The Clinton News-Record, 1906-12-06, Page 6CUntoL IleiNadtecoalt
_ANL
Outdoor Life
leaS its diSadVantarle
InsectRites Braises.,
Wreaelate, Nara:Wet lam
'meta, Ithennistism, Selatlea.
All these yield instantly to
•Ifirst's Pain
Exterminator
•A family remedy that has
laeld its place for over thirty
yeaxs, 25e. at all dealers.
Try Wars little Liver
Irina:for an fortes of humor,
eruption of the skit. A s1
your dealer or send us
• direct. ,A. handsome ,
souvenir card free.
THE F. F. DALLEY CO., Limited
Hamilton, Ont, les
Cold:Sterage,,Centres
..sosea
It ie eiaid that. the lion•. Sidney Vise
her during the present session a the
• 'Dominion Ptaxliament will intxoduve
legislation °Merin encouragement to
plans for introducto,o1d' storage
warehouse3 for fruit in thepp1e dis-
trieta of the country. No less, than
millions of barrels a *apples' have
•gone to vtaete th Ontario during 1,130
present season -in summer and fall
varieties for which there is no market
and Which at present there in no
means ot keeping until they can be
properly distributed to the centres
where they would- btowelcomed. It
seeine evident that the next great
step itt the fruit business is the estab-
lishment of these cold sterage plants
where, for. a Mall price, apples that
ROW Foto under the trees can he ware-
11011Sed%'• goodcoliatin wpm want-
ed. The waste of a generation ink -
presses elteryOne who has lived inthe
country, and those 'who. travel see it
still going en iw all directions. The
proposed remedy will not Stop all
this waste, but, it will arrest and ter
duce it -will show the way and give
the country a start inwards a more
ecenornical handling of One Of it
Meet valuable crops. EVell a email
boy, as he • Sees, the ground at with
rotting apples, ' wonders what is
wrong with the world he has coxne
to live in. There ought to be, and
there is, something that can bo done
to repair this waste. -Saturklee'
Night. •
•
President fiamuel Spencer of the
Southern Railway, and al number of
companions, were killed in •a • train
wreck Lear Lynchburg, Va.
Established 1879
Whooping Cough, Croup, Bronchitis
Cough, Grip Asthma, .Diphtheria
Creaelene is a boon to Asthmatics'
Does k not seem more effective to breathe in a
remedy ,.to cure disease of the breathing organs
than to -take the remedy into the stoniach? •
• It cum because the air rendered strongly anti.
septic is carried the diseased surface with
every breast?, prolonged and constant treat-
ment. It uable to mothers with small
clifldren.
Those of a consumptive
tendency find imnaediate
relief from coughs or in-
flamed conditions of the
throat.
Sold by druggists.
Send postal for booklet..
1.EEMING, MILES CO.,
1.40.ted, Agents, Mont-
real, •Canada. • 307
BY=LAW
A BY-LAW TO PROHIBIT TI -IE.
SALE OF LIQUOR IN THE
•' TOWNSHIP OF STANLEY '
The Mealoipal rowel& of the Town-
ship of Stanley beeeby enacts • as fol-
lows :
1.-Ttat tbe sale by retail. efspiAte
ruous, fermented, • or other' •manufate•
• tired, Itquars Is and shall he prohibi-
ted An every tavern, inat Or other
amuse eor place of public entertain-
ment • in tile' said municipality, and
the -sale thereof, except by ',wholesale,
eis• and •'shell ha prohibited in every
•:Abort. 01 vlaee other than a house of
emblie entertainment in the said num-
• 2 -That the vote of .the electors' of
• • •
the said Township of Stanley: will be-
taken on, the By-law. by the deputy -
returning officer hereinafter named on
the Seventh day of . January. One.
' Theusand Nine Hundred. and. Seven,
• -commencing at Mite a'clock in the
7. morning ad continuing until five
o'clock in the alternoon at the, under-,
mentioned places:
a D. No. 1 at S. H. No. .1.-LMaieolin
McEwen, - Deputy R. 0.
