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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1906-11-22, Page 6• Clinton, Newsu1I a :ors ""r1.!,t44 B�•f►u UCIC'$ "HA PPY nL tJGRT" •• "vw-MNG ••.. �, It embodies mote new features. for easy regulating, for even bak- ing, and -for fuel saving than any other rano in the world. That's why 130,000 "J1aPPJ Thoughts" are in use in Canada to -day+ M. WM.. Ht1CN, STOVE CO., Limited, e Montreal Wi,tYn.i P L` Brantford (Pxt,t' 'hitt.. The Quaint "Hermitage." Perhaps the quaintest summer redia- dente along the shore of Lake St. Louis is what Mr. Leary, "the oboco late man" of Montreal, is pleased to call his " 91d bachelor's shack" at Dixie. It is known as "The Hermitage,' lies on the water's edge, and was original- ly a boat -house and sable in connec- tion with the villa, now the Country Club, lying further back among the fol- iage with, which the scene abounds. Hermitage" ermitage es built of wood and consists of a large anda small room. A board -walk skirts the shore, and a jetty runs out into the water. Mr. Leary has transformedthe inter- ior of the old boat -house. Bunks rang- ed above one another have been fixed up. There are lounges and easy chairs, and cushions galore. Chinese lanterns are strung in profusion, arid thee are lit on fete nights though a reading lamp and several old-fashioned brass ships' lamps serve ordinary purposes. Curios of many kinds hang on the walls, and a• collection of old silver 18. particularly' interesting and decorative, At both sides of "The Hermitage," where were the broad entrances for. boats and rigs, Mr .Teary has . fixed up fine wire meshes, serving the double purpose of lighting and cooling the in- terior.. There is an alluring.Behenian air about the whole place, and Mr. Leary's guests always hasten back.. It is probable that more summer houses like "The Hermitage," which is the envy of many lake shore residents, win spring up next season, says The Montreal Standard. New Ontario Developing. While everybody is aware of the rapid advance in land values in the prairie country, few stopto think that Northern Ontario,' outside of the Tem- iskaming country, is opening up very rapidly because of the preparation for the construction of the' Grand Trunk Pacific. Hitherto tourist travel frons Kenora has all been southward over. the Lake of the Woods. to Fort Fran- ces, but now, owing. to the' Grand Trunk Pacific being surveyed across. •the Winnlpeg . Rive., , the sail north- ward on. the .Winnipeg River, between• Kenora arid •the "crossing," is the trip of the season. The return Journey takes about a day, and the scenery .is• said to be very picturesque. . The Kenora News states that the land about .Holst Point, which is near the crossing, has been largely bought up and it promises to become 'a great summer resort. • HAIL, -CANADA. • The North! The North! The 'rugged North! •Queen of the North, tale ,Canada, • Dear native land, thou gem of earth,. We sing thy praises. Canada. Hail, land of skies,•'whoSe colors rare • Delight the eye, sweet Canada! , Where in the world are sides so fair. • As those of our own Canada?... '. Her blues, those gorgeous blues so dark That Aye our ,.sky •gf Canada, Those colors rich, that . gold, but hark! No 'words can paint 'thee, Canada. There is no pen can paint thy hues; There. is no •pen, 0 Canada. . No painter could the colors choose, • But One, for thy sky, Canada. Hall, northern land! Hail, beauteous land!. •' Hail thou, our native Canada, • With skies of colors. rate arid ,grand Those gorgeous skies of'Canada! • The land of waterfall and lake,. , Of hero -men; dear Canada; Who would not poral for thy sake His life to guard thee, Canada? Ishbel ,MacKinnon.