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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1906-11-08, Page 66 The Clink.% News -Record. November 8th, 1906 pelitira the Re4ellTiOlt, , ;le "1 1 lao,Ooo Homes are Warmed and red from the R rs, sses. liele!ti t‘. nappy. Thought ka.nge sel-ass^"" • Lady of the House (instructing new page) -Have you ever been at a. party before,. Itigg,les? niggles -Melly as a gutst, Punch. The idea that for an ordinary. dwelling " one stove is enough" originated in the superior cooking and heating capac- ity of the Happy Thought Range. Few rural homes find need of a heater where they have this magnificent range. No stove invenstor ever embodied se many good ideasail in one stove as did the .designer of the Happy Thought. The arrangement of drafts, the construction of the grate, the circulation of hot air around the oven, the corrugated oven -lining, the ability to heat water and keep it hot are points that put the HAPPY THOUGHT RANG4 in a class by itself. It • can heat the whole dwelling in winter; while in summer the fire can he checked immediately after cooking, thus keeping the house delightfully cool,. 130,000 households are now using it both for cooking and heating, and from all reports they would not exchange for any other stove in the world. Ask your dealer about it, Every Happy Thought burns coal or wood. SEnd to us for an illustrated catalogue --free. oats:roll, b. 4 The _ leueIs. 'Stove co.., LInatted. ISrantforcl K.:intro:11 Vannipcg Aigr..4" ' ..4-.•• • s' ' For sale by Harland .Bros. French, sailors were mobbed at Tan- . Not In Tune. eier•rsterday by Pictish boatsmen. . “"t see you have made 'short' and 'sport' rhyme," said the critic, as though the Idea was too absurd fOr any- • One Cause of Elre.::z.,,,,e•••••• faietten surgeon recently called at- tention to the connection between an uncared for mouth with carious teeth . and a form of eye disease. He de- scribes three cases, in each of Which' the teeth were in very bad condition. Tile gums were soft and spongy, bleed- ing easily, while tiny drops of pus could be pressed out from their margins. The breath had a sour smell, and the com- plexion as of e muddy, smile* tint; In caring for these cam; the" first step was to purify the mouth and put thos teeth into good condition. Sneh pro- cedure, together With suitable tordes and keel •eye treatment, brought. alsont a perfect recovery, This Is only one example of the serions natureof dental diseases. He Woo Ver. She -Last night 1 beamed of a most beautiful woman. Re --Rather a coincidence.. I dream- ed of you, Mot last night, -Pittsburg Obronlele.Telegraph, . Gold colon. The fineness of our gold coins Is about 90 per cent. Good Toole. .11aVe good toOls, even if they have to be few, for your work, no matter whether it •Is art In some one of its va- ried forms, siness • or housework. The quality of your tools will reduce the wear and tear of the work on your temperto a rainimisni. Ident1ce4 Stones.. Emerald and beryl are composed of •precisely the same substance, except for coloring matter. Amethyst and rock crystal are likewise identical. THE SANDS 0' OWE. ',Oh. Mary, go and call lbe cattle borne, Ane call the cattle home, And call the cattle home, Across the sands ce: Dee. The western wiral was wila and dark with foal, .And all alone went she. The western tide crept UP along the eand, And o'er and o'er the sand, And round and round the sand, ' As far as eye ciuld see, The rolling inlet came down and. bla the land; And never home came she. "Ohl is it weed, or fish, or floating hair - A tress ot genien hair, A drowned maidezt'S.halr, Above`the nets at sea?" - Was never sahnon yet that ehone on fair Among the stakes 0' Dee. They rowed her in aeroos the rolling - foam, The cruel, hungry foam. To her slave beside the sea. But still the boatmen hear her call the cattle home, A.cross •the sands 0' Dee, -Charles Xingsley. "vvnai is the matter 'Fite that?" asle, ed the poet, who tea criticism about as pleasantly as a small boy takes eats - ter oil. "You know," said the critic, shaking his head gravely, "when a sport is ehort he is out of tune with every. thing." . The Fluke. There is no place from the gulf of Mexicoto the bay- Of Chaleurs where the -fluke or some of his relativeg 'Can- not .be caught. There are twenty-ifix of his species found in the waters. of , the. east, aid they range from the