P, D, No, 2 at S. II No. 14 -John
Murdoch, Deputy R. 0. ••
No. a at Town Hall -James
• MeClymont, Deputy R: 0. •
P: D. No. 4 at S. IL No. 5inaVilliam
Bothwell, Deputy. It. 0,
P. D. No. 5 at S. H. NO. 4-R0be3t.
Dewar, Deputy R. 0.
3 -That on the 18th day of Decem-
ber A. D. 1006` at his office in
Town Hall Hall of the Township ot Stan-
ley at the hour of one o'clock in• the
• afternoon the reeve shall appoint in
• .-writing, signed by . himself, lecio, per-
sons to attend at the final morning
up of the votes by the clerk, andOre
person to attend at each .pollieg place
on behalf of the persons, into:rested in
and desirous el promoting the; passing
of this by-law, and a like number on
behalf of the persons interested' in
• and desirous of opposing the passin• g
of this by-law.
4 -That the Clerk of the said Muni-
cipal Council of the Township .of'
Stanley shall attend at, the Town
Varna), at • the. hem or 12
o'clock in the forenoon on the eighth
• day of Jailuary A. D. 1907; to sum
ner the nuMber of Votes given for and
• against this by-law.
5 -This By-law shall come into
operation and be of full force and
effect on and after the fiest day of
May next after the final passing
thereof.
Council Chamber, Nov. 5ele 100e,
JAMES MeDIARMID,. nzpvz.
LaboreProble onlintrananta
The Panama qaestion is a public
one, and must be openly and frankly
discussed. It will belie. to be settled
in the heaved/ate future, and, the
coontry is not likely to bei misled by
demagogues. It is aot likely that
white labor from the United, Sats
min to any extent go to the Isthmus
to do the unskilled work. The great
army of shovellers must be made up
of West Iudian blaelt men or Asiatic
4'0-ca1led* coolies. Neither will the
question gef hours of labor as it 1:0-
leatee ter the *United Staten have any
proper bearing upon the digging of
the Panama Canal. All these things
must be Worked out in practical ex-
• perience on the Isthmus. The feeling
againSt Chinese labor in this country
has lett to an agitation against the
use of Mimeo in Panama. The two
• eases are totally different, and ought
not to be contouuded.. Araerioans
desire labor under conditions a roes-
onable perMaueuce. They could net
I go. to 'the Isthmus of Panama with
• their families to rebuilt permanently.
• ln no possible , way could they . be
made nearly as well off as they are
at keine. Chinese coolie labor, on
the other hand, is migratory, can be
SeCitred for fixed periocki in large
quantities, arid be handled (m the re-
lay plan], • It would be a highly fool-
islf volley to try to create induce-
ments, that would persuade Americans
to leave their families and homes to
go to Panama to perforin earnmon
labor for a period of yeere, 14 was
bad enottelt to take them to the phu-
ippithes as enlisted soldiers. It would
be unspeakable folly to try to per-
suade them to go to the Isthmus as
laborers. Common 8ense must assert
itself agatnst the demagogues on a
subject like this.-Frovi 'The Pro-
gress' of the World," in the Arnericalll
Monthly Review of Reviews for Dec-
ember.
About Municipal Matters.
Those who follow municipal politics'
are beginning to prick up their ears
and sniff about for trace of the game.
There is a good deal ,of thinking, hut
as yet 'there seems to he nothing for
publication, The municipal arena will
baveconsiderable attraCtiOn owing to
the new regulations by -which our
reeves -and their deputies will constit-
tile the County Council.
• Many -in fact allof the . present
Members of the County Council -would
ltko te 'return to the Council again.
TiMy. have their eyes on the warden-
s -hip and no doubt would like • to land
that plum'.
• But' there, are men in Out townehiiilk
COMIC:US' WhO. have eever had, the plea -
sere of warming a seat in the county
chamber and are !therefore cplite pea -
Feely casting eireir oyes that Way.
These men will hardly care to stop
aSkle for :Wen the - old war horses.
