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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1920-11-4, Page 4PAGE 4 At The disthIctive Red full strength is found Carton, , . Never sold in bulk. The Clinton. New ,era wilimagsa.11.110b- NA, NIA Rose flavor, aroma and rich, in every Red Rose Sealed LORD LANSDOWNE SAID TO BE DYING veys 14 psyChological force, alt its own, to a sneaker and has an Influence on his "national" Mentality. : A PINE FRENCH SPEAKER. It was noticed that Lord Lansdowne, speeking in French, delivered a speech, which hi English, though similar in $en- timent, had been cold and- of the for- mal gains -national style, with all the animation of e born Frenchmen and with the gesticulation and vivacity of the race. The cold, staid style of the English speaker vanished, and the gen- ius of the French tongue clomiaated• When the fact was mentionedto him he RM.W.„WW:OWRWMP Personal Greeting Cards YOUR .FRIENDS will appreciate your personal greet- ing and good wishes at THE CHRISTMAS SEASON Kei if expressed through one of our FINE ART CHRISTMAS CARDS Call at this office and make your selection early Ki An assortment of 15 different samples to choose from -- kg) with your own name printed onthem and your own 3,q' personal greeting. TheiVew Era job Depart ent CLINTON sM '41 il441-+X4M.MPEaW'MMV, ESTRO °c000nuc CASts • a rt. no, LATVIA. LITHUANIA.; s.?"' /POLAND. CITIAtaat •01 MIN* .* woo., NW* ' Se. said lie, was quite .unconSolOds of any change. The same thing has been noticed In the ease of Roglieh-speoleing Members of the Quebee Legislature who know how to sneek in lrench. But Lord Lansdowne has A good deal of Freech blood in hl$ vein's. The Qostn* cia Fla - bent, e4...900er,high the. gopd g'raceiL of Napoleois wet the soil orTalleyrand- arid the widow of the de Plahault gnfllo- tined during the Reign of Terror, and married a daughter of Admiral Keith, and their eldest daughter who succeed ed to the Keith and Nairn, Barony, be - Came the wife of the 4th Marquis of Lansdowne, and So the mother of the present peer who succeeded to the title, iSsmoihe ease may have been one of atav- Lord Lansdowne nearly became at Quebec on the occasion referred to, an accidental accomplice In a murder case, As he was going on board the barge which was to convey him to the trans- port, a .demure, but attractive lodking woman, "like Niobe all in tears," ac- costed him and Implored him to kelp her go on board' the art King, She had tnissed her husb.and she urged with the last boat to the ship Rind had no chance of wishing him good-bye. Lord LIMS- downe kindly granted her request. But it was observed that the woman's ap, pearance was wild and that her actions indicated a desire to conceal something she was carrying under her blouse. She was summarily stopped at the gang- way of the steamer by the sentries. She 'Rheumatism Neuritis, Sciatica, Neuralgia. Tympleton's Rheiitic Capsules lifave health ta sufferers. • A healthful, money -saving remediy; well known for fifteen years, pre- scribed by doctors, sold by drug- gists, $1.00 a hex. Ask our agents or write for a free triol paekage. Tempietons, 142 Xing W., Toronto LOCAL AGENT — J. E. NOVEY IN •TP12:GREAT .7fRRITORY INCLOSED • 301,Y1 IN • TUE. LINO • A-11.• C•• 0.•THERE• 13.1.ACK•Ora FOOD, MEDICAL •SUPP04114, CLOTHING. DOCTORS. FUEL. NURSES. HOSPITAL ACCOMMODATION. tyrstapcossusirriom.• SMALL- roxemo • OMR • !MMU °WIWI IN .• UNC111011k• Int • CHILDREN 4WD!! •CRIATUT•SUMIURS* ItIVEN • MILLIONS • Ca • 'Meal • AXL WAR • ORPMAN3 PSOPIJI • AVM 30 • emu • MTN • HUMAN • 6031111I • 1141.41 • MO • MU • 1111.P113S . K „ ,I• .,,,.. i.,..3.,. ex . some , Vitlkilf.3 • IMO • TaIt • , ° "syrius maw 4 '1... ia ,K001.11 111.1. 'ATI TM ,2AME • TIME . Stria/ • ' .' .,.. , • -AUSTRIA. INMSCR1 rex, !Op _MAN IA . DI TuRM19513. ALARMIMIX 4ALL. RefeRTLO • MUMMY $ ITALY. Ai,: 14'14 •-eeeteaetteie, Study this Map • It tells ---but only partly tells—the Story of Misery in Central)Europe. Within the great territory between the black lines millions of destitute children are doomed to grow up weak and deformed througji, want of fats, milk and sugar, unless immediate help comes from without HERBERT HOOVER, invited to speak at a Canadiark'iRed Crossi 'meeting, said : "Our problem over the forthcoming winter appears tollie about 3,500,000 to 4,000,000 children. "These children are the obligation of every man, worneits and child • in the Western Hemisphere, for we have suffered less; but,/ beyond: this, they are a charge on the.heart elf the whole world,,';',/ The anadian Recli:Cr ss appeals on behalf of The British Empire War Relief Fund (To Combat Distress and Disease in Europe) • $/0.00 will save a child; $1.00 will give it "saving" food for a month. 