half pound flounder to the 100 pound hall - but . Norway. Norway's Population, In coinParlion withher area, is the 'smallest in Europe; • Spinach. Have you eyer heard spinach called "the broom of the stomaph?" It is the most valuable of ail vegetables and saves many tines its cost in doctor bills and. medicine. , • • - • . • The s eelai vI •• v • -e0 'RPtttiim".1151:0" -'-'1,Nleii;frhaensP.usolitta.r.n117 bc1' Queer Luck' Charm. • An emblem of good luck, a stuffed crocodile, is seen over Many doors and gateways in Cairo.' The custom of put- ting this animal in exalted positions corresponds exactly to our custom of nailing a horseshoe over the door. : Cast Iron Seale. Cast iron scale is harder than tem- pered tool steel. • , • . • • To Test puttee. To test the purity of butter smear 'a little on a, piece of clean white paper, roll up the paper and burn it. If the butter is pure tbe smell of the burning piper Will 'not prove unpleasant but If the Witter is not pure a distinct odor of tallow is noticeable. • Paper Malang .Machisteri. 'Many 'Of the sniper making machines of the p"resent day are over 100 feet Jong and require a building to them- AT T11.18 TIME OFc,; THE YEAR F Everyone needs something to create and .nutint:un r strength • for the de y round of duties. •- • There is nothing better t than.an Ale or rorter, tiic,* puzity and merit of whidt, has Jaecn ettet,te4"hv chemists, physicians and experts .at the great exhib- • bitions. Ask FOR ,111,111111111111111.11111111.111111111.111111111114 Your Doctor Can cure your Cough or Coli, no question about that, hut -- why go to all the trouble and inconvenience of looking him up, ancithen of havinghispreseriptien filled, when you ean step into any drug store m Canada and obtain a bottle of SHILOH'S CURE for a quarter. Why pay two to Ave dollars when a twenty-five oent bottle of $1111.01i will cure you AB quickly? Why not do as hUatkedti of thousands of. Canadians have done for the past thirty-four years: let SHILOH be your doc- tor whenever a Cough or Cold appears. SHILOH will cure you, and all druggists backup this statement with a positive guarantee. The nest time you have a Cough or Cold cure it with Tho price of half a pound of Bed Rose Tea is sutall—very small, but it will show you how mueh, tea vane, tea quality and flawn. is Con- tained in this "Good Tea" ..is.g960 tea.9.1 Prices -25, SO, 35, 40, 50 and 60 ots, per lb. in lead packet SHILOH xasitt XantIppe, the redoubtable wife of Socrates, if her contemporaries ore to be believed, was as ugly as iter fatuous husband. • 'Water Superstitions.. . SUperStItiohs listVitig to 116 wilil Wa- ter are difficult to eradicate. What possible. connection eau the riee or fall - .of water harett with the duration of !Inman life? Vet whim Dickens tells of the death: or the child 1:t "David Copperfielc1"-9t be1ii IOW water. he went out wilil tile tide" -(heti the old Its pathetic t•erival. ' _ • Only Fur Unwed, Of .Queee Victor's 21 .graml,laugh- ters• only four now r•- main brims These. arc PrIncoss Viet ;a of land, Pi-lriess vie'? of . _xc Princess Patric's. , roTlanglit, sad "Prifictss Victoria of Sieswielc-Ilakt .1n, ..An. .An•'.i • Oiirrrrk(. • . Oneof' thab..'st te-tetune<•s ,IS that ..a.3cribcd to a royal 1 ist'est, or the' pes?e: • , • ' "Prisoner...a b -11n• Ira; .11:t:•, has lncloirrd yon with lit (til and . streugth, tiveead of wh1i you a'a ad. -the co an.. tt y. tr;t. itirtir hens," . • . - • . 'DOG- DON'T8,. ildn't take .the' .dog calling • on a friend who owns -G cat. . : Don't make his life a Misprohle bur.; 1.1(,l by taking him shopping.' • •• . • . Don't peruilt him to Siltation a caller, wiping: his dirty paws over her: hest . • -• take hi n ealling.at all, to have 'Mut run around a friend's louse chew- . •• Fair Hostess -I want you' to take In an article on peehieterie iron. the Indiistria1 World statesthat during Roman occupation, :from the middle of the first' century te '411, England had a• commercial iron industry, which .has been continuous to the present' time. The -Swedish industry has been eons, . Unisons from • the thirteenth century. or earlier. In the American colonies the - first successful attempt at iron Malting was at Lynn, Mass., in. 1d45. that 'lady oVer there by •the door in to dinner. •My husband seal; she le a bit ,of an old. fruinp,, but as she. has money one of his greatest friends has Joel married her for it, and we