HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1921-11-10, Page 4PAM FOUR
Good News for
1A1IONCIIITIS
Sufferers
FA*OOS DOCTOR ENDORSES PEPS
"Papa are exceptionally suited
for the treatment of bronchial
.a t nent5; their pectttiarcompo-
sition, their direct influence on
the membranes of the bronchi,
and their freedom from risky
narcotize, beinheir
many p ai eworthy p lnts
s "
Dr. GORDON STABLES.
These chilly wet November days,
when the old bronchial cough shows
signs of return, and the chest feels raw
,and tender, it is important to have handy
a box of Peps. They treat chest trouble
in the only direct scientific way.
You breathe the Peps medicine, and
it penetrates where ordinary medicines
cannot, As Peps tablets dissolve in the
mouth, the sufferer inhales with every
breath rich balsamic pine essences
with other volatile medicine, This air -
like Peps medicine carries comfort
and healing into tate chest; it soothes
the sore inflamed atr-tubes ; frees the
breathing; :loosens phlegm; allays the
cough, and relives the painful tight
feeling around'the lungs.
!spa'arsthesafest and most valuable
remody'ever'discovered for throat and
chest, With tlsesi you can defy coughs
sad colds; chills and other throat and
chest troubles. 50c, box, all dealers.
PS
TNE REMEDY
VOL, .DhLITHB
OUR
OTTAWA
LETTER
Ottawa, Oct. 28th, 1921
L_ _
fell, 'ot.tight, and there is little doubt
as to Elle result in the three provinces
01POegember 6,
And, while the Maritime Provinces
stand almost as a solid pralaux, 'the
p1'ovbtce of Quebec shoWs every
ger
bf its noted solidarity, Sir
Gouin, the strong mtus of `that pro-
vince, has accepted the nomination in
Laurier-Outremont, and in doing so
declaredhimself a soldier in the Liberal
Army, fighting tinder - the Illustrious
young leader, Mackenzie King, For
long the governmentproli;tganda-office
had been seeking to tell the people
that Sir Lower WSS leaning toward Mr.
Meighen's following and that he ;,was
likely to throw in his weight behind thz'
Meighen group but now they have that
to swallow among -their untruths. Re-
ports received ,from the different
Quebec ridings indicate that there, is
not a seat for the Meighen, crowd 1n
the entire province. The Progressives
have'nO strength there, and whike there
may be one or two members elected
who conduct their campaigns under
the appellation "Independent", when
these come into the House they• will
line\up behind Mr. King and the Lib-
eral party, who are lighting the peo-
ple's battle against the entrenched in-
terests. ,
Reports from the western provinces
and British Columbia are equally en-
couraging. While there are a certain
number of prairie ridings which will
return farmer candidates, there are in-
dications that many of the farmer votes
will switch before polling day to Lib-
eral candidates. Many' good men are
being placed In the field out there and
Ithere is a' strong swing toward these
Liberals as it becomes increasingly
' Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, leader
of the Liberal Party and next Prime
Minister of Canada, is gaining many
supporters throughout the province of
Ontario by his masterful speeches dur-
ing his present tour. Fresh from a
most successful series of meeting in
the Maritime Provinces where he was
everywhere hailed as the coming Pre-
mier. Mr. King is carrying the mes-
sage of Liberalists now through Ont-
ario and later through the Prairie Pro-
vinces and British iolumbia. .And
everywhere he is gaining followers for
Liberalism and friends for himself, for
the people see, as he goes among them,
that he is pleasuring up as Canada's
strongman, ready and able to take over
the reins of government on December
6 and give the Dominion wise and pro-
per government, which will bring her
back to prosperity such as, this coun-
try has not known since the defeat of
the. Laurier administration in 1911.
evident that the best Mr. Crerar can
(tope or it to lead a group in the
House.
