The Clinton New Era, 1921-10-13, Page 4PALM FOUR
, The
Clinton New
Era
Thursday, October 13th ,I925
MENIMISIMMIZERINNUMIMSL
Foot Saved
in4 1):,a
"Nothing but Zain-Duk could haµve
done it," says Mrs. A. Berryman, 190,
John, Street, North, Hamilton,—in
describing how her right foot, crushed
by a waggon wheel, was healed, "The
flesh was terribly bruised, blackened and
inflamed, and I fainted away with pain.
When it was quite impossible for me to
move about, my husband's mother got
Pie to try Zam•Buk' It was surprising!
"Within TWO DAYS all swelling
and discoloration had disappeared and
pain was banished. In kUR DAYS,
through this timely use of Zam-Buk. 1
could get about as usual; the injured
foot was thoroughly /waled." ,
Zam-Bak is the powerful antiseptic
healer which quickly frees the skin of
corruption and disease and grows new:
healthy tissue. No common ointment
or salve can possibly campare with
Zam•Buk. Get a box to -clay 60c. all
dealers or FREE SAMPLE for lc.
postage from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto.
FACTS ABOUT .CAN A
Each Province has exclusive juris-
diction over property and civil rights.
The laws governing, ownership, inheri-
tance, wills gifts, the sale of real es-
tate, 'mortgages, matrimonial estates,
the prescription of tlepts, are provinic-
ial Taws. So too is the law governing
the formation of the courts and the
procedure followed,
CASTOR I.
For Infants and Children
i Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears
the
Signature of
`(4S 1 CS
BUILD/NG,
'fiM:VMS9YCOUR7fSYOFC.P.R'.
ws+rsmrre1.1.e=::,
With the exception of the Supreme
Court of Canada the Exchequer Court
and the Court of Admiratly, the courts
through Canada are provincial courts,
but in all the high courts the judges
are appointed by the Federal Govern-
ment and their salaries,are paid out of
the federal treasury.
Police magistrates and justices of
the peace are appointed by the provin-
cial government, and are under the sup-
ervision of the Provincial Attorney -
General. .
The total production of nickel in
Canada in 1920, is estimated at 60,-
500,000 pounds,.an increase of 38 per
,cent. over the 1914 production, and
.,an output that has been exceeded in
,,,Canada only during the four war years,
In the matter of capital investment in
fi nufagtturing, Ontario leads with a
total of $1,50$,011,000 of nearly one-
half of the aggregate. investment in
the other provinces is as follows:—
Quebec,
ollows—Quebec, $860,468,786; British Colum-
bia, $244,697,241; Nova Scotia, $133,-
,262,649; Manitoba, $105,983,159;
Alberta, $61,405,933; New Brunswick,
$74,470,879; Saskatchewan, $39,476,-
260; Prince Edward Island, $2,886,662
and the Yukon, $3,638,929.
Cih.ildre11 Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTOR 1 A
Silver production for 1920 is put at
13,500,000 ounces, or 2,500,000 below
that of 1919. The decrease was gen-
eral. Lead was the other mineral which
showed a decline, its 35,500,000
pounds being 8,827,000 less than the
1919 production.
The greatest manufacturing industry
of New Brunswick is that of turning
the products of the forest into finer-
' chantable lunber and pulp. The capital
invested in the industry amounts to
$21,200,000.
of c•,
7.9
S0/',`1(67 oktoc-
7 Z 9/a' ape
MP /de
doe opd�41'rd ieara
reacs
6 �9J!/ thuivrci'/t
HOW YOU CAN TELL
GENUINE ASPIRIN
Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross"
are Aspirin—No others I
There Is only one Aspirin, that marked
with. the "Bayer Cross'l—all other tab,
M'lota are only acid imitations.
; Genuine Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
have been prescribed by physicians for
nineteen years and proved safe by tail -
lions for Pain, Headache, Neuralgia,
Colds, 3i•]tenmatism, Lumbago, Neuritis.