must be nice to her. - Guest -I am sorry; but, you see, Iain the particular friend WWI . merried her. . . • ' A lilvarts Opinion, Style -Mrs. CaShe• has a grea' deal of embonpoint Mrs Patvemi Then it she: hes a geed deal of it, 1 A Rard,lap. ' • ,• "'Very Well, • sir," • cried. Dr. Hivack ifter his quarrel Withthe undertaker, "I'11 make you sorry for this," "What are you going to do?" sneered the undertaker, "Retire freest ':prac. PreSe. . . know she got it cheap. . . • Life insitrance was inVented by Pas. eel,' whose "theory ot. probabilities" • and.4`la* ae averages" Still govern the ',0*.gleilegosialemealLmeeeeFees busin s .The • The fly, as large as he will ever be, crawls out of the smoothbrown chrys- alis, •uncrumples his draggled wings, and from that moment .till his death changes in nowise. It is only in the original state, the ugly maggot state, that the IV grows. „ yosnion. Plates. The first fashion plates were seen In France in the fourteenth century. They consisted of dolls wearing model cos- turneS. . • Tower of London. What IS knowu as the Tower of Lbn- don is located at ,the..,extreme eastern. verge of the .eits• alai is a confused masa of 'muses, towers, forte,. batteriee,' • • eatoparts,' hayracks, . 'armories, store- houses and. other buildings, inchaletrin boundary of about 000- by, 800 feet imoarnomasetaimwiawasseagnoliTsessemosoiliTiase , AND SKIN PISEIME6 &Saila IS a disease of the skin wif.elt does not allow the eater layer to mature, thus ausing the watery portion of the blood to exude and form:scabs innalng szes. Za..a.11uk cures eczema, because itis a skin fool It stmt.' ate ;she skin, give it torte, and this ends the Painfoi• and disfiguring d.sia e finally. Mr. Julie Miliett Harris a In ell•Anown Methodist. preacher, t).i• Lyng (Norfolk), gives his testimony to the vtilue of this peat hethal Mum. " Eczema Mart d on ,•• arm," he Says, " tont even tuall:s- pread over my whole bcdY i lutubm The Horo8 were very painful and at bight they itrhed tetribly. othertimes they t.remed to barn 1 ike twe, Mints Mat 111111 rni cd 1 ' nIi 1, proVeti ton.' my statet WIth one of agony and ntisery. When Yaint-Iluk Wus .1 feared that it would pro% e like the other things E hnd d, hiit I was pirasantly • sin -prised, The first few' applications gave me mist., and right from that time the improvement set in. it.ly skin is 110W (Illite Atwell of all trate of try, His. I tun eared completely end I MVO it !ti RA IW'S SO•111' CURED Mrs. Eililf, of St. John's West, Welland Oninty, ftitYti halw ha 1a ra8h-quite a Mifflin!' Of small ltd. Sifflt, !Ma 11141011' 111111 sore. t tried Zatmlluit and t1:11R delighted with 1 he ru,ttlt, hushattd ale / Used it for a out which it. healed splendidly." HEALED SEVERE cur IN 3 DAYS Um. Wm, Seed t, of Pottlend, Otm, sayst--"I riming sneak too MAW o 7.noi•l1nk. I have used it in lite home roe ,.otue time. and found it n. sotentIld hen)! g lnJ,,'My 1111 boy get asevere eta on his forehead. I antdied rimin-link awl. in three dim+ the wottn4 was healed up. Zuni.Hulc takes the orenehs out of wout,d. 8111i0.1 8,1 watts it 14 aleilied, and heals them up in 'num; time. You can publish th14 $,ott wide as there is he doubt. Zsmank Is an exoepent remedy." • A METHAIS PREACHER'S EVIDi1105. N I 10 RD r Motet get the int nressiMi that Zatmlluk good ottiy tor very scrimp; skin trouble*. ,utch Gil i;!1 1oies Gild iiiii ?Its or weskit). Chapped hands, cute, ureiseq. burns, elilibialus, Mkt feet, cola %ores, ihse dis efineear before Ximelluk as wen es ulcers, opensores, and pollonoti un• 1101thithrilil bairn. , keep it h Don't tear o tie, .it on chit Ire» It. lis aholutely pure. All tleuggistA and stores at, 60o. a box, or no4t•pahl trout ZAtvt.OLItt pc> "tbeiONTO (Or price, 11 boxes for au& (REE BOX will b.3. mailed yott It 'oit tame to MAMBO it CO,,Torontst sand this coupon and I eon. iskor400r9 tissiessmatemeaoseseizitiesess • ICEBREAKER LADY GREY. New Dominion Government , Vessel After the Launch." •. The new ice -breaking and surveying steamer Lady Grey was launched on August 28 last by Messrs. Vickers, Sons & Maxim, Linalted, 13arrow. This vessel, Vain for the Canadian Govern- ment, has been designed of special form and constructed with heavy scants • ' ' malt Imc-uneeeen, LADYGREY. Hugs to break ice in the River St. Lawrence, and thus keep it open in the winter • season for navigation. The steamer is at the same time