Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1920-7-8, Page 3SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN CANADA Three months .,, ,,.. .., ,,. f 40 Half year , . , R , t• Year .. , . —if notpaid in advance, $2,90 per antrum - The Third Page SUBSCRIPTIONS OUTSIDE Ole CAR'AQA (Advance Only) Great Britain . . .... . ... . . .. . . . . ti,50 tluitedStates ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2,00 France ..,.,,,r., 2.04 • Office Phone 30, SUFFERING OF YOUNG G WaMEH This Letter Tells Haw It May be Overcome --All Mothers Interested. ' 'Toronto, Ont. — "I have suffered since was a school ir! with pain in tarty left {{sideendwitherampe, 1growing worse each i , year until I was all ' > )11.1110i,01.1rii.i .Arun odwa. Iam '! a children's nurse,and I was so bed at times that I was unfit for work. I tried see, eral doctors and pa- tent medicines, but was only relieved for a short time. Sonne ofthedoctorawanted to perform an 'oper- ation; but my father objected. Finally 1 learned through my mother of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and how thankful I am that I tried it. I am relieved from pain and cramps, and feel as if it has saved my life. You mayuse my letter to help other women, as I am only too glad to recomtnend the medicine."—Sneer 'CENT, 42 Blamford Ave., Toronto Qnt. Girls who ate troubled as Miss Rent I was should immediately seek restoration to health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Those who need special advice may write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn Mass. These lettere will be opened read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence, A noted British wireless company has announced the production of a radio dir ec ' finder that enables ships toto ate one anot'ter's position in the densest logs. Gravity is the only power in a new 'vi^• for labeling ,ins which roll G„wn an incline over p.stC then Wver a pile of labels, then over brushes whi- ch smooth the labels. Canada Comes Second in Auto Making 350,000 Autos n Use, One to Every 23 People. Canada is now the second nation in the world in the manufacture of aut- omobiles, the number of cars owned and the number. per capita, The United States Is first and Great Britian third. Figures taken frana government r e - port show that the automotive indus- try In. Canada employes t5,000 work- ers and represents an investment of 50, 000,000, The total sales of cars last year amounted to $:00,000,000 and the payroll exceeds $15,000,000, During '1919 94,000 automobiles were manu factored in 'Canada and it is believed this total will be increased 35 per cent in 1920. Latest registration records show that about 350,000 motor vehicles are in operation throughout the Dominion. One in every twenty-three persons in Canada owns a motor car. There are 6,000,000 automobiles in the United States, or one for every 20 inhabitants. In England there are only 580,000' cars or one for every 268 persons. There is one automobile to every 402 people in France, to 684 people in Germany to 1,000 people in Italy to 2,700 people in Austria, to 5,300 in Russia. Registration of cars in Canada in- creased 13 per cent over those of 1918. Ontario continues to be the banner province for automobiles with 127,860 passenger cars and 11,428 40 8 motor trucks s in useSaskatchewan Alberta, use, withS chewan Alb a, Man itoba and Quebec following in order. The rural population owns more than half the cars in the Dominion, and in the prairie provinces the percentage is higher. Canada is no longer an assembling centre for automobile parts made in the United States. The made -in -Canada aut- The Stopach Begi fis digestion, but . the most important work is done by the bowels, liver and kidneys. Failure of these to act effi.cisntly allows the whole body to be poisoned. BEECHAM'S PILLS do more than produce bowel movement. Liver, skin and kidneys are influenced to more active effort with resulting increased effect. It is always safe to take Serum's Sold everywhere in Canada. , in boxe , 25c., Soc. THE CLINTON. NEW ERA. cenobite is now a reality. The automobile and accessories manufacturing Indusr try is confined almgst ,entirely to Ont- tario, HOW A MAN PICKS A WIFE Come Conclusions That Have Seen Reached by the Registrar at the Boston City Hall, Edward W. MeGlennen, registrar it the Boston elty hall since 1000, who keeps record of that city's marriages, has found in his study of the subject of selection that association deter- mines a man's course 1n the selection of his wife, and when you have chosen your vocation you have automatically chosen your llfemate at the same time, observes the New York Herald. Mr. Mw Jennen bas found that tellers mar- ry ma r ry talloresses, longshoremen choose waitresses, many employees and clerks marry stenographeps, while profession- al men more often pick their wives from the girls in society in which they move. After eighteen years of daily obser- vation of the way and habits of pro- spective homemakers, Mr. McGlennen has come to the concluslou that prox- imity Is the chief determining factor in a man's choice of a wife. In the long and voluminous marriage records the various :mangos of the different vocations show that chauf- feurs and