stheeleinie
i•fis winter output, is eheipped at reg-
ular -intervals to a fir s'of Poetics le
'Toronto, who enjoy. -'large trsule
:among the more wealthy families ":Of
'that city: These eggs regularly • re-
turn the teeter fifty Cents a dte.ica.
In --Speaking of the (tiffiealas he has
tezperienced in connection with he
rairig .of pout*, Dr. Farewell %aid
that fresh air, not too Cold, was tile
,essentail to success in chicken
"With my plant as it
itted,"I do luit consider it possible to
Mated Janet)! Alia February titaasis
With pr011t. Tire difiletilty in sweat-
ing Plenty of fresh aft, of a high en-
ough temperature, together with lite
thigh price of eggs arid low percenAge,
•of hatch in that Season, Mem the
test of production prohibitive, despite
the. high price which midi birds .v ill
bring in the mitlitte I fir.4 that
,March is as early an,1 can afford •to
:bring up chiamt; under my emelt
Tonditions. I am satisfied, howevet.
'that a handsome milt cOuld LAO
in the production (A 30.111.10.1'y
ruary chickens With a plot in *wet,
ithere could be provision for a forced
supply .of heateit air -such as you. find
ill the hest of the large . hotels:"
When' Farewell' •,began raising
chickens: in * large way, he theught
he cthild 'provide them with a grass
tun which Would eat only furnish shel-
ter,_enia.,ea.e.ectneiderable amount te
feed sterieg the summer seasOn. "I
. have given .up that idea,'" said lre
have fond that yOU cannot keep
grass under chickens. Pet theia in 'a
iresb grass run and the grass will dis-
appear and the ground will be as hard
and 'tb.eprizes • of life were Wets and lattee pert. of the week, owieg to thee may be of service in settling this die -
sweet, andathe road .leose to the..fohnee's brother, Wallace putee' answered , the ether . mildly
success stretched •fisvitinely ahead, and Murree: The latter has been ill with "and I should like 'eery numb to • do
the Great Divide seemed a long Way an attack of eppendthitis and under- that." • .
"`This ain't no.clispute,'' sulkily re-,•
turned ;the min.
"No dispute !" calms in a.stonished
taxies, 'item the .would -he peaceeriaker.
,"Why .yette---1-,-" • e
"I tell- yoult ain't no dispute," in-
sisted the man. "She .thines she aint
going to pt week's wages, gnd 1
know She Ont."
• ' 7 -August Lippineott
Wrngbam
The A.aters liat for the tewnship of
East •WaySanosh for 190e has been
printed ,and was first posthd in the
Clerk's. °Mee on Wednesday of last
week.. The tOtar Mimber ot voters on
the list is 570, divided as follows :—
Part . 1; 400 ; part 4, 80 ; part 3,
24. This is a slight increase 'over
lase year. The number of persons
qualified to serve as jurors is. 290. .
TOininY, Stacey, a young sot of Mr.
Thomas Stacey of Turnberry, had his
foot very badly cut by a mowing ma-
chiee last Wednesdeys If was found,
neee'ssary to remove hint to the Wing -
ham Hospital. The boy lost a large
quantity of • blood, and as the tendons
were eat across and the ankle joine
.laid open, there* is seine danger of the
elsildbasing ,a etiff joint.
' Mr." John Anderson.; who Was for a
number of years a -resident of Wings,
ham,, died at his home in Galt ion
•Mondn,y after two years illness, aged
74. years, While fit Whigham ear, An
'demon Vas engaged in the furniture
sielke-aseetere-e
the site where W. F. Vanstgne'r affice
now7stands-.—f1e left Wingham Tar
'Galt Some fourteen, years 4o.
Mr. William Drunairiond, who , has
heen in Jibor health for some time,
passed away at Kincardine early last
Thursday inornitg, aged 39 years,
Deceased for many years was engaged
in the flax milling business at Myth
and Some years ago: moved to Wing,
ham -and took charge of the mill here.
Early. last silring, he contracted a
heavy cold and this brought ' con-
suniption Ile had been living in a
tent at, Kincardine for sonie weeks in
a hope that.this treatment wonld be
beneficia,I. The deceased had a
her of friends who vete sorr bear.
of his death, at so early age. His
aged mother and t sisters were
With him for sol time prior to his
death. A litt daughter and the ether
berea.ved ateVes will have the syrti-
path f many Wends. The tentaine
e brought -to. Winghtun ler inter-
ment.