• $UD DAWN MrUNTA�ti ! Prof. Calaln,= .of Toronto and Oth• • Geoloil:b Giicseded on S'wpee of Voloano-elYlexican Churches. Mountain el -bribing and a elide 4.t 3,000 fent down a an +wy elope were the heroic amusements With which Prof. A, 1'. (oleman. of the School of Practical Science, Toronto, and his brother savants varied' the monotony Or the technIca1 discussions of the Go logi(teal Congress at the City of Mexico Outing the past month, About 225..c11 the world's moat eminent geologists were gathered together at the meeting,. unlash is held only every three yeai•rl, f(ii'' the purpose of discussing questions of tnlportd,hee to scientists. Four other Oaned;'ans b€1do t;,'. Coleman were in attendance at the conference, They were Prot. W. G. Miller, of the Ontario Bureau of Mines;, Prof, Adams, of 113e- �i11I Tlnivereity• Dr. Lowe director re thrbominton beologida•T• Sur've'y, ASO Mr. Courtney, of Ottawa. During the deliberations of the congress Dr, Cole.. man read a paper on "Inter. -Glacial Periods," as exemplified at Scarbor'' Heights and the Don Valley, Tor)nto. The entertainment - of the delegates wee superyiaed by Pr'esid'ent Diaz, of the Mexican Republic, who went as'o far tie to •import from Chicago two trains of Pullman cars with dining cars for the transportation of their visitors, ""rh'• Mexicans are among the meat hosptt- able people on earth," is Dr. Coleman':- cwnciusion aftgr experiencing it. As Mexico :: it ufamous as the scene pi volcanic action in the past, !a number of excursions were' organized for the benefit of the men with the 8e410 gists' hammers and a, passim for rocks. Prof. Coleman visited quite a number of the mountains and climbed three. ofthe highest: Toluca, about 15,000 feet in height; Colitna, 13,500,feet, and Oelzaba, 18;500 feet. The . last' men- tioned ranks third among the moult - 'tains of America, only Mount Togan, in the Yukon territory, and. Mount M•cIinley;. in Alaska, exceeding it 'n height. • On the summit +)f the extinct voloa.n8, Mount Teluca, was seen a beautiful lake, while on Mount Col nm the explorers peered into the deplha't an active crater. 'We had some hot experiences.' sala'Prof. Coleman, '"We passed throu: i s'teetn and walphoti fumes into 1' " crate•, and it was very uncomforiab;(', buten t dangerous. "In the trip 1.4) the summit of Oriel - ba four days were occupied. althoueh we were only two on the moan'ain " said Dr. Coleman.' "We slept at tee 13,000 -foot level 'in a little cave , i+ '- tween tivo lava 'he'r's, and at was bit- terly cold.: We tirose early the follow. ing morningand. in 1'ur and a h :t haurs reached the top, a distance ot 4,500 feat, whence we could see a m tx nificent panolvanta of the. Gplf of Mex- ico," LADY. ERNESTINE. HUNT. Titled'Lady•to Ranch In Canada -Buys - 3.0,000 Acres. of .Land. With the arrival of the steamship Moncama _ t 1 t 4vomnofith London from Montreal, came the news at .an experi- ' meet which Lady Ernestine Hunt, eld- Causes of Insanity. In England, where everything that is excessive in a great civilization is to be Sound; mental alienation is frequent. Many especial causes contribute to this, such as ill-assortedmarriages, which engenderender hereditary insanity; ; hazardous and desperate speculations, the frequency of commercial crises, the increasing fluctuations of political life. the laziness peculiar to the rich, the abuse•of fermented liquors, and, lastly. the immense number of religious 'sects. -London Hospital. • WIRED GLASO wiNDO .: HOLLOW SHEET METAL SASH &FRAME METALLIC 'ROO:l:ING Ca. ILO MITEI/. TORONTO &WIN N•1'BtEa : Liver Complaint est daughter `.of the. Marquess .of Alles A CARILL,ON OF CANADA. Having experienced some uncomfort- able nights in Toronto (through phyla-, cal causes) while attending the recent Medical Assoclatlon's meeting, 1 desire to say that such discomfort was much ,eased by the' sound of the City's bell. The lines somewhat represent the tin- pression of rhythm made by the sound of the bells on my ilnemory:- Sottiy belling, Gently telling How ttie hours fly- , List the chiming . Stealing, riming, From the tower high. Not with violence 3'R+r► Through the silence. Pulse the tones at birth; " But as feather am -wee 'oubtirig whether It should touch the earth, i• ^'restseeeri,eeeeete--"""e Voicing freely '!!iri li Spirit of the sky- ,..,, rr sa Night and morning . "We sane. down about 3,500 feet 1.' dime -quarters . of an ,Maui," proceed: e Di Coleinare "We ":lid down .the snob•• slopes with sur tlpenstocks • travelin behind. its Ince a stealing. gear, a ptn- tesee of descent known as "glissadin '' . in t:he Alps. The. snow was' soft en tale retern_jougney Arid ii•fforded a bold• fie' 'e,ur hobna letfshocs. • "The country: towns are .old -d wor;:i in typo; alt rgether,!•' said Di. (o!e- Mare. "and suggest the countries bol deiin :on the M(tittei'ianextn. ','tie houses .tire. of :adobe, sen -dried bricke. With a court or patio in the• centre. In tilt.' centre • of., every• 'town is . a pubs ie square :or plaza, on one .side of which ;$ a lacg: ,church 'i 'hese are exe.ed. Melt, 'interesting edifies, architecturally and are ei:tremeiy picturesque. :I wish w • had as attractive churches in ('.0 - :tea,• Our churches couldn't comport•' with there Of coarse they:are bulit • Polar material and •their ill etl,.tttions art .crud ; but their styie:'is s.eating'and•. ea inctivea" Its. Celenten found the •country, as e wlloie. (toile' ba:ek vard, although Meet `leo Wean. modern city and was advar, i•i r i, !:ply wi:.h .the • std of. far 'iee cat tee. Tn its development inany ('an- •:t'lans (vera intert!Sted. The Light :anti P''w. r Co ef. `lexis ter example,.wus ,.a Can;d'an. ento. 'p rise. and one 'of the ni:rst tri per t'lnt , burin' ss coreeratione la the cosh ly, : ')u4 ing..his. state in tate' •ani. ry'Dt Colenhari •m(t annany Cana- 1.'i': The mttjori'y. of: These t,;ere.an- t :. e 1.!n the d eeleptn`ent of .the natural i.'$in,rces • f ilex a', S,,iine'Were.min- n. engineers, white others were :feet-' weer Hien, • varier i' w lj meet at Stetkh•01m -erel •:ears from. the prtsan.t- It hes h, n 1 h:, niSed.e tunt,le the •Swedish :•gni elf. in the shape of'1L trip In c '.tett t . 0, 'one of the: most nerLhcrn J • IL o4 `ib!e •hoi015 in' the. world.. ` . • A .Canine Surgeon: Th°ut,the •clog p seesses a !narked sur - pleat. instinct is verified by' many In- sin n-•. sin:h^es out • of .the commonplace, Mr; • rr loo , who was engaged foe a 1.1ne :n• neaai'mary work in, northM1vest- bury, has' undertaken. ' La,dy Ernestine' Hunt has started a horse -ranch at Calgary,• Alberta, on a -stretch of !find between 30,000 and '40,e 000 acres in extent, and•' she has per sonally, supervisedthee conveyance of seventeen of the horses to Great Bri- tain. From Bristol the animals will be transhipped to Dublin,..wliere they will be broken, in and sold. The •horses are still in',,half--wild state, and throughout• the voyage across the Atlantic '. za.dy Ernestine Hunt, had • little' or 110 a;i:istance in their' m'ana gernen,t. Lady' Ernestine Hunt'says••she Is the first woman who • has ever, brought live stoek.acroSs the.•Western Ocean by herself,. and site pays a tribute • to the cattlemen,• who :are, in her. opinion, a much -maligned class. • • • "Since :I was 20 .year's of age," added • her ladyship, ''1& have . been facing the battle of sale bymyself.