• It is a laudable a:mbition aral one
worthy 'of ;every citizen; *desire to
have. sonte sharo. in moulding public
oniniOni and in tra.neacting public -bus-
• iness. It 'takes al Rood male to make
a, .goo6 -public servant. 'Every.. Com-
numity has its good men: These men
'should be -indueed to enter the Siel:-
ii�
of their respeetive communiteee,
end they should be eleft royally, sup-
ported. • • I
We want the licit: men in our coun-;
ene that we Cali get. Here they will;
learn the iturdamentals •of goverainenb;.
and their yearS Of eiperienee wilI fit
them ta occupy pesitions in Our feder-
al and provineial parliaments. .
CORM.
...ADE lp."'ANY'DETAll,
,METALLIC
LIMITEU
TORONTO &WINNIPEG
The Australian Federal. Govertenent
is contemplating the • proeeciition' of
the .Australian blanch of the Staralate
Oil Trust. • ' •
• . .
•
• •
•
, •
FOR OVER SIXTY YEARS:- •
• Mrs. Wilslow's Soothing .Syrup has
been. used by Millions of mothers for
their children while teething. If dis-
turbed by night and :broken of your
rest' by a sick child suffering and
crying with pain of cutting teeth send
at once and get a bottle Of "Mrs.
Soothing Syrup" for child -
rep. teething. It will relieve the poor
little sufferer inunediateiy, Depend
'upon it, mothers, there is no mistake
about it. It cures Diarrhoea; regu-
lates 'the Stomach and Bowels, cures
Wind Colic, softens the Gums, reduces
Inflammation and gives tone a.nd en-
ergy to the • whole system. "Mrs.
Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for child-
ren teething 'is pleasant to the taste
and is the prescrinthIn of one of the
• oldeet and best , female physicians and
nurses •in the United States. Price
25 : centsa bottle. Sold by all drug-
gists throughout the world. Be sure
and ask for "Mrs. Winslew's Sooth-
ing Syrup:"
4.4i4•41444....
-NOTICE.-
' Take notice that the aboVe ie a
• tree copy of a proposed, by-law which
• NO been taken into consideration b
the Municipal countil of the.?roWnsbp
• of Stanley, and which will *lei liliallY
• passed by IAM said Couneil (in the eV -
'int of the assent of the electors being
c, obtained thereto, am proVided the
I'Llquor License Act) after one month
;from lite first pliblieatiOn thereof in
The Clinton NWS-rteCOrd, the date
01 whieh 'first publicathin was Sixth
day of December, and that at the
hour, day and plate's therein fieed for
taking the v,otee ef the eleeters the
polls will be, •held.
JOHN' E. ITARNWELL,
K
40NOON
Indio Pale Ale
Brewed from ate
lacked hops, choice
barley malt and
pure Spring water,
with the utemet
care, Bottled at
, the brewery depete
to ensure proper
handling.. That is
why Labittt's Ale
is equal to the fin*
est, surpaosed by
none, though it
coats consumers only about half as much es imported goods.
44484* 44 0:,•+•:••:14010 444•11101114.
144, 11;*
Wintet Term opens Jan 2nd
Here are some of the re-
cent records made by the
•
0:0
EI4LIOTT
44,
TOROIITOI ONT.
bot of 'the last 250 calls. from, bus-
ileeSS firms we have filled FIFTEEN'
of the positiens Wo had no One else
ready to send. We have also had 82
lealls for business college teachers.
101 ex -students of ether business col-
leges or Sher -gland sehoolS were en-
l'011ed here dring the last two years.
We bellave we lfave 'tbe best Colinnet-
Ojai school in Canada. Weatherceighly
satisfy Mt students,Write to -day for
Ca.1.0.10gue. '
4; W. J. Elltott,
e:e Cor. Yonge and •
• Alexander Streets. 4. .
