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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1920-9-30, Page 3SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN CANADA Three months $ 40 Half year , , , .. , , �. , $ .. $ ,74 Tear ............... 'L50 �[f not paid in advance, $2,00 per annum- Mice Phone 30, The Third Page ONE WOMAN'S * * U e * * JOTTINGS FROM HERE " EXPERIENCE * AND THERE Siam purchased 79 motor• vehicles from Uncle Sam last year.. Of Interest to Childless Women; Toronto, Ontario. -."I suffered for a long time from a female weakness, in- flammation, and a terrible backache caused by that. condition. One day one •f your booklets was left at my door, and read how other women with trouble,' like mine had been made well, so I gota bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. and a package of Sanative Wash, and it helped me wonderfully, and I now have the finest little baby boy that any mother could want. I want to recommend Lydia E. "'inkhorn'', Vege- table Compound to any woman who has female troubles." - Mrs. asaSs'H LA Belau., 773 Shaw Street, Toronto, On- tario, Canada. The experience of Motherhood is a trying one to mot women and marks distinctly an epoch in their lives. Not one woman in a huftdred is prepared or understands how to properly care for herself. Every woman at this time should rely upon Lydia E. Pfnkham'e Vegetable Compound, a moat valuable tonic and invigorator of the female organism. In many homes once childless there are now children because of the fact that Lydia E. Pinkham'e -Vegetable Compound makes women norms 1 healthy and strong, and this good old fashioned root and herb remedy con- tains no narcotics or harmful drugs, SUBSCRIPTIONS OUTSIDE OF_CANADA (Advance Only) Great Brltnin , , . , . , , , 1,459' UfiitedStates.,, .:,.•'•.. ,, , , France , , .... ,, TH.E CLINTON NEW ERA. *i Resale has one automobile to every 15,300 inhabitants. I Motor hearses are licensed as pas- senger or "pleasure" oars In Ohio. •British motor manufacturers are booking orders for ,921, 0.922 rind 1923. United States foreign trade an auto - 94 and tires during 01'0 covered 94 digerent countrles. ' The retail price of gasoline has ad- vanced four times since the middle of January. In 1903 there were but 220 motor car owners in Canada, Registrations for 1919 totalled 324,886. German helmets are being used as the base of roadway instead of cobble- stones near London, England. With an increase of 29 percent Ten= nessee leads the country in increase of motor -car registration. St. Louis, Mo., will have' a manufact- uring plant for the production of gaso- line -propelled railway cars. .1 Long-distance motor truck freight , service is. extensively patronized by de- partment stores in New York and•Pihil- adelphia. For repairing automobiles along the country roads, travelling machine shops carried on motor tucks are operated in England. • Materials for the construction of auto mobiles have averaged an increase of approximately 35 per cent. in the past ROYAL YEAST CAKES are now packed in square packages. Each package con- tains five cakes, which are equal in quantity to six round cakes. All dealers are author*. fixed to guarantee that the quality of the round and square cakes are identical in every reepect. III six months. The world war revealed the fact that one man of every ten in an eflielent army must be proficient in automotive engineering, investments ranging from 81,000,000 to more than 52,000,000 are made by several corporations in United States in motor truck lines. Of the 82,360,529 collected from New York city in motor fees last year, The Progress of Manitoba (1) On the left the Royal Alexandra -Hotel, Winnipeg, •and on the right a portion of the C. P, R. Station Building. (2) Fort Garry, Winnipeg.