• •As long as 1• pan' remember I had had a. roving, dis- position, . and ,:have been 'fond of 'two things -horses and the sea, "Three months ago I went to Canada, with a perfectly open mina, but pos- sessed with a vague ideaof starting a ranch. The whole affair is'in.its infan- cy,Mitchbi er •' •n bigger 1l beo a c but thin s wi Y.. g• scale before long." LOOK out for these symptoms, of torpid liver and biliousness: Coated tongue, Bitter taste in the mouth, Attacks of headache, Fickle appetite and indigestion, Feelings of weight and oppression about the stomach, Pale, muddy complexion, Depressed spirits and irritable temper, . • ' Constipation and looseness of the bowels. The most satisfactory regulator of the liver is Dr. Chase's. Kidney -Liver' Pills. This well-known medicine has a direct and specific action on the liver, enlivening it inits work of filtering the blood' and aiding digestion. Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills, ' one pill a dose, 25 cents a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, nates & Co., Toronto, Ilratilletit Behar isr'!+ettee ()tats otter (reaps, but is best Wier, t tem in (bit Sunlight wait, • .t P"hllght 1(004. r41.2 l,q,• �t drreatlutrt; Campanile t Giving warning l '' ;, Message from on high, 'S y' Watchful Crier- • ' ' ; 'r nettle the spire Calling t fltU men: "13!ai thru l Wiser, Love thy neighbor, ;ee be with thee, then!" Lountie' giving:. "Heed thy living While the day is yet - Tempters linger, e g , Mark Time's finger On Life's minaret!" • Nightly lulling, Senses dulling, Sounds the belfry chime:. Care suspending, Vigils ending, Minister of Time! Gracious power Of the tower! Ever ring in peace: May men's anger And all clangor Evermore decrease, 1.1 et, 44 F.. • Anguish, illnesse Soothe to stillness, ;. • By the solace given - Lifting, dwelling • ' • Tones foretelling ' ,.Carillon of heaven! -St. Louis, in The Globe. IN ARCTIC WILDS. !Belleville Member of Northwest. Mounts ed Police Tells lntereeting Story of Wonders of the North Country. Constable John Phillips Of the North. west Mounted Pollee has recently been in Belleville, Ont., visiting his parents, I1 r. and Mrs, Norman Phillipe. He has Just returned from a two years' ex- peditlon to the Arctic Ocean, where the party Vlslted Herschel Island and other northern points. They only saw one white resident during their sojourn In the nerth-a 14cotehn an named Firth, who has been stationed at Fort McPherson for oveg 40 years as a Hutt - son Bay agent. Fort McPherson is 100, miles south of the Arctic Ocean and the meat northerly Hudson' Hay post, Tile & t who is married to an Esqui- Mau* let, his an interesting fam- ily of 13 children,. Constable Phillips says the Govern,. e sends in snail overland . from sea. (dice 'a year, One of their party received 260 letters in one mail, Dogs Alone Used, The only means of transportation in the far north is by dogs, A. horse is unknown. A good dog is worth $30. Four dogs will draw a man and from three to four hundred pounds, alinost any ' distance. Traveling overland is impossible except during the winter, His party went in from Edmonton, a distance of 2,000 miles from that point. The country, he says, is rich in coal, Dopper, lead, gas, oil, etc. Some of these minerals are exposed on the surface. Coal in abundance.was no- ticed along the .banks of the Mackenzie River. Same of it .seems to have. been burning for years, At one point on the Mackenzie River ignited gas was gush- ing skywards to a great height, and the natives said it had. been burning for a great many years, High end Low Temperature. The 'temperature during the winter ran as low as 64 degrees below zero, and in the summer it went as high as 84. .At Herschel Island the summer temperature is. often around 6Q de- grees above zero. The sun