•
4.4.• 4.4. 4.4444 4,4. 4.4444 •
geneereperee..--e- •
Which he produced imee and beans of
many and divers kinds, surpassing the
NORTH BY BARICCANOE litrnagirried ttle pTork leatnd beZ: could
author of the var ies." never
• '
take on so many •forrns.
Mosquitoes and Sand -Flies.
IN THE LAND OF THE INDIAN AND • The only drawbacks to the perfect
THE HUDSON BAY CO. • enjoyment of a trip to the Height of
Land are the mosquitoes and sand-
• flies. They are beyond the power Of
Scotch Rule the Posts -Journey Froth mortal to describe, and are productive
of more forceaul and picturesque Ian -
Ville Marie to Height of Land- guage than anything else known. to
Lazy Indians Who Do Not Want to mostmanThEeini-e. beneerueshe
de mancoirinitdheswpeaarr-
tywas
Do Anything Else Elut Eat -Have in two languages. At night it was
the Simple Life Down to Perfection often Impossible to get a moment's
-A Beautiful Country. .. sleep, although' every Precaution was
taken. It was after our return to eivi-
' There were 'four of us leaving Ville lization that we learned of a ICentuc-
lVfarle-a young lawyer, known as the kien's method. This end colonel would
Attorney -General; a professor, .whea never use a netting over his bed, and
forgot all about his text -book on ellY- the reason given was that in the first
etas; Ernie, the happy, hardy French- ..part of the night the celenel was too
Canadian giiide, cook • and all-round drunk to :pace the bites, and in the
handy man, and the writer; J. C. Roes, second half the mosquitoes were too
special corresPondent • of .The Toronto drunk' to bite.
Globe. We had tis o birch-barlis, enough As it is, the mosquitoes are an effec-
tive and new hind of gold et...e-ouring
one of his lust for gold in very short
order. '
The most -sought-after • en,an • seemed
to be the Attorney -General. was
dear to mosquitoes; sand -flies. found
' him a treat." Inthe daytime bis spirits
rose high, and he 'would' break into
.song at frequent intervals, saying that
fr.-The north countree is the beet °Gun-.
pork and beans to feed an' army„ floine•
oatmeal, 'rice, dried apples and canned
goods (despite the Chicago investige-
tieee), and we were bound for the
• "north countree."
After 4 long, heartbreaking portage
of e2 miles from, Ville Marie to Ginies.
Depot; we launched our canoes .on the
.Quirizes Lae, and felt thateat last we
were pioneers.' The drst day was not
very propitious; a' canoe leaked and had ,
to be repaired, and then, later, a storm
arose, but we Watched It spend' its fury
froni the:Shelter of a Hudson Bay post.
Our way lak.aiong the old. Hudson Bay
route to Lake Abitibi and James Bay.
' For centuries. the "gentlemen adven... •
turers" had shared the country. vilth
the. redman gua his picteieSque birch -
hark and tepee. Now it is being inVad-
ed by trapper and trader, by prospector
and miner by surveyor •and railroad
-man,' by. l'uniberrnari and contractor,
and the Indian' will soon be tareed: to'
_seek nevi -Minting grounds. •
The Hudson Bay Factors.
Mrs. Gardiner, wife af a Sidney
tOwnethip fanner, WM attacked by a
bull. The eternal would probably
have killed her only for a, collie dog,
that rushed in and kept it busy until
Mrs. Gardiner Was rescued. •
• The Hudson 13ay posts are stattoned
every 60 or TO miles, each in charge of
manager or factor, who is loOked up-
on by the Indians as a Great White
Chief. Many of these factors are
Scotchmen, who have spent their whole
Jives. in the service -of the Hudscin Bay
Co. Some are haIfbreeds, but aleimey
every factor is married to a squaw. At
one Dost on the Quinzes an old Scot ex-
• tended -to us a .warm welccene, hie, only
regret being that lie had Mot his bag-
'pipes- to give US a tune. They were in
Ottawa being- repaired, and the old. man
mourned over them more than over the
absent members of his family. On the
walls of his Tog house were pictures of
Scottish heroes, of Scottish reements in
the van of the fight, of Scottish pipers
arid generals, and in his heart a love for
auld Scotia that a lifetime among the
Indians could not -efface. In answer to
Mir query re the state of trade, his ac-
cent shoe,ed his Highland extraction:
• !"There will not pe much pisness now
whatefer." The average value of an
• Indian's yearly catch of furs is $40. .
DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED
by local applicaltions, as Ihey am -
net r.eaeh the diseased portioes Of
the eat. There is only One way to
Care deafaese, and that is by eon-
stitutionel remedies., Deafness is
caeised by an inflamed conatiou 01
the mucoue liaing of the letleitachien
Tubei: When, this tube is infletned you
hex° a renibling Sound Or l'operfeet
hearing, and When it is entirely dos-
ed, Deafness is the result, arid unleee
the inflammation cart be taken out
and this alba restored to its nermal
condition, hearing will be desteoye
forever ; nine cases milt (if ten at
caused by Catarrh, which is welling
but an. infIeme,d condition of the muc-
ous surfates.
We will give Gee Hundred Milers
for any case of DeafamS (caused by
Only ' Good. Indian a Dead One.
. Another factor, a haltbreed, but a
• clever business man, was very 'indig-
nant at the Indians, calling them *lazy,
good -for• -nothing dogs." -According to
•hlin, "the only non Indian is a' dead.
Indian." He stated that. the Indiaas
would not Work, nor hunt, nor dsh as
long as they had a bite to eat. When
hunger compelled them they Wotild go
out and shoot a moose or cateh fish,
and then return and aet the glutton un-
til that was finished. •Certainly the In-
dians take life easily. To see them bask-
• ing in the sun day after day, doing ab -
:whitely no work, caring for nothing as
• long as they were ted often and mue.h,
one is conyincee that they have the
simple life theory down fine.
This halfbreed faetor was horn 500
miles further north, He had never seen
a large town or city -the largest being
Mattawa. He had taught himself to
read and write, but was a well-informed
man, despite the disadvantages under
Which he labored. All the conneetiOn
the factors haere with the outside world
is When their Supplies come in - great
canoes, laden with three andtour tons
of freight, and paddled by ten or a
dozert men.
The recent rush to the goiaIleicie ir
northern i:tiebec brought in many eros -
rectors, and to a Certain extent brought
excitement and novelty to the Hudson
Pay mete Our party carried Deoseee-
tors' pickS, hut as no one seemed very
strong on the prospecting Idea the picks
were returned "most as geed as new,"
Ernie, the genial cook, was the life
tef the party In more ways than one. Ile
Wag not trained to bake bread, how -
and his efforts alcmg that line
wet fleetly the death of the party. The
produce a hie breatt-making eiterte Was
tree," .etee but When the mosquitoes
tortured hie Pred body-. and the, cold
• grey dawn • caine. around Without any
eleep, he would sit up and murmur:
• .
"I Was away. last ntglit, dear' mother,
• And I was away the night before; '
But if• eYer I getlipme"again, dear
mother, •.
ytt never go 'may an More."
• But we all enjoyed thetrip; despite
the mosquitoes.. It WaS irnpossilste not
to. enjoy the glorious sunshine. the
freedom, the splendid stretches of Wood...
land and the long reaches of sunlit
waters. Everything:NV:Ls nevir'and vir-
gtn. Tire forests: were untouched,. and
uneearred by the hand of man, and were•
as dense as tropical jungles. It was -
novel toexplore new bodies': of -water-
great ,strange seas that took days • 'to
•croSS.
A Land. of Lakes and' Rivers-.
•
The northland is a land of lakes and
rivers, incomparable in natural beauty
Andescentry, full 01 great forests of Ca-
thedral pines, Which breathe health and
•sweet music, making the tired traveler
glad te ger beneath their ozone -laden
branches. It IS the land of the one In-
dian,' 'and- his trails and tepees; of
Hudson Bay traders and trappers; a
land of stillness and splendor; and In
our journey north the charm of it all
caine over us, ana we were glad that
' we were alive, glad that we hadsuch
a heritage, and glad that the •opening
of this country to tourists and travel-
ers would soon be accomplished
There was no 'question when we
reached the Height of' Land, . Ore„et
mountains, calling the Swinging Moun-
tains by the Indiana; barred our way.