—A plate on the wall, presented by Winnipeg Canadian Club, tells its story. There is an Indian legend of a Red River, territory, between the race of people who dwelt upon the present international boundaries and Canadian Prairies before the .Red Lakes Whiiiipeg"and Winnipegosis. Men came, but why they vanished or This land he proceeded • to colonize who they were no man knows. Van- veld: setter's frons the Scottish High- ish they did and their place was tak- lands, The Colony grew and flourish - en be wandering tribes of Indians ed. About 1830 the population of who hunted and fished, hunt their Red River was 1,500, In ,1835 the Wigwams' and their camp -fires, told Council of Assleilibia -was organized their wild legends end smoked their to govern the, colony and Fort Garry ' peace -pipes for many a generation (now Winnipeg) Was built, before the foot of the white men ever From this 'time on the history of visited the plains that were their Manitoba is one of growing. prosper - heritage, sty, broken 'only 'by the, Riel rebel - The first discoverer of Manitoba lions, of 1860 and 1885. :To Sir Ed- was the ill-fated 'leery IIudseu, ex- round Head, Governor-General of aotly 810 years ago. Others followed Canada ie 1861, is due the fact that in !.is topes, Presently carne the ad- Manitoba was confederated into the Ve11 . de Groaseillier, who altos Dominion• In 1869 the lfludeons Bayspyi g out the land, went back to Company, of which he was a direo- k agland, where, with ltadisson, his tor, transferred back to England, in companies, and under the auspices of consideration of a sum of £300,000, )'rinco Rupert, he rbiained large the lands which it had received trout grants of land Frohn Charles II, and her some two hundred years before, roamed that Itudson's 134y Company England transferred the territories which was destined to piny s , greal a and the debt of $15,000,000 to the nasi in the future history c£ Canada. young Dominion of Canada and on During tl.o oro hundred odd yearn Tune 17th., 1870, Manitoba became a that a etfc,.c'd Inci,e, , thus tints Province of that Dominion, taking nod lot' i1,u sieve o: the inneura,,ti her place among her sisters under • tray t,t. e..y is": i story o, Ma A- the . Lieutenant - Governorship or Vibe, r a e y,..)..1, e d ,, ,tu Ila Adams G, Archibald. In 1871 she I, cashes with t,t Ai ail, I is tends elected her Gast Premier, TIon, R. J. s.,tb rival c .5..0,e, s, d ite r;u. pa. Clarke, tam of all • e i.e.., o, ,.. c , m t 6u u- Manitoba has always been a try over reit no it r",.II, r.r tit, nh,st treatcattle raising province. But part, bona, Ira ,ra.y, U, Its+ rl els the hes doh this oho poslsesses many . "t.ost L di rt.,.,, , , in,: e, h - .,oat other sources of weattia. In the 3 ur tun.p:Jig, 15.t, r wee eho eon valuable area now known as North - t sl haw: Lei Oise t Loa eunnlnimmi ern Manitoba she has tnlrteral de - Ltd many a ^terror , ,a Hay i"u :the be- posits of great value, Water powers la, mu banes of ;,,,,,,r au,ivt its:: it.a t,1 to develop lobe ruse power, fisheries elef,,hil 1817 t t'e tits, ,.,•.,tel 'nu', were capable of ,gelding lame roturne. fur teth,tud and in me 1"0.,..,,1. , healing 3 ale !s ia.ninserablo and t::;8hli in 1': L, h0srritr 10511 Sol. much good 1*:,,1 (.V31101110 for the t :r,L;, alter hsa. sta a colatrr 1;1g inter- hardier crabs, Ile climate in this CA. lir, tt istock 01 tit Ilulson'a'T3ay northern, p...�t of m..1,00, le egteerne 1 ,,rlr n, orletrie l ATOM 11. a ili'ant In bet healthy. 3 eat!'sl.oin's, "1 116,001 seluaaa mites of Up to 1870 the nis•'er.; of cduoatibn In Manitoba is largely written In the heroic efforts of the Church, both Catholic and Protestant. In the be- ginning of the Provincial era there - were 33 parish schools in operation, but In 1876 the number of schools had g-ro-wn to 53. Laot year •there were 3,200 teachers and 115,000 pu- pils in the • public and high sehoois of 'the Province. It is a far cry from the old trading post of Fort Garry to the big, mod, ern city of Winnipeg. Fifty years ago this city was a mere village of only a couple of hundred people. Main Street was only a prairie trail. There was no school, no railway or tel graph connection with the outer worlds no banks, except that the ;Hudson's Bay Company eeceptej 4 - pot;lts and issued paper money of Its own; and property owners paid no taxtic, But. after 1870 the place be- gan to grow, Three yo:'rs after- wards it had a population of over 2,000, and in 1874 it became an 'neon, porated city, with F, l0, Cornish, a lawyer, as first Mayor, In 1880 the bultding of the C.I•'.R., east and went from Winnipeg was begun and in 1885 the first through1 train from Montreal arrived in the! city. Now the C.P,R, freight yards; at Winnipeg are Nee !argot In the' world. Winnipeg's growth became steady and solid. In the period just before the war Winnipeg's population had increased to 183,•- 378 and her aggregate industrial production for the year 1918 was $62,000,000. She Is now the third city In Canada anti the' little colony, be'. gun by Radisson anis his fellow ad.. Venturers. is note a great and hour- iahleg part of the wide D0hilnion, whose confutes stretch frem sea do Sea and "whoao nettle fa known In all lands," --Front the 14Ailitoba f, Pro Prose. T11ur'sday, September 30t11, 1920. 