The train battle ground is quite
evidently Ontario. There the Meighen-
Hies are fighting the fanners heavily
while the Liberal leader in his tour, is
pointing out the need for unity be-
tween the forces opposed to the re-
actionary, hyphenated party, which fol-
lows at the heels of Mr, Meighen. The
Government everywhere is condemned
for its extravagance and wasteful
handling of the public stoney and for
its refusal to consult the people on any
of the matters • which mean further
heavy public expenditures,. Mr.
Meighen sticks to his tariff war -cry and
by reaching blue. ruin seeks to make
the people believe that the defeat of his
government means the ruination of
'Canada. On the other hand, Mr. King
is showing that while the tariff must be
maintained, there must be a revision
of it in the interests of every group and
class in the dominion. The home will
first be considered Mr. King has stat-
ed, under his revision, and the changes
made will be to reduce the cost of liv-
ing, increase trade and industry in the
country, and thus bring about a wave
of prosperity such as that enjoyed
under. the Laurier tariff.
FRAGRANCE
IP
rt ,01 awes NO.
—The aroma et`
1
U34
betokens the perfection of the leaf.
Famous for 30 years, Salada never
varies the excellence, of its quality.
1
' . down the prejudice which prevails a-
COUNTY HURON COUUgalnst Canadian literature, -
l, j
NEWS IN BRIEF LETTERS FROM AL OVER
B
TELL HOW
fiJRL�
1,46
has sold his •tinei'O .acre farm on the 13
Bronson Line, Stanley, to his neighbor
Mr. Menne' . Stickle. Mr. Talbot has
purchased the farm of the late Wes.
Harvey on the 2nd con.,. Stanley. Pos-
session In both cases is given next,
March.
Goderich—A quiet wedding was
solemnized in Detroit on Saturday, Oct-
ober 8, when Miss Gladys Irene, young-
est daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James
Hoggarth, of Goderich, 'became the
bride of Mr. Luthe Hayes, of Howard,
Texas. The ceremony was performed
by Rev. Dr. Frinth, pastor of Grand
River Methodist church.
Hay Twp.—There passed away on
'Tuesday, October 18th, Mary Ann
Hartman, beloved wife of Mr. Alonzo
Foster, of theBabylon line, Hay town-
ship, at the age of 65 years, 11 months
and 9 clays. Deceased had been sick
Stanel(r Twp..—Mr. Melvin C. Talbot
I
—0—
The Maritime Provinces tour was
:tike a triumphal procession, Mr. King
..declared on his return, The eastern
;provinces are solidly behind Liberalism
',whatever differences there may have
Neal in the past are healed and Liberals
egeaywhere ale` working heart And
soul for the return of their candidates.
There is not a safe Conservative seat
from the Ottawa river to the Atlantic
ocean, and while there will be a stren-
uous fight trade by the Meighen party
managers to retain one or two, their
hopes everywhere are decidedly slim.
Tliat much was evident from the re-
ception given the two leaders when
they were in the Maritime Provinces to-
gether. While Mr. Meighen was re-
ceived coldly and respectfully, the
Liberal chieftain was hailed every-
where as the corning Premier and a
worthy successor of the great chieftain,
Sir Wilfrid Laurier. Men who had pre-
viously, heard Mr. King speak voiced
their amazement at the manner in
which he had developed, andthose who
had not previously heard him were
equally amazed. Many people follow-
ed him from one meeting to another
in order that they might have a further
opportunity of hearing the message of
Liberalism which he had brought.
Local organizations and candidates are
HOW YOU CAN TELL
GENUINE ASPIRIN
The Prime Minister, in his tour thus
far, has continued his claim that np
extravagences have ,been shows] by
the Liberal chief. In view of that It
was interesting to note that on return-
ing from the Maritime. Provinces Mr.
King found at Levis a vessel of the
Canadian Government Merchant Marine
unloading stacks of 'high ;explosive
shells for use in Canada. Just what
they are ko
be used for is not evident,
unless the government expects another
war inside of three years, for the shell
boxes seen on the .Levis wharf were
all marked "Fire or destroy before 6-
25" Thos apparently means that the
shells will be useless after June 1925,
but the government has brought in five
shiploads of them and distributed all
of these to the various garrisons
throughout the dominion.
Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross"
are Aspirin ---No others 1
A reasonable excuse has not yet been
given for buying shells in England and
bringing, them to Canada, while in the
Dominion there are hundreds of muni-
tion plants, established during the war
for making these very shells, and which
now are standing Idle and with their
expensive machinery rusting and use-
less. in five shiploads of slselis were
needed, surely Canadian labor would
have benefitted to some extent by the
making of these munitions in Canada,
and even if they had been obtained
without cost in Great Britain it would
have beenfar better to have saved the
cost of transporting them here, or
used the sante amount of money to
provide work fo Canadian workmen.
The government's answer to Mr.
King's letter has been made but it is
far from being convincing. If it is pos-
sible to get right down to the root of
things, there may be found a sinister
purpose behind the bringing of five
shiploads of antntunition from England
to Canada this summer, when the need
is not for munitions of war but of peace
and when there is crying need for
money and works to prevent suffering
among( ICalnada's wprkp'eople during
the coming winter. 'Mr. Meighen will
probably have an excuse,iaud it may be
a more or less plausible one at that,
but it will be hard to justify such pur-
chases and shipments its the eyes of
Canadians especially when the nations
of the world are convening their dele-
gates at Washington and seeking to
find a means of cutting down all War-
like expenditures,
about three years. She was well
known by many in I•lay township hav-
ing been born here and lived all her
life. She resided 44 years on the farm
she died, and leaves a grown up family
besides her husband to mourn her loss.
QO'SnPHe rOSPHeat sOD h p lEn"n.
Tones and Invigorates the whole
nervous system. makes new Blood
in old Veins. Used for Nervous
Debility, Mental and BrainWorry.
Despondency, Lou of Energy, Palpiteation of
the Heart, Faii:ng Memory. Price S2perbox,3;
for $5. Sold by all druggists, or mailed in plain
pkg. on receipt of price. New pamphlet mailed
free. THE WOOD MEDICINE CO.,TOftONTO,otir.
.gaols Novelists
Open Authors' Week
(Toronto Star)
Authors, publishers and booksellers
met in the Board of Tracie rooms last
night at the inauguaral campaign din-
ner of the Canadian Authors' week,
which is to be from November 19 to
26.
There was a time, Arthur Stringer
'Canadian poet and novelist, told the
meeting, when it was said that Can-
adians spent more money on whisky
than on literature. Mr. Stringer
said he was trying to live down the
fact that he was once a renegade
Canadian author, working and living
in New York city.
"If 1 suspected that this authors'
week was going to be merely a boost-
ing of a commercial ,product, i would
There la only one Aspirin, that (narked
with the "Bayer Cross l=all. other tab,
lets are only acid imitations.
Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
,have been prescribed by physicians for
stineteen years and proved safe by mil-
lions for Pain, 'Headache, Neuralgia,
Colds, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis.
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets—also
larger "Bayer" packages, can be had
at any drug store, Made in Canada.
Aspirin is the trade mark (registered
in Canada), of Bayer Manufacture of
Mongaecticacidester of Salicyheacid.
' While it is well known that Aspiriti
means Bayer manufacture, to assist the
public against imitations, the Tablets of'
Bayer Company, Ltd., will be stamped
erlth their general trade rilAr1c Li10
('Rayer drosilt
OCX
�LOOD
B/1 TKRs
(RELIEVES IIT$FER$IA
Among mai*_ of those who have writ-
ten us Is Mr. A. Fleming, Scotdeid,
Alta. He says in his letter:—"fI some
been troubled with dyspepsia
years. I',tried severalmedicines, but
only got relief for a short time. I suff-
ered with pains is my stomach, also a
smothering feeling after eating, and
could not eat any meat at all. I got
run down and was very weak from rob-
bing the stomach of its necessary wants.
I also suffered from pains in my neck
which would run up on both sides Into
my head causing terrible headaches.
I used several bottlea of Burdock Blood
Bitters, and now am completely relieved."