shines con- tinuously for mix weeks at a stretch, n f urs io 0 e eded bythe. same d t 'duce semi -darkness, duringwhteh time .the' sun is not seen at all. The natives- are Esquimaux, and what' are called itt Indians -those who live on muskrats, many Indians being superstitious in the use. of such'a diet. These Indians are almost extinct through the ravages 01 consumption. . Mr. Phillips says the region is deso- late beyond description, two of a pre- vious party sent out by the Mounted Police going crazy tbrough the' .mo- notony of their surroundings. . Constable- Phillips, went through the Boer campaign in South Africa, and .is a boy of 'whom. all Bellevillians are OUR BANK FAILURES. List of Canadian Institutions That Have Gone to .the Wall.. • Singe Confederation there.have.been .'.no less .than eighteen 'suspensions of • proud, chartered' banks in Canada, batt only a ' few' of_ them have been at all wide- spread in their. effects, and nearly all have paid their depossiten in full. Ex- cept in , the carie of the -AM-Setae k, the'.note-holders were paid in Ban lull,, and the record of the- percentages . paid he deeositors is as follows:•. • • 1868 --=Commercial Bank ,of New Brunswick.. Depositors paid in full. • • 1872 -Bank• of Acadia. • 1872 -Metropolitan Bank ot Montreal - Depasito'rs paid Inlull. ' • 1879= -Mechanics' Bank of `M4ntreal. Depobitors' paid 571-2'per •cent. • • 1879 --+Consolidated Bank of 'Mont- real. Depositors paid in full, 1879 -flank of Liverpool, • N, S. • 1879.-Stadacona . Bank _of' .Quebec: Depositors paid in lull. . 1879 -Exchange Bank of•Canada, De. positors paid 66 1-2' per. cent. • 1879 --Maritime Bank, St. John, N. B. Depositors' paid 10 6-10 per cent: ' 1887-Pictou Bank; N. S. Depositor4 paid in full. 1887 -Bank of London, London, Ont. Depositors paid in full. . 1888 --Federal Bank. .Depositors' paid kit n full,' • 1888 -Bank of Prince Edward Island. 1898=Commercial Bank` b1 Maa!ti)ba. Depositors paid in full. 1895 -Banque du People. Depesitor1' paid 75 1-4,per .,eent: Ville :'D ositors• 1899 --Banque. S isle 1'Tarie. els.- paid 10 pen cent., ; to date: 1905 -Bank of'. Yarmnuth. In liqui-' • 4.4 ••••1••• aau1. In .tile staging of ,one of 1118 earlier plays Joseph Jefferson,. accompanied by' a friend, attended a rehearsal, at which a lively disagreement arose be- tween two of the. actresses ' as to the possession of the center of the stage during rt Certain scene. While the than- ager pouted oil upon the troubled wa- gers Jefferson Hat carelessly swinging his feet from the rail of an adjoining box. The friend could stand . it no. lodger. "(rood : gracious, Jefferson," he ex- e' ijied, "this will ruin your play. y don't you settle matters? You waists if you only woultil" 3ei'rersolu} shook his head gravely, but vtitifa twibkle air bis eye. "NO, George," lie'"repljtd, "the Lord only made one '!!''"who could ever manage the sun 49;010on, and you remember even he let the stars alone.". Was the Autocrat-IL/awe e A.nntig the relies of famous men in the n8 esslon of Dr. xohn DI�twell of St: Lbs.ig Dr, Oliver' Wendell. Holmes' 0004m. It is an ordinary" steel shoe as affixed to it cane handle about fat feet long. ,&Hued With this, the doctor could Mit an his' Oboes *mat stdiiping Or wasting snotty". 