-off, his %feelings • were OptittliStio, He wentin operation on Thursday last I
lecteed on 4th e' bright Sid. of everything which has .So• far, been very succedifio; I
if eeetthIng was not for .thelseet . as the. patient is doing well, • •
the best, 'Of • all ,poesible worlds, - things The death oecurred in ,Torcette. re -
were at least • 'doing very. Well, and • eently of .Elliabeth- Hutton daughter
this was ; a. pretty good world. Liter; of the late David mid Mary Illitron
when bereavement earlier andedisepe formerly of Glasgow. Seetland: Ths
pOinimeatee4ed• ' the relish, edges' of deceased lady was a niece o! ear. and
life intended :Where their touch. ssenied Mrs: Barton of S:eaforth ,and
a profanation, and fame. eeenned •.' to resided here with her mother' for a
have: less Michante*rut .the possegs4 short ifine after craning out Non"
ing than had • glowed about it in I thee, Glasgow, moving • to Toronto -t tmA
wuirung,Ced..the,SnoW .1611 upon the , years • ago,. The late 3ess fou':ert
hair el fri Ms,. and RN' 'ofieted little ,been 11n • poor health: -Since the &at:
'more. -Us took fie:Ward, tholaghti: her. mother v.elii-Oh: Occurred recently
became 'scirelfer's BatVe the charae-.:in .TOronta. Miss Agee. Barton and
ter Of his ..phileeophy has never cha,nga Mr,: IL Jeffrey attended the fenern1 in
ed....From the first to the .Ia,q he has 'reroute.'
fought the • gebd fight. .VVhether lie
has fought in the 'buoyant certainty of ..-•
.%•ictory or lit'„the resteeed..mepectation!
of defeat, he has ' alWay,s been on; . the'
sUme. Wu• , . , I As Mrs, Alfred-Metaggart cf Roger-
eas always tried to hghter fleet villa was drie:cag With two ladle's nit
Sueday ...afternoon', the horse took
world's ills, th aboliekenjustice, • and
to help •the CI eoppeeSsibn, frighteanidi they were thrown out,, a,nil
Mrs, CleTaegagt had her aollor 'hoe
iwmhsest,I.s.ear tihietizoitealiorescsotorrhe oarn inBelgian
broken ".
r, •,,Dremniond, Who was foremaa
rubber -trading .Kitg. • Nobody _ever
besets to Ask 'where ire statelg. . s at D. Urquhart'e• flax. . *sum -
though to !mow t•hat seeeeg bee neer, end left here last spring owing re
beer. comMititd I•liew that he is' i1159s8, died at 1n '4(1411b' 111 Winghani
agahiet m The sufferer may be an lest week, Ilis death'is yegretted by
man, a Filipino, or a Congo savage; ••
'a Chino., his .many old friende heeo. • .
Mrs. Gated eed her three children
A merican negro, ladian;
he wil'l find a defender int Mark Twain. arrived at KiPeen from Formosa last
as a hearts in a, sbort thrie.s" And with, all that there is tharity for weee. The Joy of u. union with her
. .•-• • the oppressor, too, unless he has sill- tWo boys who were left.in Kippen
Ap, Orchard Run for Vie'tickets. •ned against the light. The sympathy be eancated was great. It is seven
Alongside of Dr. "Huck' enirry rine years since Rev. and Mrs. Gauld " re-,
rewell's pr ter' the slave In
elooto'in house, kere.. 15 barge. 09..: tuh.avSavtio.timiehre.,Perfeet thati the synepa- -turned to FOrincisli. IV.% Geoid, . who
mer hoes , for his. chinks. There -ire eh mission
chard, and itestle e s v
wieltse tits' house a slatge-enelosure
sfeieted le by wire. He intends keeping
up:the wire until the birds -get 'the
her- I of loality developed, when he
will thee dere: the ;fencing and allow
the el thee full., rtilt of the erchard. The
bled t will 'then have abundance ef •
sit ele, lets .of room foreieb‘rcise.
Stlenty. ;of "Meets, and live' under the'
, very beat 'conditions. ' •
Incubator
• Hannan
OC
n- rem the same system. That se why ...there will arrive later., • •
ANT _world is -learning - las-eall-1Vrark - "Jaeit' litoelteian of the -third con: Was
TW,ain something. more ,than a , mere thrown out of Ids buggy on Saturday
"h*moriat.",':-.10rom "Mark Twain; night and had the misfortune to have
Dotter ot Lett r,," by Samuel 8, his ankle bone broken, width will lay
1Woffet, in the American Review of. him up for, some time. " :
ttettl7ws Mi. Aughet.. • Miss Bell Chesnsy is getting along'
.., . alsell toward; recovery' though it will
i --*"s.--. ' 'be seine. time before she to fully re -
r ;
*etain will spend. tele, ate a welt stored to health. -• •
million dollaes, in fitting het warships .. ictevw .dos.occu. lilyl le tbmt, iryi . ott °fol.:arad:I,
, . . . p
evipi refrigeratftg 'nada:eery 2tO keen church for the next time Sundays.
tle4; magazines eeol. 1 It was with pained surprise and
sincere regret that the people learned
on Sunday week of the death of Mrs.
Duncat•McEwen of, the London Road.