40 .... .�. _ . _. _.._. a Hon, George E..Foster, who recently celebrated a birthday, has been in parliament since 1882, and has hel d many t;abinet offices. When in Opposition he was the Conservative Financial Critic, 51,322,907 went to the State for use in road maintenance. By assembling a complete car in less than half an hour, one automobile in- dustry in the United States plans for a 1920produo,tiou of ope nhtlion cars for AN -EXCELLENT MEDICINE FOR LITTLE ONES Baby's Own Tablets are an excell- ent medicine for little ones, They are a mild but thorough laxative which sweeten the stomach and reg- ulate the bowels thus bringing relief in cases of constipation, indigestion, colic, colds and simple fevers. 's;on- cerning then Mrs, L. J. Chiasson, Paquetvllle, N. 'B., writes:— I have found Baby's Own Tablets excellent for my young baby in the case of constipation and colic and it gives ne %great pleasure to recommend them to other mothers." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co,', Brockville, Ont, WHAT NEXT 1S BABE GUILTY OF New York, Sept 21, — Local neuro- logists have been busy analyzing the sensations of the baseball fan when Babe Ruth is hinging out a hooter. The average fan imagines the gets up and yells on such occasions because he wanted to applaud a good swat. Not so. The fan, it seems, is imposed upon by the vagaries of his nervous system. Babe's hole run swat, the neurologists declare, brings about fulfillment of "the concept of anlictpation," and, to be a trifle more explicit, "the sympathetic nervous system over -stimulates the en - doctrine substances. The supraronal gland affects the insoluble glycogen changing it to glucoso. The thyroid gland affects the body -s proteid meta- bolism, supplying new proteid substan- ces for those broken down by the em- otional explosions, prolonging the out. burst." Youth and Ade THERE is no time in wom- an's life that she cannot benefit by the use of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food in order to keep up the supply of pure, rich blood and to ensure a healthful condition of- the nervous system. I3eadaelhes, neuralgia, sleepiest,• moss, nervoue 5190115, trritability, timid, worn-out feelings, boon disap- pear when the vil;or and energy of the nerves are rt ; ored by the use of 31,ls .ewe food cine. 50 moan a 0s»•, 6 fm .n.111, all dealers, of lndswaaecaa, 11ct1' es Co., Ltd., Tersute. Sporting Paradise Here in Ontario Interesting Demonstration is given 1 of Our Fisheries and Game Ontario is the world's sporting par- i adise, Our neighbors to the south may measure their hunting grounds in acres but here in the Province of Ontario the vats virgin expanse of practically un texplored territory is measured in square miles. The fact of Ontario's sporting pre-eminence has been brought home to !thousands of people who have examined with interest the exhibit made by the Department of Game and Fisheries in the Government building at the Exhibl- 1 tion at Toronto. Among those who expressed great admiration of the char- acter of the display as well as its beauty and orginality were Lord Burnham and Lord Cavez, members of the British 1111- perial Press Conference. They sug- gested that the Ontario Government should take steps to give a similar de- monstration. of the gauge and fisheries of Ontario at the British Dominions Ex- position which is to be held in London in 1923. The display would bring home to the minds of the sportsmen of the world as nothing else could, that no greater fur market or better -stocked fish ponds than those of Ontario can be found on the face of the globe, Demonstrations are always more gra- phic than books and pamphlets, The exhibit Indicates in a striking fashion that there are hundreds of districts in the province where a lover of outdoors can find sport with his rod and gun. A number of live animals captured in Ontario are shown. These include grey and black squirrels which are now multiplying rapidly again under Gov- ernment protection which lasts until 1923. Several Canadian black bears are also being shown. There s a message to the fishermen as well. In tact the showing of tisk is one of the finest portions of the ex- hibit. 