B. B. B. has been on the market for
thepast
A.Milbu42 rn Limactured ited, d, Toron to
The
Out
sill! naturally Inrercepr an ..or tae
water Qowiag through the soil above
then/. Aleo be
and the drains eareanot sollliableese to
be affected by the water moving slow-
ly through them. It the 01epe 1s not
veryr steep the drains may bo laid
down the Ineline with satisfactory re,
sults. Here' the tile,, drains the land
on both sides and no double draining
reaults.
In thle underdrainage the general
beneflte are again obtained. The
water
rot capacity to p10 lantsandthe
more
prevention of surface washing
alowing the water to penetrate
through the soil to the drains, thus
carrying much plant food to the
roots of the plants,—R. C: Moffatt,
O. A. College, Quelph,
DRAIN THE H 11S E..
Thursday, Novelriber I Qth, 192 t
CA& TR�A
For Infants ani Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always
J
Bears the
Signature
of
Why an Orchard Will Pay.
The planting of commercial apple
orchards in the Province of Ontario
is highly desirable for several rea-
sons: • ,
1. Ontario is not producing
enough good apples for home supply,
but imports annually from Nova Sco-
tia, British Columbia, Oregon and
California.
2. Production in Ontario Is likely
to fall off still more because no com-
mercial planting is being done. Very
few commercial apple orchards have
been set out in this Province since
1911.
8. Of the thousands of young trees
set in the boom years of 1905 to
1911 a large proportion have al-
ready passed out of existence. Prob-
ably not more. than 20 per cent. of
the trees planted during those years
will figure in the commercial produc-
tion of the future, and certainly not
more than 40 per cent. of them are
alive and receiving reasonable atten-
tion to -day.
4. The home orchard will never
again be an important factor In com-
mercial apple production in this Pro-
vince, because it is not large enough
to be worth while. Ia seasons when
scab control is difficult, or when
prices are down because of a heavy
crop, the return from the small orch-
ard is not large enough to justify the
expense and risk involved. When
Erosions Mean Consideraule Loss
to Many Farms.
Tiling, Open Ditching and Terracing
Recommended—How to Plan and
Do the Work—Why an Orchard
Will Pay. ,.
(Contributed by Ontario o Deparment or
A.griculThe erosion of hillsides and the
flooding of the land below by the
eroded material has long been a
worry and an economical loss to
many farmers in hilly and moun-
tainous sections. This can frequent-
ly be prevented, and the method em-
ployed depends on the conditions ex-
isting, such as the nature of the soil;
light or heavy, the steepness of the
slope, and the type of agriculture
practiced; pasture or tilled crops.
The Value of "Sheep -Drains."
conditions are unfavorable the sinal
orchard passes quickly into a state
of neglect; this' is why apple growing
in Ontario is at such low ebb a+.
present.
6. Fruit is an essential part of
diet. While it is true that in case
of necessity people can live without
it, it is also true that health suffers
and nutritional complaints become
much more general in the absence
from the dietary of fresh fruits and
vegetables. The apple is the most
important and most useful fruit of
the temperate zone, and, from the
standpoint of public health, its cul-
ture should not be nogelected.—
J. W. Crow, O. A. College, Guelph.
i
Wet hillsides used as sheep pea -
1, tures may be much improved by what
are sometimes called "sheep -drains."
These are merely shallow open
ditches about 30 inches wide on top,
a inches wide on the bottom, and
15 inches deep for removing the sur-
face water. They are dug alantingly
around the elope to intercept the
flowing water and carry it in a
definite channel to a suitable • outlet
at the base of the hill. The removed
earth should be thrown out on the
lower side to form a sort of embank-
ment to the drain. The grade of the
ditch should not be so steep as to
give the water sufficient force to de-
stroys the drain by either washing
away the banks or digging the drain
itself deeper, and thus making it
dangerous for the sheep and lambs.
Sub -drains are sometimes necessary.
Terracing and Draining.