cooks are attracted by do- mestics, while tailors, dressmakers and milliners incline toward still closer re- lationship. Salvatton Army men choose a Salvation Army lassie, the sea cap- tain picks a good housekeeper and home body, while seamen genesally fall to love, when ashore, with wait- resses who serve their,meals., Mr. Me- Glennen believes that good looks and good clothes are not such an impor- tent Pastor as, geaenally believed—ft is'all'a matter of environment. The telephone operator is a favorite with the sotdler, also the nurse who min- isters to him when wounded. Lunch- room proprietors more often marry their casitters, and so It goes on. What puzzles Mr. McG ieneen, how- ever, is why a miriner chose a dent- ist's assisteut aa'11te mate and thow- Riding Comfrt 4ade4nCana .a WHY let rough roads, inter- fere with your motoring comfort? In this Overland. you need hot let bad roads spoil good rides. Tripler Springs make every mile you ride a more enjoyable mile. Light weight m akes every mile a more economical mile. This rare combination of rid- ing luxury with driviteg economy accounts for the tremendous en- thusiasm which is greeting the Overland all over Canada. , Its equipment is of the most modern type. Its stamina is a credit to the Canadian institu- tion which created this car. Let us show you the Overland. y v l� et oi L. KENNEDY„ Wingham, Ont. T -Tedd Office and Factories: W 11ys-•Overland I,inited, Toronto, Canada Btencheu: 'Toronto, Ivtontreal, Winnipeg and Regina hk v,,eav° —+ rraaivamrcraus,uiakaiaRiL..nilitresrs.Awkcvntsw�4m street ear cortuueror carne to pick nut an abtress for his wife, These are exceptions to the general rule. Lied in Attempt to Sava Pet. Determined efforts by MAdies of high Social position to smuggle pet doge without license into,Ilingland were re• sently described to a representative at the diseases of animals' branch of the board of agriculture, London, It takes the combined Intelligence of Scotland Yard and the chstorns officials to out- meneuver some dog lovers.. Recently, on board a steamer crossing to Eng, land. a foreign prtn e s was seateded on a deck stool and a wind was blowing. A shrewd observer, whose duty It was to be inquisitive with his eyes, hap- pened to catch eight for a moment of a little dog's wagging tall. On land - Ing the lady, In reply to the usual (Median. said sbe hntl nothing to a. - THERE IS ONLY ONE GENUINE ASPIRIN Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross” are Aspirin—No others If you don't see the "Bayer Cross" on the tablets, refuse them—they are not Aspirin at all. Insist on *genuine "Bayer Bayer Tabl ets o f Aspirin" plainlystamped with the safety "Bayer Cross"—Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years and proved safe by millions for Headache, Tooth- ache, Earache, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Colds, Neuritis, and Pain generally. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets—also larger `Bayer" ,packages. blade In Canada. Aspirin isthe trade mark (registered in Canada), of Bayer Manufacture of lilonoacetieacidester of Salicylicaeid. While it is well known that Aspirin The Sword of Prince,Maurice. means Bayer manufacture, to assist the The Loudon Evening News tells e nubile against imitations, the Tablets of Bayer Company, Ltd., will be stamped with their general trade snarly the "Bayer Cross." Tiltlrsclay, Jlily 8th, 192O. glare, "No dog, madame?" "Certabu. ly not." "Then," sale her questioner, "I most send for the female searcher to have your statement verlfled." "la that case," said the. lady, "if you will snow me a couple of minutes by my- self I'll produce my little dog." Which elle did. Making Themselves at Herne. I celled at the offices of the Inter national Y. M. C. A. Hospitality league, ears the "Clubman," in Pall Mall Ga- zette, and heard a delightful tribute to the United States bluejacket", of Whom so many thousands have been In London recently. Quite a number •t them were entertained at private houses --free to go when they pleased In the daytime, free to become mem- bers of the family when they had thea themselves with sightseeing. I over- heard two would-be hostesses talking of their recent guests. "Mine, too, were dengbtful," one said; "ao happy and se perfect to their manner. , But, my dear, they had net the least no- tion of what war means." "How ea" "Weil, of course, I didn't grudge, but it was a little trying to one's nerves. Every morning they ate butter with their bacon and left half a spoonful of marmalade on their plates 1" ,Use the blind Properly. Some people have to be entertained all the time. They must have some- body to put interest into life for them. Hears spent alone arg eternities. Wise folks keep quiet about this. Only the rash confess to the world how empty their souls really are. They do It be- cause they have no idea what it all means, There will need to be eternal vaudeville or some other show to make them at all comfortable. And the hours spent add nothing to theirIr n er- soaal growth. 