equipped for other duties whets not engaged on her primary.service. Thus she is to be used by the Marine and Pisherie,s 'Board for surveying the coast and channels In navigable waters, powerful pumps and other gear being fitted for .salvage werls, and also an efficient ats rangement of towing gear, so that the vessel with her great engine power may render toWing service when re•, quire& The principal dimensions and particulars are: Length between per- penalculars, 172 feet; breadth Mould- ed, 32 feet; depth Mt/aided, 18 feet; draught normal, 1.2 feet; draught Mean -When breaking ice, .13 feet; diSplete, ment, LOSS tons; speed, 14 knots. The hull, as indicated, is built of great strength to 'withstand the shoeks due to Ifeastet against ice floes and to pounding of 10e, and In view of survey- ing and other work the fittings and equipment conform in all respects to the requiretients of the Board of Trade • and the Canadian steaniboat inspection act The bow is of the "Cauedian" formed for mounting and breaking through greet' ice and for going through pack ice. The accommodation for the crew is ample, and all the In. ternal Work Which can be done in Can- ada Will be' completed after the vessel arrives in the S. Lawrence, Mrs, O'Grady Hely performed the naming eeremony. The Cement Age. A man has invented a cement Shin- gle. It is a Metal shingle coVered with cement and is really a tile as Tasting as stone. As cement beComes more known and it is learned that every Mall .eall make his own eement, there will be a boom itt eetnent building, The priee 0/ cement is high now, but there are vast stipplies and no possible monopoly. Cheap machines for making the blocks and plenty of sand and a little knowl- edge is the foundation, and the prlee outside the cities will be cheaper. We are beginning the eernent age, and con- erete houses will be the houses of the future:41mine) ant tender, Clean the mangers before eaell grain feed. What She Forgot, The Gardener (tendering Ids resIgna- tiolf)-"No, air, the tnififaiS 1 can't abide. She's got inter the 'shit o" talktte ter me jest WOt She 406S ter you. she rergite 1 can lettite when 1 wants ter." --gketelt. elf!, ee rubbers, etc. Don't' penult him ta salute you w -i(7.1 . . hia totigue and 111441 say rapturcusly. • ' Inaproved. • T. 14. 'ESTAOROOKS, ST. JOHN. N. B. WINNIPEO. TORONTO. a INtt.‘teurriiii a•e. F. •• in• stove building is con- centrated in the Souvenir Steel Range, It hns Ito . equal amongst modern cooking stoves. Added to its compact- ness, is every advantage to. be found in. any SOUVENIR RANGE Its Aerated Oven, changing the air therein completely, without lessening the heat degree, gives it .an immense ad- vantage over all other ranges. Its deep fire.box holds the fire easily over night—no ashes can accumulate to choke the draft: Its 'grates can be removed without loosening a single bolt. • Every desirable improvement for effecting a saving in labor, time and fuel is found in the Souvenir. . - Every Souvenir is alisolutelY: guaranteedby the makers THE GURNEY-TILDEN .CO.; Limited • nAmn.-roki, wimP.F.G. MONTREAL, VANCOUVER 406 .ZtiNgetIM7SIX/M=Er.... DAVIS & RowLAND AGENTS CLINTON '"Do you think the automobile has ' CAUGHT COLD. . ,ONTtlE . come to stay?" litee how he iti-ses'ine.". Don't let..him tisp up. on the •Chairs,' so that the next person ,who•sita .there: will acquire a coat'of dog hairs. • , • . Don' -t' tie hint tip and go off for the.. day order' that he hilly. make the, neighbers •.ntiseraisie with los .119w1ing. • 1/oit't . expect outsiders to have the !,:11110 admiration rmr hitti and 'accord him the, same indulgent treatment you 4„,0„.....,.......elutnge• • • :91(4' sir.. I used to think so when was necieSsary 'for me to walk hong. about every tithe 1 ventered out but 1 •' •• • am new cdavinced that it has come to •go." -New • 'Orleans Times -Democrat. . . . • ssronte A. E Mumford tells how Psychine • cured him after the Doctors gave him up Mlss Tobriste-You have eome strong. and rugged tYptis of -manhood' out in • this weStern country; haven't. you? Stage Drivers,ra.as, miss, •we hev How Eczema men out here ' that don't 'tiff k it's • .nuthin', to hold upa railroad train. - Ohio State; Saurnal. . is Recognized THE most constant and trouble- some feature of eczema is the itching-. 