Donn one side the waters rushed in
a mad race to reach the Ottawa and
St. Lawrence, and -be' log in the bread-
•Atlantle; wbile down the other side the
waters.parnea and leaped in their tush.
to James Bay.
eateaTh) that calmot be cured tilir traded to some Wilms for fish, but it
Hall'Catarrh 'Cure. Send ler It was noticed that after that transaction
culars free. Ernie gave MI Indians a wide berth, and
CHENEY Si Co., TOledd, O.
elTHAW felt at ease In their preeefiee-
P. .
the most he would do was to call` a
Sold by Tinge lee ,, 7Se. loud "Quay! QUO.Yr to them In Imes -
Take Hail's FamilY Pills for ecee Ing. ("Quay" is GOOd-glaY.") His long
stipation. suit was the beanery plant, from
AMMOANNIonme•••444so Amor I IN 4444.4.44•444.4444.4.4441.
eying effect to new regulations for
the better protection of the owners of
;great• which goes into special btris in
the elevators. 'Samples are te be
taken as the grain is put into the bins,
and when the grain comes out, 11 the
owner le not eatiefied that it is his
own Wheat, further samples will be
taken, and the two seta sent forward
to the chief inspector at Winnipeg,
whose deoleloa will be binding upon
both parties,
11,000 Acres Pee' Man.
One million, seven hundred thousand
'acres ef the best hunting ground in the
country, w•hioh has heretofore been open
to the public,will herealtee be re-
served for the use of 100 men as the
result of the formation of the New
Brunewlek Fish & Game Co, Limited.
This company has been ;formed in
Montreal and Is composed of wealthy
•men of Montreal, New York and other
places. •
The membership is limited to 100
and ,the (Meet of the company is to
have the beet facilities for hunting aqui
fishing during their vacations. The
lands in question have been leaeed
from the New Brunswick Railway (o.
and are situated in the Provinee of
New Brunswick. • The club gets the
right only to the shooting and fishing
privileges. A magnificent -club houee
will be erected, the cost of this build-
ing and grounds being estimated at
$50,000. In addition camps and cot-
tages will be located at various points
of vantage •and boats and launches pro.
vided for the use of members:
A corps of guides will be maintain-
• ed and a. system of fire protection fez'
the valuable timber limits will be ee-
tabliShed. The na:embership fee has been
fixed at $1,000 and the annual fee will
vary frorn $56 to $100, as may be ne-
cessary. •.
• The officers of the company are:
Lord Strathdona, . honorary president;
•Robert Meighen, Montreal, president;
H. H. MoLeam Nice -president ; Alfred
Zeeley, treasurer; W. T. Whitehead,
• manager.
Street Car Charges Bruin.
• There were exciting. times in the 3'1.•
einitY ef the nockliffe ranges the other
-morning. .Motorman Fitssitrution,a, ors
his initial' run to the Rookliffe ranges.
had to rub hiseyes before he could be-
• neve his sight. .Just as the car round-
ed the curve whefe•the old militia eamp
uied to be . a large black betar ambled
,peacefully ahead along the tracks. The
'motorman • at once assuxned the ag-
• gressive; Pulling up the fender, he
• charged the arifmal. Bruin heard the
*clatter, rolled to one skit' then climb-
ed the hill and gat out ofsight.
CANADA'S WHEAT.
United States Carried Third of Last
Year's Crop.
•Out of a total of 55,509,720 bushels of
Canadian Northwest wheat ehipped
during the crop year ending Aug, 31st
last, 'United States routes capturedone-
third of the watershipments or actual-
ly a total of 16,912;631 bushels. • The
Department of Trade and Cemrneree
.hat just received the figures of the
shipments which passed throtigh •the
elevators of Fort William and Port Ate
then The total was 55,309,720 bushels.