'there are trout from the famous Nipigon waters, White fish and Stur- geon captured in the remote parts of the province and brought alive a thou- sand nines, Brook trout from the Ont- ario hatcheries and a splendid collect- ion of black bass. It is a display that will rouse the enthusiasm of every dis- ciple of Isaak Walton. The one touch needed to make people "iionhesick" for the wilds is' furnished by a scene that depicts a hunter's cabin. Here in front of a real hut stands a camp kettle on a tripod, with a birch -bark Indian canoe near by. A few figures will indicate the activi- ties and the work accomplished by the Gavle and Fisheries Department. It is estimated that over 53,000,000 worth of furs are sold annually in the pro- vince and In this connection 14,000 trappers and 13,000 fur dealers do bus- iness with the Department. Last year there were 20,000 hunting licenses is- sued and the number of licenses issued to .non-resident anglers was 12,000. This year the Department has restock- ed Provincial waters with over 70,000,- 000 fish of different varieties and in the coming year 50,000,000 more will he added. The department of Game and Fisheries is under the jurisdiction of Hon, F, C, 'Biggs, Minister. °,'ELLOWSI-lIP 1'lie earth is warned by the kindly sun But lives are warmed by the deeds of men And their words of praise when our hest we've done And the parting wish that we'll meet again. ' The clouds may blanket the sky with gray And the earth grow chill as the rain descends. But he shall keep smiling along his way Whose heart is warmed by the love of friends, it's the glad "hello" and the handclasp true The smile of joy on a friendly face That means contentment for hoe and you And makes of the earth a happy place. 10 isn't the gold that we.strlve to earn Nor the faire we struggle so Iona: to For these ere glories we'd quickly spurn if never a kind heart took us in. The poorest man nil this earth is he Who has bartered his friendships for House Phone Bis, The Finest and Purest Tea Sold `SALA�A" There is genuine and unmistakeable pleasure in its daily use. Black - Green I Try a packet from your grocer, or Mixed but be sure it's "Salads' . a "t• selfish gain, - Who has sought advantage by trickery And seeks for a welcoming smile in , vain. For the earth is warmed by the kindly sun, But lives are warmed by a higher plait, And he shall be bad when his word is done Who has kept the faith with his fellow mar.. Edgar A, Guest, Thegovernment of Brazil is plan- ning to experiment with the produc- tion ,if jute as no native fiber has prov ed an acceptable substitute and the cof- fee trade of the country alone uses 10, 000,000 jute bags a year, To true work in a lathe and make sure that the lathe centers are in align- ments is the purpose of a new indicator gauge. L1i2t't O not miss your chance to pre- serve these last sun -ripened gifts of summertime. How your folks will enjoy them, and how pleased you will be to serve them when canned goods made with top -priced sugar are out of reach. The time for preserving foresight is when the fruit is still in season. I,tantic is your best friend in retaining the rare bouquet of luscious plums andpeaches, of delicately -flavoured pears. Its tiny, snow-white crystals of purest cane dissolve so quickly into syrup of concentrated sweetness, that you can smile at the old-time caution "Let it simmer until the sugar is all dis- solved "—because it's FINE. Fruit will retain its natural form and colour because over- cooking is unnecessary. Lantie WILL go further, and so costs less. ATLANTIC SUGAR REFINERIES, LIMITED, MONTREAL This Mark on Harvest Tools A Small Thing to Look.For But a Big Thing to , Find .<;. +�'SL,-•mvciL:r.3 a,,.uy. -"55' -..- --y. Half the job lies in having the right tool. If it's a Hay Fork, you want a fork that feels'righf, has the right spring and balance, the sterling good quality that makes the work go faster and easier, All Sensible Farmers Insist Upon . "GOLD MEDAL" Harvest Tools With GOLD MEDALTools, you know you can de- pend on good hard service. No wasting time because of poor, defective tools, in haying time, when the moments are precious. Buy tools with the Gold Medal Label—and get good steel, right temper, tough hickory, proper It and heft. 4 l First -egg Lanka e andeni