A system of terracing is quite uni-
versally used to prevent destructive
washouts on hillsides. The terraces
are made perfectly level, and of any
width, and then carefully aeeded to
grass. At the time of rain the water
spreads' out evenly over the surface
of these and then Bows gently over•
the slope below without sufficient
force to wash away any portion of
the hill and thus prevents
"gullying."
For the drainage of tilled hill-
sides a system of under -drainage is
not be here. As an 'author, '1 am sometimes used successfully. The
interested in the week, but I hope we amount of erosion of the land large -
are not going to divide the year into ly depends on its condition. It the
a series of special weeks, like our surface soil can be kept arm the
erosion will be lessened. Soft spots
cousins to the south, where they have on the hillside, though, frequently
'e water
week,' intik week,' from above which has peccur as a result of n trat d the
'leather belt week' and' goodness surface soil and reached an Inver -
knows what' vices layer and thus deflected to
a,,,,w .t• k1 1IPFt"d 11'ier tk
..
Mr. Stringer thought we could not the surface on the side of the hill.
Hope to rival the United States in Water flowing over this with con-
eiderable force will naturally wash
motion pictures, or in drama, but
it•away more easily than the firmer
"when we ask Canadian people to soil free from this seepage water.
buy Canadian books, we are merely - Advantage of Tile Draining.
asking thein to be good to them- I If the drama are ro laid to Inger_
selves," he said.dept this peepage water, eon.iderable
The well-known novelist, Mr. J. l :Trion can be prevented. It the
hildride 1. comparatively .1001),
Murray. Gibson, said that the Week was drains laid at an angle to the la-
instituted for the purpose of breaking cline will be mbre satisfactory. They
CONQUEROR ,OF,,CONSTIPATION
AND SICK . HEADACHE
The Great Success of Carter's
` a Little Liver Pills is due to the com-
plete satisfaction of all who use them.
rr-r 6E Not by purging and weakening the
WEIR' (lam` Bowels, but by regulating and strength -
PI ILLS ening them. b
Don't Hesitate—Get a Bottle—
take one after each meal and one at bedtime. They act as a
nalral laxative to the Bowels and a regular and healthy con-
dition of the system with freedom from Constipation and Sick
Headache is, the result. They are strictly Vegetable. •
Small POI Small Dose Small Price
fionrtinp tettatt( boar signaature
a1
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
• TNC CENTAUR COMPANY. NCW YORK CASTORIA
FACTS ABOUT CANADA
The total exportation of meat from
Canada last year had a' value of $96,-
161,223, which is more than twice the
value of these exports in 1946.
The sheep in Canada last year num-
bered 3,720,783—an increase of al-
most one and a half million since 1917.
Ontario led with 1,129,084; Quebec
second with 1,031,982.
Children Cry
pis /gFORR FLETCHER'S
C A S 9 O R I A
There were exported from Canada
last year 17,612,605 lbs of butter;
126,395,777 lbs of cheese; and 6,000,-
528 dozens of eggs. 'There was an in-
crease in the quantity of butter, but a
decrease in the cheese.
The grand Prairie in the Peace River
District contains over 20,000 square
miles of land. It is a plateau having an
elevation of 2,300 feet above sea level.
During 1919 there were 856 home-
stead entries in the Grand Prairie ar-
ea, and 587 soldiers' grants filed in the
Dominion Lands Office at Grand Prairie
City.
vaflTFIunting in the Gatineau
.(1) Blue Sea Lake.
1(2) Below the Paugan at Low.
To a great number of people, "the
'Gatineau"' is a term quite as vague
as was "aomewhere in France" dur-
ing the war. Even Canadians wins
'confirmed explorative• tendencies are
iabyamally ignorant concerning that
'section of Quebec that stretches
Mshorn the Ottawa River north to
aniwaki and then on to a cluster
f unnamed lakes in which the Gatin-
eau River takes its rise.