'It's not what enters the ears that adds to life, That mey have little or no meaning. It's what the mind appropriates sad .remakes with- in itself that adds to Life. And it's the ability to keep the mind constantly employed that makes the hours fly. It's the name ability to use the mind that will fill eternity with pleasure. nee or tiattenuerg, one It nae jure been given to his mother, Princess lleatrice, Prince Maurice . was killed In the Xpres salient in November,"107.4, and burled ha our lines. Our forces had just retreated, end all the prince's kit fell into the heads et the Ger- mans, except his lneeribed sword. This Was secreted In the rafters of a Wham. Oh cottage, where the'owner bad been billeted, and for four years it has beep lying there, with Germans billeted, la the bowie. Now the poor Beigtaa family, to whom the .piece belopged, have scat it t• the dead soldier's Acerber. Course6 In highway engineering are being conducted in 115 Ainerican leges. NOW TO OVERCOME NERVOUS TROUBLES A Returned Soldier Tells How He Regained Health and Strength. tomplesamme Nervous troubles of all kinds, par- ticularly nervous debility, work a re- markable transformation in the patient. The change is boot physical and mental. The sufferer loses Weight and strength and frequently becomes irritable and fault finding. Tables that were once thrown off without any difficulty as- sume exaggerated proportions. Other symptoms of this nervous condition are poor appetite, headaches, exhaust ion after little effort, and frequently di tre S SSf e 1 a i r meals. The caused d of thisdabin is ally starved nerves, The blood which gives the nervous system its food and power to work efficiently becomes thin and weakand until blood regains its tone and strength there can be no im- provement in the condition of the ser ves. in cases of this kind Dr. Williams Pink Pills will be found tete very best medicine. They make rich, red blood which feeds and strengthens the starv- ed nerves and in this way restores the sufferer to full health and pathetic story of a soldiers sword. It• strength. Proof of this is Mid once belonged to Prince Mau- found ' In Lite case of Mr. Fred Sander, London Ont., who says: Fruit (Irowi g or the ....,,,.,mac,-..•. _......•. ;xl.=a='u,=acaan e Pi= a fries .wµ a Lona before the advent of the wheat grower hundreds of varieties of email fruits grew In the sheltered spout' 01 that great north-west of• the Amerlean Continent, now known as the Canadian., Prairie Provinces of Alberta. Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Several varieties of wild currants and berries, of a most delicious flav- or, are Still found throughout tifeee three provinces. and frult-picking excursions form on" 01 the most de- lightful diversions in the life on the farm there. In the woodlands„ be- :side e:side the creeks, lakes and' rivers; it does not take long during'the season for the women -tolls and the children to pick sufficient wild strawberries, raspberries, saslaatooas, red, black and white currants, gooseberries. etas to keep the family well supplied le preserves until tee following sea- son. , Where the wild varieties of fruit grow so profusely it is natilral to ex- pert that some, at tenet, of the cul- tivated varieties will grow equally well; and this expectation has beet realized by hundreds of farmers in Western Canada who have made a hobby of growing small fruits. Their succuss shows :bat with reasonable care and attention there is an oppor- tunity to develop fruit raising on the Canadian prairies into something moire than a vocation of a few farm- ers it could possibly be developed into an Important industry. eineh valuable information con- cerning varieties of the different keels of fruit most adzphable to the cnt>.d.tioria prevalelt on the prattle Term has been gathered by the hortl- meteral departanents of the erovin- cial Uitiverselea of Man,Loba, Sas- etatebewan and Alberta and by the experimental atatioes scattered throughout the ecu'•+ry, At the Una vr.raity of Aller 6 at Edmonton, which le morn tba.i three, hundred Milne north et the international ho,tneary. a large number of varie- ties of currants, reepberriea, and strawberries, have boon grown with an n.ddelrous suoceae for, many yearn. At Isaeti a dozen varieties 61 cttr- rants hive done well, growing very hertitty and giving heavy yfelcde of ext>-emety deiicioea fruit Ruby t'aatlo, fret) Cherie, heed Dutch and elte*art have proved to, bo abort, (1) Strawberries gown in Alberta. (2) A Fertile strawberry patch, 4 tMu-0 the beat' of the red kind.Wbtte Grape and White Dutch of the white, and tate Black Maples, Prolific. Tictoria and North Star of the black currants, Several varieties of red, black and golden raspberries, particularly the red, ,have also been grown with success at Edmonton, Ate Sunbeam and Cuth- bert are tine favorite raspberries. Their flavor is fine, they yield taeav- Ily, and • tete former, particularly, ripens very early in the season, The Herbert, Turner, King and Louden varieties have also been very Sae- cesatul, The Caroline has proved to be the best of the yellow rasp- berries. Olackberriers bave not been so satisfaceory as the red and the yellow at Edmonton, bust in other' parts of the county they are being grown with more or less suceesr Strawberries are quite at home on the Canadian prairies, They are, in- deedit, thgre owmnostin popular thefarm garden, of the smelt fruIt seems safe to predict that