41 ,-403. ten Canala, pial among. his clogs, ot. v. hath a large number were necessary. Tar drawing his sleds, one.i1over. This •u g net (,ntya,'tended its own,woun'ds,, but a::tu illy ale firmed the duties of pure: on to all its fellows. • flails. wound; ft'nzep feet and other !tie.injuries consequent upon the pe- ('01:ur toil •.they had tt) perform, were svs! emu tItally and .Successfully treated Rover. The toglad neeriarne - (y, the noint'ng r•f th1' afflicted .part with saliva. Wherever it applied.. the remedy, the cure was 'speedy. . ' It,was n..tir d than parts of the toes cf the .dog patients which could not b' •1,•a'ched by' the dog doctor's tongue went unhealed,'rhe Rev. Mr. Youn•• S:Lys that the Indians, in admination (•f ths dog's wonderful learning,, called !t. tvuskeke' Adm., meaning the surgeon. • The dog isnot alone in the posses-. et at of this means for curing the Var- ious ills to•which its tribe is ,heir. .Cats, cattle, rats; (nice, and monkeys are all known, to lick their wounds. when they can get at thetn, and when they can- not iso. so; they endeavor to get the`.: companlone to perform this office for 1906 --Ontario Bank. : In liquidation. Depositors in the Central Bank lost a fraction oT a per cent.--amounting-ala told to some few thousand •dollars,. but. even this Jesse -night •have'been averted if less expensive litigation, • had '+e.::rrr red. The Federal- Bank closed up lee ac counts with• open doors. although this was .only' made p ossible the uugh, the action of the other banks, tvho' •took ever the assets' at a liberal reductt in. The position In which the : (hila• (n Bank' finds itself Is in many . respee•ts• a similar i one -to that of the Federal Bank in 1888. Canadian' Woman fellow or Music. • r t n - � • •(v ofrete . On i) )� ivfrs. W. J.:M1 rt tario, Canada, who has been 10. Leaden 1 fog t•h; last three in: n!hs atilt: 'ng the 1 Naticinai ('allege "1' t US:r a= ir.. zn itueesssful in pnssitig',tit • be' ba'si'l exarninatitin ..- with • dist heat. n • saes I.1,'A• h,. ler adrilla le eke i4 -n,; t' •f '-rser of..the -National ( ),lee tee: ;1i h.er gt+eat ahii3Cics H11l enable it 't t fulfill. It islatele that t 1.1 y 'i els in passing the I etre Sh p i"a el e. tp:' the tests tire volt .t4`-'!`( 1' re, Morrow displayed kn"o ,',•- 1- ity seldomen•et with, 1.1 '•t 1 •' • elle and 'admirers in Pei'', rl • i• ' •. where' in Canada and tae i tee received the news ( f her , •.:tit -much piea.sure, tend a h oar., n awaits..this'lady 'th her re r•- tilt(, has tong held a- h:i.h 1,•a' tri •1.• Musical world 'both 'h (` •.latus t ''1.! Tlnttei'States, and is,a-(:;old. ' The motor eke is the.lntest develop• meat that the litt'dl('1 profession Iut, to deal with. 1't aliveIt•s, that th• ,-(' •ho ire ti II tit lh:u Cir.)... ' Your . Doctor • Can cure your. Cough or Cold, no question about that, but •• why go to all the trouble and inconvenience of looking him.up, andthen of having hisprescriptien .. filled, when you can step into any , drug store In Canadaa and obtain a bottle of SHILOH'S CURE','. for a quarter. Why pay two to five dollars when .a twenty-five.pent bottle of SHILOI, will cure you as uickly? Why not do as hundreds of thousands of Canadians have. done for the past thirty-four ears : let SHILOH be your; doc- tor oc totor•. whenever a Cough or Cold ap ears: � LOH will cure you, y i and all druggists back up this statement with a positive guarantee. The next time you have a. Cough or Cold cure it with November 22nd 19(* ummanowommishommommen good tea" It las 'that "Rich Fruity Flavor." wbiob . belongs to -Red. Bose Tea alone, 'rises--a'SI 301 35, 40, .50 and 4o cts, per lb. in lead packets T. H. NOTABfiOOKB. ST. (JOHN. N. B. WINNet'a4- TORONTO. t WCLMN41•N, ST., 1. Ne°wfoundland and.Canada, Cai$'adiails'who .desire to' be patriotic (arid who .does. not?) can do no .mitre patriotic thing •thrtse days than ,ti) .cul-. ovate a'knowledge. ' of •New'foundland: • The' union of Netl foirndland.and'Can- 'ada would 'bt::a sed .thing for bell, abut it must be a. union based on mutual understanding. ' I£ •Canadians would spend more of their holidays there they' would be assisting;, in the' work of 