4S4 Help &t this humane work by sending or bringing your subscription to sums ,04,37W.! the neorea local Red Cross Branch or to The Canadian Red Cross Society, iAlue imottauSherhporne Street, Tortinto, ANA:Metal As... .4 11 - AUe xofas apasu ail" Imp Jour Ispnou to lunowv 432411,211 -qt 0940300‘00 irrit row 'M1:orens put! raw uosotni Hese el 1.! put 033,ntaX os 42A0 .xoj-epvint3 xi! . IsiaA prepue}s 941 ualaci req Isvax 1: .1.SVHA 'became furious, but the quartermaster had her very'promptly bundled into a boat and those around were told the reason: "Why, she has been trying to get on board for three. days in order to shoot her husband. He is hiding below in mortar' fear, as he caught sight or her coining in the boat," Sdire en- ough,the woman was found to be arm- ed, evidently ready to carry out her pur pose, The poor madwoman was seen et Beauport Asylum, some time after, a most exemplary patient, according to the officials in charge, but at the same time one of the most dangerous homi- cidal maniacs—at least as regarded her husband, said to have been drowned at one of the cataracts in the course of the ascent of the Nile. Lord Lansdowne's name 'was a good deal before the American public not long ago in the connection with the sale of the famous Retnbrandt, "The Mill." This magnificent painting, held by the judges of art to be matchless, was bought by J. P. Morgan for the enormous sum of £400,000 to the great indignation of the British people, who held that such an incomparable work ought not to have been allowed to leave the country, The first marquess was the son of the Earl of Shelburne, noted as a favorite Cabinet Minister of George III. A younger son, Lord Henry Petty, was a very able financier and Chancel- lor of the Exchequer, and for many years prominent in the front ranks ot the Whig party, and lived to he the patriarch of the House of Lords, and a personal friend and councillor of Queen Victoria. He lived in active politics long enough to take office in the Aber- deen Administration, which was so inept et the critical time of the Crim- ean War. This,. the third Marquess, Was a lover of literature, and a gener- ous patron of men of letters, in ad- dition to adding to an already fine li- brary he made one of the most superb collections of paintings and statuary in England. CASTOR IA, k‘or Infants stud Children In Use Forayer 30 Years Always bears • the eigtoture at Kingston Whig:—Why such an up- roar about that still found in a West Virginia church? One expects people to keep still in a church. Indianapolis Times: — SpeakMg of the fun is poked at women for wearing furs in summer, one of the fair sex calls attention to the fact that the original owners of the furs wore them the year around. , AO; Thursday, Nov. 4th, 1920; W0.1 NEVER PLAY BARERALt: Christy Mathewson. Rives Reasons Why tho French Are Not L.Ikely to Take Up•iiiiame, r --- France, the country that went through the lighting of the biggest war in history without batting an eye, will never adopt baseball - as -a natioaal- Pastime beeande the game is "too . rough." Whim was learned from no :loss en antboritY than Capt. Christ°. -pher Mathewson, who arrived et New Rork recently. • Although the Polka have braiely at. temptedfew games under American tutelage, "they're more afraid of * • hard-hit liner or grounder than they gra , of it German TT," according to Mathewson. "Their Infield work 1* rotten," said Christy. "They ean run beset? all right, but they get little en- nOrtunitY, heaause they mull bat. 'And I don't believe yeil could pick' up a first -claw catcher in all of France. Every time a Frenchman gets behind a, bat he wants to retreat about ten paces, erect a barbed-wire entangle- ment, dig himself 'a dugout and crawl "Nu, the Frenchmen will never take te biiscball in a big war. I -le Meet's something geotle;'sueh Ls footnati and itteling." . "N 'Rfr y9 FOLLOWS THESUli The'enidendc of "flu" left in its train many weak hearts and serious nerve troubles. Mrs. L. Wilson,. 63 „Ridout 81., King, ston, Onti, writesn-"Over ler° years agol was taken very ill withiemanish iefluenza, followed titneuritis of the head, higb blood pressure and congestion of the brain, mid 1 was left in a very weak state. My heart and nerves were, eo terribly bad I would have weak, fainting spells, sometimes twine a day. It really seemed to me roy heart would stop beating. I doctored, and they Seemed to.do all they could for me, but I grew so bad, day after day, they thought, I could not get bettet. I had given tip nil hopes of ever getting well, as -I was failing vcry fast. It seemed to me IL was a God -sen when I looked in the paper and read about Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. I thought that there was a little hope where there was a spark of life left, I commenced -taking them right. away and I am now on my fifth box,. aLd can safely say 1 urn a lot better. I truly think that, is it. had not been for your wonderful medicine I would not have been here now." Price 50e, a, box at all dealers, or mailed direct by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Torontct, Ont. THE STORING OF CROPS How to Keep Over Fruit, Roots, Cabbages, Celery, Etc. All Specimens Should Be Sound and Dealthy—Careful.ITandling Very Important,--1•IiMS on Fall Work In Field and Garden and Among Live Stock., 3008HVA1011% 40 tile Storing oe mien . cmucts as maPifIlleosuttAlelclartIlang'8 wyelelichilavertol)epia,et°vIert the -development