Bandy tin boxes of 12 tablets—also
larger "Bayer" packages, can be had',
at any hug store. Mack in Canada.
Aspirin is the trade nark (registered
in Canada), of Bayer Manufacture of
ktanoaeetioaeldeater of Salioylicalid.
'While it is well known that Aspirin
moans Bayer manufacture, to assist the
public against, imitations, the Tablata o
3tayer Company, Ltd.; will be stamped
With their general trek m4; tth�
[tfayet Growl'
t>:x., ?>:'s•.l�fRk i:rhRfYi 6 K�'`'uk...
Ge g'I L J 9 �° .� Fi
e • �..THUR• CURRIE
,
Prinelpal McCI�I UnlvcrSlry
A New Task For Sir Arthur Currie
Sir Arthur Currie, who stepped out
of the -c 01 command of the Canadian
Army to take over the Principalship
of McGill University, should find good
=eve for his organizing ability and
driving force in McGili's Whirlwind
Campaign for $6,000,090, which bas
been arranged for the week com-
mencing November 16th. This sum,
large for a Canadian Jnlversity, but
small in comparison with the recent
campsyigns for Harvard, Yale, Cornell
and Princeton, is necessary to put
the groat Canadian University finan-
cially on its feet, and to help to re-
coup the losses caused by its active
participation in the war and by the
absence of many students on war ser-
vice overseas; also to renew and ex-
tend equipment, to increase profes-
sors' salaries; to extend the build-
ings to meet the requirements of the
larger number of students in attend-
ance since the close of the war; to
meet the special requirements of the
various faculties; to 'erect dormi-
tories for students, a, common dining
hall, professors' reshibncea, and a
convocation hall. Many leading
Montreal citizens have accepted the
responsibility of heading and ar-
ranging the work of the campaign,
which will be along lines made fami-
liar in Canada in years past.
McGill, from ha very inception,
nearly a hundred years ago, was
identified with scientific research and
application. The Faculty of Medi-
cine is the oldest Faculty of the Uni-
versity, and the first degree con-
ferred was the medical degree given
to Dr. Login. The practical trend
of McGill's teaching appealed to buei-
nnaa mon,• such as the late Sir Wil-
liam Macdonald and Lord Strathcona,
and no doubt influencocl them In
helping the University with substan-
tial endowments. The pre-eminence
of McGill in Applied Science is large -
due to the policy of Sir Wfittam
Dawson, during whose regime the
course of Domineering was cathed„
into the Department of Practical
Science, and later into the Faculty of
Applied Science.
Scientific Agriculture is taught
adder the auspices of 1jlcGill at the
affiliated Macdonald College ha Sta.
Anne de Bellevue which pais done a
great work in teaching improved
methods of farming, not only In the
$rovine.e of Quebec, but also through-
out
hr -out the whole of both Eastern and
Western Canada. At Masi, d
College aloo is a school for 'Ido' . ' 'rs
which has greatly elevated our
educational standards.
Bdat11I1 bas produced some of thei
foremost physietans, sorgoons, en-
gineers and mon of science of our
tans. John Hopkins UntversltY
owes its high standing to the ad-
mhnistraaton ins iW rated by a McGill
man, the into Sir William Osier, who
afterwards did similar work forsthe
Schobi of Medicine at Oxford llni-
veralt3
Lord Sh nessy is the honorary
chairman or the Qampabgn Com--,
mittee, while 11fr. E, W. Beatty, Rrodt- ,
dent of the Canadian Pacific, is the
active cbairmnn of the executive.
Others actively interested in the cam-
paign work are Sir Vincent Meredith,
President of the Bank 01Moi o
treal,
Lord Atholstan, proprietor
Montreal "Star", Sir Charles Gordon,
Sir Montagu Allan, and a committee
of 150 men prominent in Montreal's
banking, transportation, shipping,
and general business circles. In ad-
dition to those there is a strong com-
mittee of the graduates' Society,
with branches throughout Canada
and a methberahip in many parts of
the world.
Potosot ltdlge wore taken by
Nnra
1