There are, it is true, many Ot-
tawans who claim to know the dis-
trict for they variously contend that
Chelsea, Kingsmere, Meach Lake,
hue Sea, Farm Point or Kirk's
erry is tie real Paradise. But of
the vast unsettled, unsurveyed coun-
try rolling away from the main road
and the railway, they know very
tile.
The Gatineau has "got me" at
last. Par years I have fought
garnet it, listening with ill -conceal-
ed seeptiiciem M those who yyroroaarras
ago succumbed to its magic thrmLl.
1 have bean driven tato posers tai
forced to hear poems ea. the Got s-
eau ; I have been late at -
cling exbihitiect mating $a-
rea of the Gatiman; I have nars-
rawly etas pieties up tie Gatin-
eau, and t� pettier gyp'
oh, yen Seaad ,hags, wheeaking of t aa
coapore
untry , plates liktor e e paon s, hove
greatness thra.t apes theatl Gir-
cummtannees *eh roe to Low; ehtem-
*tanees over whew I hod no
They were two stere., erwearew
ink! nuesee.
1 Driving from the station (whist&
Iwlim
e remelted by cbing a eilt'1 grade
of two feet to the hundred), to the
house that was to motive my bat-
!ro
hat -
!tared mortal envelope, I decided that
Low was an eminently fitting place
in which to be buried. Varity, the
mournful task seemed half accent-
�plished by merely stopping there!
And'wtthin a week it "got rhe"; got
me to the extent that I feel no poet
and no artist, however inspired, ever
did it justice. r
Low 'nestles in the embrace of
'close encircling hills. Perhaps it
lwould be more accurate to say th�hatt�
;Low ie a collection of hills, elotheel
int this season in bronze fat early
morning, in flame and orange at
;won, and in gently fading pimple at
!sunset. Nov` and ads they win
!be mist wrapped, aqd
will — slowly from the risMe
vaguer os s eat the
•e Pm at ma. tt
Opus twists Wks witteatiteem huh
in the stnisien wham0
win" memilimg Dee
of a Brit jewel sat amid sewelet
teem et tepee tin the tinellap ed a
Ave Magee paalidabe lla stens eerily
meet tem mails Isis lease. Tan may
event •a1 a aksietet.
Aa ieaekkh sal street* reterteed
le me (the Gotham+ ataerasltt hwiit!) sets wed a
I waw ever
feadhos into the nmblasad besll. eras
0se earning time aderestataing, I�
stumbled over a large bona bleaehed
white and almost perfect in point e2
preservation. It showed a sharp
ridged jaw, a long frontal bone and
borne. Considering the antiquity of
the las which geologists compute
at fifty million years, It seemed rea-
sonable
dinosaurs
pptt u s stYppose t and ichthyosaurs must
hi, re -
moue oratione left s. occasional
Tal eleton moved
It But to which claws diad the bone
belong?
Timis altars ne tag heated and
chilled mo. I shouidered nay tromp-
are that Weighed probably six
tiouncle tool sect oust fits home. isa
asides diminish , the weight oft
viaced tient Atlas Ira& a testbtro a
Ithhevelont !hist
le eat atteeffwoe the Mee
mimic
Om giaspereas gpeadelas 1ier el.
elintet ° M 14 with ill
A
Weems int
are entity tie lace
The man i a ween
of the sail keft remarMime Cawedien
Boa what theme felhot
there want with that ole tract! If
Tad knowed what you AIM gain' attarr
I could have saved you
all them miles. I gat two
beads in my loans.' Two?
I gasped my disbelief.
Why, the district mart be a
dinosaur repository, equal to
Red. River countryy.
"Sine's I'm telihl' you," pro
any host. "Itep' jun' fer fun, as y
might say; horns and teeth
too. Bettotr'n younn, there!"
"Why—why—what are they'?"
faltered.
"Stems' )bheads," he , eh
lug goal "f kill a ample `• 'i
fall. Ton can have yoi r desk of
tar
.a���tlaa�G�.�s:,,,yytbcm�ae,��d„o..o a at 0
Mee. ate',' 4 sheen. ”
Imre t I fairly
die
h eon-