of molds and yeasts.. These are always present' on the sur, face of the fruit. Bacteria cto not damage fruits as they do vegetables or meats on account of the sugar and acid nature of the fruits, which le not FiatletaetOry for bacterial develop, Inent. but Is Just what le 'needed,ter Molds and yeasts. ' 'But even ineldee and yeasts will not develop on sound apples and pears that are properly stored, If, lio-wever, the fruit Is damaged in the picking, handling or apaih eekn it oe, lloeina tehpeorle:raufryels,ultee potse l- bOL i thare 00 the surface to germinate ; and grow and nuitiply, and when.4141, once they get a start they will con- tinue to spread even through the sound lieelthy tissue and from fruit to fruit until the whole pack may be spoiled.. • -Therefore in the, storing of such efersueintsas apples and pears it is tia4 1, Te have only sound specimens. 2. To pack .cai•efully without b1.111.Tsinog. 3store in a cool, well ven- tilated place where they will neither be overheated nor frozen,—Prof. JD. II: Tones, 0. A. College, Guelph. Diuts for Field Work Its the Fall. Watch every opportunity for Ploughing land In preparation for i spring nrope. 1 hoe, that all crops are carefully stored so as to avoid daniage in case of an early winter. When harvesting potatcen for storage or for market be careful to remove as much of the dirt end as many of the mall, irregular, bruised or diseased potatoes as passible. If manure 1$ available it Is an ex- cell•nit plan to spread it over plough- ed land and then place the soil into ridges about thirty Inches apart by means of a Single or double mould- board plough. This: preserves the fer- tility, improves the sub -soil and lay -s the lazel In 1>::..(!elle.nt condition in the spring, espezeally for criliivat, ed erops. Complete all ploughing which is required to be done in the a u t umn. When practiceble, gather and feed or burn all remnants of vegetable crops and other refuse. Select in the field from the grow- ing -crop some of the best ears of corn for seed for the following spring. When filling the silo the third ela- ting of alfalfa might he mixed with the corn for improving the quality of the silage. (Contributed by Ontario Department of Agriculture, Toronto.) IN the storing of roots, tubers, cab- : bage and celery it is a coingars4- . tively simple matter if the Mater- ' tali ave' soiind to begin with. Although the decay -producing bac- teria, yeasts and molds are always ' on these they cannot do any injury until the materials are first' damaged in some. way as by bruisieg, beating or freezing. After such injury has beendone the decay bacteria and molds are able to feed on .tlae dame agedetiseue and as it result .or this action decay or ,rot takes place and gradually, spreads until all Is spoiled. 1 Therefore, in Storing tooth,' tubers. 1 cabbage or celery, it fe,neeeseney,—• 1st; To have only 'stein& bealthy specimens., „ •• . 2nd: To handle with care so as not to -tarn's& ol• otherwise ' dainage the tissues. • ' • ' • - . 3ed./ Store in a cool, well-ventlIal.. ed ,place r here there will be no dan- ger of either' over -heating or freezing, . Overheating or freezing'willusual- ly kill theliving tissue of whicla the roots are eempeged, afterwhich they will 'readily decay as a'result ol the rapid Idultiplichtioe of bacteria and molds in the :deati time. • Fall Work In the Garden. Rat -vest the late cabbage, cauli- flower and celery; much of this can. be put away carefully in storage and held until well on through the win- ter. Slight moisture and 86 deg. I', for roots, dry and cool for onions, tiantlasilddfy 72 deg. 11`, for winter s iee.-eeee.ee.....ieveaek At this time the garden should be well manured and deeply ploughed so ground as to admit the frost to mellow it. Gut off and burn the asparagus tops, and clean, up the rhubarb bed for next year, giving it a coating of inges"akree. up some parsley plants, Put thetain Pots or boxes and allow them: vines killed b frost should be clean- ed ul, Roo *pa except the paraley a44'salsify: should be.taken out be -i. Squash 2 tind pumpkins . should bo fora the , groned bepomes. too wet.. gathered' before frosted: On' vacant. g - to grow in the house. Some counsel given early: A..ik tsoowthroyeitoarte tlitoe,graivtee osf grathreette bitilhud;or , ploughing : e down in tba: sprItig: Late carer's, :should -be hillod" up to start the bleaching process be-- fore it is put lo storage. . .. . . . October Mints for Letts Stook. I. Feeder:Lean generally be .selected, to advantage Ws, Month. • Dipping ewes 'and lanibs ' thli- month.will ocean then: ng, arid mak*, them comfortable and thrifty -during, the winter. ' If ewes 'are ' given good pasture: they 'will begin to gain, and be in best pea:Able condition for breeding, ensuring more lambs. . Stableswhich' are swept down and. whitewashed after the fall threshing make more Sanitary quarters for the Meek during winter. 11111111111111111111.111 ptutitodluop eictepbek sAtue elpfil ,tri•erreiv 4,-.41=•0 • uodft puladebi Caentil4SassAta ISMS:MAX . 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