before many seasons have elapsed these Riotous berries will be grown and marketed on a commercial scale fa Imlay parts of Western Canada Hitherto reputed for wheat rinsing and stock raising only, Por inany years strawberries grown on the De- monstration Farm of the CS:nadian, herrn; Were etlppticd to this toms pany'e dining car and hotel servicem and their delicious flavor was very highly spoken of. The grower of strawberries on a commercial scale in this northern territory will have a great advant- age. Itis berries will ripen later than those grown further south, and lie will be able to bring them on the market after the supply of berries grown elsewhere• has become ex. baustod. Beaides, the flavor of those berries is such that the fruit would be able to hold its own even If there wore any competition, :Prom the middle of July until the cud of Sete Lember, and sometimes later, straw- berries from the Canadian prairies could be bought on the market. Orae of the Most interesting ern - prises prepa.r•cd for the Prince of \'ales during his tour through Can- ada last year was the preaeetatkm of a box of strawberries at Lath, bridge, Alberta. These berries were grown by lotm Hamilton on his farms at Coaldaie, near Letlgbildre and were picked in his stirden an the morning of the pres:meat/oft to the Prince early In October. t i"re ilr strawberries in October are e,wrtairtfil a novelty in the northern beam phare int they really ►re a polsallbi Pacific railway at Strainer*, Ai - . • •• - • • Huse Phone 8l£, "While on service with the Imperial forces in Africa I completely lost toy, health through continual hardship and shock, 1 was sent back to the base hospital suffering so the doctor said front nervous debility. After spending some time in the hospital t was invalid- ed back to Eagiand as unfit for further Service, After spending a long Bine in Netley ffospital 1 was given my dasher ge but was still a weak and nervous wreck' absolutely "Oat for work. t had neither the strength nor ambition to do anything. In London 1 doctored for three or four months with a civ- ilban doctor Who ifinajiy advised a change of cl t nu e n 3 g t . i Was terribly nerv- ous, suffered from sleeplessness, smoth ening and shticing spells, and pains in the heart; my hands and feet were al- ways cold and clammy. At this time I decided. to come to Canada, and shor- tly after reaching this country was ad- vised to try Dr. Williams Pink Pills. After I had taken the pills for some weeks 1" found myself improving. 1 con - Hued taking'`�the pills for several months with the res 'It that they filthy restored my health. M `nerves are now as steady as a rock; nty,appetlte the best, and my eyes and skitfi which had turned yet lowish are clear end healthy looking. I feet like a new man in every way' fit for anything; I have since recomnren ded the pills to seve 'al friends and know of several cases wiser : they were benefi- tial in the influenza 'ptdemic. 1 stn of the opinion that sho aid any' of my returned soldiers co rades use Dr. Williams Pink Pills for ,shell shock they would be a great help to them." Lou can get Dr, Willi ms Pink Pills through any dealer in me :cine, or by mail, post paid at 50 cents 1 box or six boxes for $2.50 from The r. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, On ". A wind mill which pumps dire "fly in- stead of through gears that Inas been Invented n d it f n Argentine, a Satin e c g nasi si s lilting vane, mounted�ot right angles to a frame bolted to one eod of a. bar anced beam, PIMPLES and.I For Nearly Two Years. When pim les and boils appear on the face' and body it seems as If the skin is the seat of the trouble. but the real disease is in the blood. Lotions and ointments may allay the trouble for a while, but seldom if evcc cure. You have to at under the skim; get at the blood whhah is the cause of the trouble, Burdock Blood Bitters goes direct to the root of the disease and restores healthy, normal action to the different organs, and cleanses the blood of all its impurities. Mr. E. C. Goodwin, Cambridge, N.B. writes:—"For nearly two years I st$fcretl from boils and pimples on my face and neck, and nearly all of my bode was covered with the pimples. '1tried most everything, but got no relief. One day a friend advised me to try. Burdock Blood Bitters, and atter using throe bottles the boils and pimples had all left me and there is no sign of them return- ing. I can strongly recommend B.B.B. to anyone who is troubled with skin disease,' Manufactured only by The T. Mils burn C&, Limited, Toronto, Ont. BkOQ-DER STOWS :. Now that Habohing season has arrived we are la a place to sell a limited number of Brooder Stoves at very reasonable prices.. They are very much more satisfactory than the uncertain Hen. Goo•Il-Langlois & GO., The up-to-date F'a�,ar ei Clinton Branch Phone 1 N, W. Trewnrthe, Manager or Hoimesvllle 4 on 142, R PIANO Before purchasing your new piano or organ let us show you the newest de- signs in several well- . known and old establish- ed makes. INSTRUMENTS RENT- ED AT MODERATE PRICES PHONOGRAPHS See our stylish cabinet designs in the best makes. C. How 4e6tVbea4k1w..bwu..i2,M:M,rtk,'.P'I(,,4rn'a6'.Y ,6A. kNWm.kr.:amunicat Ri maim .Msman.1.NM.is! oiv :,,,