0th' andln on b geed nderst e hin�• a o u rat: g e g 1 sides -•, This is closely hewed,. up with the qutstti)n of iiuprov,ed cotninunica- tion. Canada is by alleadds Newfound- nd i with o lands nearest, neighbor and, ,g railway • and - steep -ship: connections, will' come increased travel . and trade. and Increased .desire .for closer union.' Newfoundland is as. yet a land of ex-. tractive industries, and these along but. few lines. The development of rna'nu- i. factoring 't -in the 'Maritimne •Prewinces' *Ili - thus provide work for • the fisher- men •n1.en of Newfoundland in the . winter 'and bring about a..eloser. 'bend of un- loll n- loo than anything else could. In' this connection The St. John's (Newfound-' lend) Herald speaks of the: prospects for the •comieg winter'in a way`w'hich . shows how important Canada might become to ,the old: colony,. and what danger there is of the good work be- ing nullified„ by the influence of . the. Eastern States. It says: '+Owing to the suspension of some of the . northern amines and the intended, stoppage., of some of the 'principal saw -Mills in the interior this fall, there will be Same hundreds of men thrown out of em- • ployment, and .th',ugh, the Walisan The ,Aerated Oven of the Souvenir completely changes the air therein every few minutes withoutlessen- ing ing the heat one iota. • tar '."'"'... 1. ure, cold air is drawn • An Aerated Oven into the aerated flue and heated to the exact temperature . of the oven before it enters it, This Aerated Oven can only be had on the �UVEN1R The ventilating principle of other ranges simply g draws in cold air direct to the .•oven,heats it and allowsescape. Suppose . you have a pan•of it to P PPo biscuits or a sponge cake in the oven, and' a gust of 'cold air ' strikes them - they fall flat at • once and the whole baking is spoiled. Every Souvenir is absolutely guaranteed by the makers. The GURNEY.IILDEN CO., Limited. Hamilton, Winnipeg, ,Montreal and Vancouver. 401 AVentilated Oven D�:AV,....^IS & R �..•'OWLAi'ND AGENTS - 'CLINTON The Biter. fit. .Local papers chronicle the fact .that a few • days age 'there was found. lying oh the high.sand beach of Big Sandy Pond, Lake 'Ontario, a- bald eagle, •wits its talons firmly imbeddedein.the back of a. huge pickerel'. Frederick. C. List, of Syracuse, chanced to discover the, unuual sight. ,as he was drawing .his boatwup on the beach. Listf who is an enthuelastic fishermen, explains the strange. phenomenon' in this manner; " The big . eagle •-sweeped :dawn cit the surface of the water: and placed its talons deeply :in the, pickerel,• ;which -• happened. to 'be so . heavy that.' the, •eagle could not pick it'up,,'btit, on the •other,hand, was drawn under the sur- face and drowned. 'The pickerel probe ably died of its injuries; and the fish •and bird were. wiished ashore a. Pew' •.days. later.•,. The:picketel:awls• a.beau- . • thus 'specimen' ofthe tinny 'tribe, and Mr. List -says .`tvould • have .weighed close to fifteen pounds.' them. • w 1he.,country .0n ti (110(01' car (,1 '(' 1 ' • Lost For Three Days. eye to take a too rapid lime:es:aloe at ti1r1:h his clothes all t nn' and •hint- l the .things it• encounters and that That self 01111(181 a wrecic•from exposure, 'toil- ;;!yeets'the 111eC11ti1tlsitl of the eve, \ :• titan (,nIlup limped Into Vancouver, recently after having toad his way' through the forest from the Bt' tc(nprnt;,• ILSs tannin, .nine,' How t: Sound, Ile waS los '' titre did not prepare us for the con(tl• tions of modern tamest and \while it IA 1f to them 11111115. unfort mines will absorb a• goodly number it is doubtful if they. will have room for all who are seeking work and the rest may have to migrate to Sydney o1• the Eastern States for tate winter, topee cure lucrative octupet!.n. 1t is, feared •by careful observers that there will not be as good tulles in St, John's this .fall • and winter, as in preterite( yeten. in the woods for three day.