'and burning which varies from that which is simply annoy- ing to that which is positively un- endurable. . Then there is the tendency for eczema to become chronic and spread to other parts of. the body.' .Persistent treatment is always . i necessary, •but you can depend on t that Dr. Chase's Ointment will cure you. Relief will come after the first few applications, and the heal. ing process will be gradual and natural. . • • •A North of ',relent') Sir Robert Ttai t ltnOwn. as ,on'eI cif the•greatest Ertglislunon of the day, is ..T.-Ortit: Of 'Ireland •Tilan t?:sr birth, and Went to China in 1854'na student Intel Preter: :in the consular. Service after. graiduling at,.Queen's College, Belfast: Tit 55 he -Was .appeinted Inspector ef ..CustouiS at Canton. 'Phe appointment ;was one of the first results Of the•1n- terferenee of I3ritain, France, and the United States, a.fter.the Taiping Apbel- lion. had disorganized the existing Cus... • "It is twelve years since Psychine cured Inc of galloping consumption," The speaker was Mr. A.- E. Iklumford, six feet tall, and looking just what he is a husky healthy farmer. He works his own farm near Magnetawan, Ont. "1 caught my, cold working as a fireman on the C.P.R.' he continued._ f‘I, had • night sweats, chills and fever and frequent- ' ly coughed up pieees of my lungs. I was sinking fast and the doctors said there was no hope for me, Two months treat- ment of Psychine put me right on my feet • and I have had no return of lung trouble since." If Mr. Mumford had started to take. Psychine when he first caught cold he - would have saved himself adot of anxiety and suffering. Psychine cures all lung troubles by killing the kertrts-the roots of toans service. Two yearthe disease. later Mr. Hart was surntrioned to Pekin to confer with the authorities as to a reorganized ser- ' vice, and in 1868, when Mr. Lay resign - 'ed. as director, Mr, Hart. althoughonly • 28 years old, was appointed t succeed him. .Then he began his mat life task of evelving European order out 'of Chi- nese chaos. . 50• p B atti • (Pronounced SL -keen) Mothers use Dr. Chase's 0,...Lrit- 1.11j .N.ew.3./tLeir. d. • wilt ins sem.. It, . • . inent • for the chafing and swat ail/ atitiftss initil the 'cud ef 1901' ELI Larger else* $1 and 42 -all druggiato. troubles of their babies in preference 1,is , '‘ cry htn.. 11 ,:.:tn t i• IJ t. OR. T. A. SLOCUM,o'Litalteti Toronto1 to unsanitary pore -clogging powci- • . . l ..ers. .60 cents a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates ac Company. Toronto.. , 'The' national W. C, T.. "(lot: at ilartford littsd a, tesolUtion •dzpreca 1 mob- jaw and• • • lettnetneI'Artist. One Well known and decidedly intr. . tistie quality of Lord. Leighton Was his. punettlitlity, He was once In Dan:Ma- ttis and wes urged to remain there, but be deelined. His reason Was that he lied to be in London on a certain day because he had made anengagement withhis model. .& friend was anxious to learn whether Lord Leighton had ac- tually ,Icept • this engageinent, and he tound that when the Artist was as. tending the stairease straight from Da- inasetle the Model was knoeking at the icor of the studio. Him Wenknesie "Alas)" cenfessed the penitent Ma* "hi a moment of Weakness X stole a carload of braes, fitting:4." "In a moment of weakness!" ex. claimed the judge, "(bodiless, man!' What wotild you have taken If you bad yielded In Moment when you telt strong?" ceesesove le tors,. ;reek -You shothl have seen alts$ Waldo. 'Ur oyes flashed lire, and- irthur--That's funny. You said a mo. zeta age that she froze you Await a dance. Judge thyself wit)) n Judgment Of lineerity and thou wili Judge °there vith c Judgment of charity. -Mason, alidor , . Managed Like an Engine. One-third of a hoasekeeper's life is spent in her kitehen. One-half the labor of housekeeping is at the cook stove. ' 'Veer range can dotible or halve the cooking slavery of housekeeping. A poor range adds worry as well SS workeand worry multiplies the housekeeper's care. London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, VanceUVer. Si. JOhtt, N.B.- °fir: It;bctiedyos rtah6111a7gde o( fvtehsd we'tollfrity7arn.d betaifikSe worryktikr it prolonge life. Sold by euterprisiag dealers everywhere. Write. for booklet, etigine-it responds tO the touch as quickly and certainly as the huge Get a range -that reduces the work arid eliminates the worry, The Pandora Range is as easily and accurately managed as an . e it' . cciarys , .. 11 For Sate by HARLAND BRCS., CLINTON