• The deceased .hati, been ie geed health
• up to Friday, when she Was Suddenly
StriOket with an inward trouble,
which eroveir too rapid in its action
for nentical s'cill to cope with and she
succumbed on. Sendai" moraing. The
il.neased, vslTo;e maiden name • WaS
Mile KeUger, was born its Hay town -
stip and was ina,rried. to Mr. 10..11.1yed
about eighteen. years ago. SNo.'S of
a quiet, retiring dlsposltioij>4iid as a
thrifty housewife had e mats is,
this section.
A -great deal of ,trouble has, as oer
readers leo!, 'oecurred With ids lea -
tor chickens this year. There WAS
a' poor hatth in the first Mace, and,
heavy mortality among this hateh, in
the secoiul.
Mark Crawforth, 01 tha base line,
Whitby, although this is his first year
with an inetihsktor, has been fairly for-
tanate. Out of one hureirod arid twee.
tv eggs ih the first battle he had
ninetv-iour chickens. Part of his' sue-
eeee itt eseaping death losses after
liatthInz, he•attributes to the faetthat
he sprinkled bran otter the floor of th6.
brooder in which the young ch w.re
keit. This trit oily kept the little
birds in exercise but tormed a dr',
warm footing for them durinr tit?, raw,
damp weather of eatly spring.
not)i)"s
KION EY .".%
17("to,/,/
t'"of
4 ttoN-Elt WAIT' "
biAH;rAr...6:1rOsiS014c -"ve
ALP.1.11: h/
nu to t ,s
J, Butland of Tortinto bag PON
chased the Drug business of H. W.
T •offison.
meletteassenumemennwiara
A gi teBrewed from se -
it Fo'•
nted hops, choicp '
barley. malt and
pure spring water,
with " the utmost
car.' ponied at
the brewery depots
to ensure proper
handling. That is
why Labatt's Ale .
is equal to the fin-
est, surpassed by '
none, though" . -it •
costs consuiners onlyabout half as much is imported goods.
(LONDON)
India Pale Ale
Eighteen hundred 'Mies of the Nat -
lanai Traiiscontielental Railway re-
mains to be contracted' for, and work
on the hig• uridertalring is beingNtgor-
,
ously pushed.:
Judge Finkle (plashed a' conviction
in a limier case made by P. M. eller-
rison in Ingersoll, and complaint was 1 The British proposition for the Waal -
lade that the magistrate had hip at_= it of contraband has been adopted
tersflor., drawn to a shriller ruling/ by against stior.g.oppotitionin committee .
the judge hitt ignored it. at The Hague. .
Britt won the fight . with Battling
Nelson in the twentieth rour.d.
For biliousness. try Miller's Gran-
ules. For sale in Clinton by W.;,, A.
McConnell, druggist;
• e .
Five Japanese Chambers of Coin-
meree have sent a protest 15 Seattle
intimating that utiess the people of
the Pacific coast cease discrimination
4111111111e
Where all else fails
vs=
Kendal o -Cure
Bone Spavin,•Ringbone: Splint, Blood and Bog Spavin, ThoroUghpin,
Curb,. Capped Hod.., especially if of .long standing and obstinate—will
not'neld to ordinary linunents or blisters.
Kk..NDALL'S SPAVIN CURE is an etiraoritinap, remedy that gives
extraordinary results. It cures old, stubborn cases that 'many tunes
veterinaries have given up—takes Away every sign of lameness—does not
\ Star or kill the hair—and leave.s the house sound -and smeoth.
Bantro. Aran, Sept. 1/40
\ - " 1 hare used Kendall's:44min Cure for eo
WIG years— •
„„ It eVeri„ ,
ataska me Olff.e." JOHN sitHENNA,-
, .
•
Write for noted becilc t'treattse On Ittie Horse" -something wordi knowlstion
• every mice. Sent tree. Kendallts Speen% pare is sold by &Wetseverywhere at
$1. * bottle -0 for 115. ' ,
Ds. III. 4. XICNOA141.,C13,., • 4 stimipulea rehash, vciollorcr. u.s ita.
•
ee.
Sir
You want to learn hookkeeping\so You will know "the correct way to
that when you finish' your courie • enter up every conceivable kind ot
you will feel sure of yourself, don't\ a .transaction by either single or
you? double entry.
That's the way we will teach you You will know every phase of
bookkeeping. modern banking methods.
We will thoroughly instruet you You will "make geed "mis actual
iti the theory of bookkeeping and busineas life. Arid, clo you knoyr0'
we cannot supply the demand tor
then Make you apply your theotet. cur gradliatesT
ical knowledge in a practical way. Urge, alumna/Id catalogue free.
„ roarsT Cirt BUSINESS COLLEGE '
shaumei litailassa J. W. ftilITLIWE1.1#
,•
against Japanese a boycott of VnAsseieletta. Orbieleati itirli
States goods is WIely to re ult.
CoLLEOB RE...OPENS SEPTEMBER 3rd