(, and thank I keret eirentustfnces must oe( ter.-Ln:1• t his lucky stars he is alive to tell the I tale. He had to struggle thr ,ugh dens:- '1st -grown underbrush, over huge fallen ; logs, and to Cross streams swellen by t the late ruins into torrents. From Grain to Bread In Three Hours. A record time for converting granti into bread.lhas been eatabliahetl by a Canadian farther. Wheat whi 01 was in a the sheaf at 3 o'clock in the atf (t nt'ott 1 was made into seeneo before ti t aterelr•, When operations began t• tva:. n t mei d le the barn with nbnut half a :ea 1 itt grain in the sheaf. Hemel,. it. was u thrasher. ("onnerted with thls eels a gasoline engine. The engine who wart- ; ed, the sheaves were fed Li r tilt' 1 thrasher and the grain was d °t'' • •rel tr4 1 a bin. The potter wan then tte f r:'1 to the cleaner, and the work ' r iinnli'r.' Ing the newly-thrnsli d witett 1 t•, Ib ur '\ 11S tiulekly carried the •ugh, 'I':t•• root t,f the !ask was wtttsy.-London tt,rtt. The Ideal Beverage 4 NOON A PAL, A►.is, palatable; full of the virtues of malt and hops, and in sparklilttg condi- tion, k the ideal hev(rage. 'Now when chemists announce its -purity, and judges he merit, one need look no further. atm Had • Cream' Next. Day This is a story that 38 .being told anent the recent."disclosures" re.local milk siipply,,says The' Toronto. World: A very -mild west end clergyman had • for some time been displeased with•the quality' of the milk served _him. r •. At, length he determined to remonstrate with his milkman for .supplying. such weak :stuff. 'tie began: .. "I've been Wanting to see.you'' in re- gard,tti, the. quality of •milk which you are'serving, the i, . "Yes, sit," uneasily answered • the del.r .. ae. ,.0PBottle in a the•�■ V nt d u I only .w'ant to• Say, co• minister,. "that I. use the milk , fol•• r.,sre<rr aires••ffit and e2 -all• druggists, • x lus�ivel and 'not )p5P. P. C i sur s. Y stat r d 1 1 Y 'Toronto. for christening;:'• • OR, T. A. $LOCiii't!, Limited; . WIFE "CURED �IISW_ P f LA IPE Quebec Man tells how the Great Con- sumptive omsumptive Preventative was an all-round Benet "My wife. took La: Grippe when she was in Ottawa," says R. N. Defoe of Northfield Farm, Que., in an interview. "She got a bottle of.Psychine and after using it for a, few days she was quite well.;. I took a cold and am using it and am getting all right. • T.. think Psychinc is .one of the •best tonnes on the market to -day." 'There you have the whole •matter in, a. nutshell.' La .Grippe and colds are among, the forerunners of consumption..'• This man had one,' his wife had the other. Psychine-not• only cured both but it built' them up ,so that their bodies are. strong enough to' resist disease. All' seeds of comsurnption'are killed.by. • • (Pronounced Si -keen) the Pandora Thermometer The thermometer on the Pandora range oven. means precisely in ac- curacy to the cook what the square and compass mean to the draftsman. Without the square and compass .thedraftsman would have to work en- tirely by guess,just as you do without an ac- curate ' and reliable thermometer- on your oven. The Pandora thermometer reducescooking to an exact science. You know precisely how much heat you have and what it will do in a, given titne. - It is one of' the small things which slakes the Pandora so much different and better than common ranges. k it L t: c• k - W�rilsotte�a tas►d �'abfortai,i ti ' e Lonadon, trizeontoi Mo#i►tr(al. Winnipeg; Vwtn(t:ovi�►(sr, St. John, NSB,, Hamilton PI R !.., N