Of this quantity 5,882,453 bushels, went
out by rail and 49,627,267 bY water. The
• ports through which the water ship-
ments of wheat passed Were as folloWn
•
Montreal ***
•ireeot Mabee
idaan d •
Owen pound .....
dollingweod 41444441414144. a
Petra Edward 4444441171441
Gederieh ...,... . .. . ..
Meatord •
Poet Colborne
Thorold . ••••.(6•4
Eingetott • . . . . ..
Preseott .
Pushels.
9,321,013
.8,450,042
3,900,527
2,782,500
• Faithfid Oftf Fire Engine.
• A special cable despatea from Lon,:
don to The New York Times statet that'
at a fire the other night at Bray, in
Dr:gland, a fire engine Which was pre-
sented to the village ire /737 by Lady
Coleraine or Canoahill, was effectively
•used- ,
Within the city's din and dust,
Its heat and toil a.nd friction, •
I dwelt, as many Mortals must.
• Tiii saddened with- affliction. ,
•, I called a' doctor, one I knew •
To be a skilled relieVer
Of htiman.ills. Said he, "Sir; you
Are stricken with hay fever."
t 00,140
5,227,804
1,491,201
588,852
135,211
447,063
876,582
59,657
Then to a cool resort I fled
• As soon as time would let ma •
And telt all right in; heart a.110 head
tintil new grief beset me.. . .
She Is a widow;--ob,. stich grace'
• How can / ever leave herl•
A pretty; grass one. F'ataL easel •.
Once more I have hay fever
-Nixon Waterman In woman's' Horne.
Companion. • .
our 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 Canada and obtain
a bottle of SHILOH'S CURE
for aquarter.
• Why pay two to five dollars
• when a twenty-five cent .
• bottle of SHILOH will cure you
as quickly?
Why not do as hundreds of
thousands of Canadians have •
done for the past thirty-four
years : let SHILOH be your doe- •
• tor whenever a Cough or Cold
• appears. ••
SHILOH WM mire you, and all
• druggists back upthis statement
• with a positiee guarantee.
The next time you have a
• Cough or Cold cure it with
As stated, the quantity of North-
west wheat which was shipped by
United States emtes was 16,912,631
bushele, of which Buffalo alone eecured
16,338,449 bushels, oely 958,920 bushels
of which was carried in Canadian ves-
sels. Port Euron got 019,000 bushels
and Ierle, Pa., 954,576 ,bushels, of which
512,182 bushels was earried in Cana -
dem vessels.
An order.10-Clounell has been passed
under the Manitoba, arree Aet to 1509
A
eeearee/earee‘ellkiere.reeree...ekereeeeeeee.
WINTER TERM
oF THE .
CLINTON BUSINESS COLLEGE
_• Affiliated with Whigham Huai.
nese COIlege.
OPENS JANUARY 2nd
—Thai:I—the most modern, thor-tt,
ough and successful institution
of its kind in Ontario. Excellent
staff of feathers; unexcelled eq-
uipment: large attendance.: act- •
Uhl Inisinees sekonl. During
Novetnber we had 20 times as
many calls from leading concerns‘'
for Bookkeepers. Stenographere
and Telegraphers as we had
graduates to send.
Enter any time.
Individual instruction,
Our handsome CHRISTMAS
CATALOGUE sent (tee on appli-
cation to
GEORGE SPOTION, PRINCIPAL
Dect bar 6th 1906
The Cost of a
Furnace
really begins after you buy it and pay for it. It
o'omes in the amount of fuel you feed to it and in
repairs. The best furnace is actually the cheapest.
Sectional View of Buck's Ludo Furnace
Buck's "Leader)/ Furnace is built to give cilt.2a heat, lots of
• it and to last a lifetime.•
Buck's
"Leader" Furnace
Ask us for our Heater Catalogue. It is full of informa-
tion on house heating.
The WM. BUCK STOVE CO., Limited •
Brantford •Montreal •Winnipeg 4;ASreiTA\ •
0.a.
Ai* D
Its ficepot is in sections—it will never wear out.
Its proportions of firepot and radiating surface are exact,
every heat unit in the fuel being extracted and used.
• Its radiator is of solid steel and every joint in it is
absolutely air and gas-tight.
• It can burn wood as successfully as coal, the feed -door
being very large. •
It requires no expert to rim it and will stand rough usage.
Its massive construction and scientific principles make it
the most durable, powerful and economical heater ever built.
• An absolute guarantee goes with every
HARLAND BROS.,
Clinton, Ontario.
.4ameemammeme
HygienicallyCooked
• The doctor orders
meat broiled for his
patients—he wants it
hygienically cooked in
pure oxygen, with all
the nourishing juices
Meat Iroalaiscitedthein saweet tasty
Weil...VtAi P70
flavor retained.
comes out of the oven in exactly the same condition
as if broiled. The Souvenir's Aerated Oven causes
,
meat therein to be con- •
. •
,
stantly surrounded by
fresh oxygen, and really
roasts it. Most ovens
only bake meat.
• "nay Souvenir is absolutely
. euareetted'by the: makers.
The GURNEY-TILDEN CO,
Limited --
BAtilATON, */WII1PMI. MOSTREM..
IrtkligOiNglt • 403
- k! •
)
'111111111111101e.M1150
DAVI SI& 'ROWLAND AGENTS
• CLINTON
• When Writing a letter
ig advisable when writing a letter,
.tio place youename and address in thd
upper left hand corner of the envedope,,
•Many letters haVe Veen, saved from be-
ing sent to the dead letter office by
so doing, •especially if the address is
not intelligibly written. Or iS wrong.
Dueing 1905 more • than• 11,000,000
pieces of mail went astray in the
United States for the. reason of line
• prof/dr or poorly • 'written addresses
and in many eases no address at all.
The• greater • majority of the mass
went to the dead letter, °Mee the
most of which to be destroyed. This
advised •precaution if followed k will
save much worry and a,nnotyance. For
a small eum you can got envelopes
with your name and address printer
on at The Newi-Ilecord office.
. Sett Detente*
"Xttiturptised at you," Said Mee y,
"trying to borrow a dollar faith that -
fellow Harduppe. You're surely tot in
such awful need 91 money."
"No," replied Shrude, "but 1 felt sure
Herduppe was. Anticipated him, that'e,
all."-Cathelle Standard and Times.'
Afraid to COmb Back,
"HOU' Cali SkInnem afXord be stay ei
long In Europe,"
"it's a good deal cheaper than fi
Would be to come back here and pay
his debts," -Detroit Free Prese,
Too Busy Then.
41low fur did de mule kick yeti'!"
"Don't ax me. Thlnk 1 ma time ter
measure de distenee?"-eAtlanta COO-
atittition.
The Kingston schooner Queen af bfes
Lekes. foundered near Sedits.'Point,
The crew escaped in, a yeael,
HIS. WIFE'S LUNGS
*BOTH AFFECTED .
But the Great Consumptive Preven-
tative brought Health and Happi-
ness to his Home
"Our doctorsaid there was no cure for
my wife as both her lungs were affected,"
says Mr. L H. Walter, of Pearl Street,
Brockville, Ont. ' "It was a sad disap.
pointment to Us both, just starting out in
life only married a short time. But before
she had finished the first bottle of Psychine
the pain in her lungs, quickly went away,
and after taking eix bottles Mrs. Walter
Was a new creature and perfectly Well
again'
• That is just one of the many fa:11111de
into which Psy?hine has brought hope,
health and happiness. It is a living proot
that Psychine cures Consumption. But
don't wait for Consumption. Cure your
LaGrIppe, your Cough, your Bronchitis,
your Catarrh, or your Pneumonia with the
remedy that never falls-
PSYCHINE
(Prone:mere
5001 Per Bottle
ifaegor alsoa In and $2—aft drugginith
DR. T. A. SLOCUM, Limited, Toronto.