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The Clinton New Era, 1919-1-30, Page 3
u Thursday, Januaiy 30th, 1919. 141WE POULTRY WANTED 11�1o0 HENS 1.000 CHICKENS 500 DUCKS Each 'week at our Poultry Reeding Plant for the balance of 198 Prices paid according to quality and fancy prices paid for large properly fattened milk fed chickens. NEW LAID EGGS Meatless days are making very high prices for eggs. Al- though grain prices are high It will pay, you to take special care of your stock of hens and pullets. Gunll-LaegloiS & Co., Limited The up-to-date Firm Clinton Branch Phone 190 N. W. Trewartha, Manager or Holmesville 4 on 142. inAAAAAAAAAaAAAAAAAAAAAAAp. • • 4 4 A r P 4 s Pianos special values in Art Cases See and here our finest New Stylish designs of Doherty Pianos and Organs, ► 0 f `'anon and organs rent P. e3 `1 . Choice new Edison l.hfiuographs, Music S: variety goods, .e�,aao."r.naas.�,n se s,rv+✓..haanresv�an.•w'. NHEN ?OU ARE NEED: OF ANY L PLUMBING TI NSM I'TH I N G. ROOFING' •• OR " ,;,.ELEG`f,RIC: WORK• CALL OR PHONE FOR PRICES ecu J. A. Sutter Plumber. and Electrician: Phone 7. Vvvw lWNWVVWWVVWI. veneer, Better Pay The Price Don't be tempted to choose cheap jewelery. Far better to pay a fair price and know exactly what you are getting, Yon will never be sorry—for as a matter of money, it is easily the most economical. That has been said so often that everybody by this time should know it—and yet there ie no scarcity of cheap jewelry in the land NOW to get personal—If you would like n Eat Dort altogether— it yy, u WoUld like to buy where nothing but high qualities are dealt in—COME k119R.iE And even at that, no person ever said our prices were unfair W. R. eoHitterc- Jewefop bYt>tf �9vticl�n net bi litoMige Lieensell 111 Its Richness inQuality gives Tea,Pot resnits equalled by loo other. Teas on sale anywhere Black a Green or Mixed Sealed Packets Only. Belgian Queen a Physician Queen ,Elizabeth of the Belgians studied medicine as a girl and was graduated with the degree of M. D. at' Leipsic shortly before her mar- riage. • A Woman's Crowning Glory it is estimated that there are 480,- 000 hairs on the head of the average fair woman, and that each of these could bear a weight of four ounces without breaking. HAD PIMPLES ALL OVER HIS BODY. The nasty, unsightly little pimples that break out on the face and other parts of the body are simply little irritating re- minders that the blood is out of order and requires purifying. Burdock Blood Bitters has been on the market for the past forty years, and ite reputation is unrivalledas a medicine to drive all the impurities out of the blood, thus eradicating the pimples and leaving a bright, clear complexion. Mr. T. W. Steward, 165 Avenue Road Toronto, Ont„ writes:—"I was troubled with pimples all over my body. I hap- pened to mention it to a friend who ad- vised me to use Burdock Blood Bitters. I am now using the thirdbottle, and S am very pleased with the results. I have no more irritation and feel a whole lot better in every way. Your medicine seems to have fixed me up in general:: Burdock Blood Bitters is manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. See that their name appears on the wrapper. W. 13 LOCO° W to BAMUST ER 8Or,ICITOi: kO1.tXY PUBLIC, F.TO H. T. RANCE Notary Public, Conveyancer, Financial and Real 11,rate INSURANCE AGENT—Roprsserting 11 N,re to surnnee i:n,upu,ius, Division Court (Duette. po&1) 4 McLta01) A. Carload of Govt. Standard HOG FEED Just Arrived 011,1) VeLEOJ) Pi'at110 TUIIIII Mr,'Jamee Doherty wishes to ia- torm the public that be is pre- pared to'do fine piano tuning, tone regulating' end repairing. Orders left at W. Doherty's Rhone 64 will' receive nrompt_,attention, Mod18,1. • .;;DR. J C: GANDIER Office at Raslden'e , ,victoria Street' Clinton, •. — Ontario' DR. W. GUNN Office at Residence Corner High and Kirk Streets. Clinton Ontario. OR. F. A. AXON DENTIST ltrnwn rued Bridge Work a Specialty, Graduate of C.O.D.S". Cbloago, and n,O,D•B Toronto. hayfield on Mondays, rraV Ise to D IHt. 1<l. FOWLER, DENTIST. Moes over O'NEIL'S store, 8peoial ogre taken to make dental wept ment as Datniene as possible, THOMAS GUNDRY Live stook and general Auction ,e' GODERIOH ONT asm stow sales a epsotaitl, Otneie at t Now ERA cnioe, plietant,•pram t.y attends to.'Teanee ree,o,,ahis, Farmers' salt not .01001 4. D. McTaggart 81. 1). MoTaggar BELGIUM'S CONDITION Half a million people were driven from Belgium as refugees by the German invasion: Of these one half went t0 France, 180,000, to England and 70,000 to Holland. The re-estab- lishment of these 500,000 people in their homes is, however, only part of the work of reconstruction. Six million more, in the parts of Belgium that were occupied by the Germans, have had their ordinary lives and oc- cupations so disturbed that they will also have to be given something like a new start. Before the present drive more than 45,000 buildings bad been destroyed, and in the fighting along the Belgian front that itas oc- curred Targe numbers of ruined buildings were added daily to the previous total. Even that part . of Belgium which remained free has been shelled time and again, and so will have to be included in the dam- aged area. Practically all the import- ant factories have been robbed of their machinery, and id many cases not only the walls razed to the ground, but the very foundations of the buildings destroyed. The ma- chinery was, of course, shipped to Germany. From looting on this large scale it extended down to such small things as doornobs, knockers, curtain rods, for the metal they con- tained, ' Miles of interurban rail- roads were torn up and shipped to Germany. Towns and villages have been wrecked. Farms have been robbed, to their last ainmal, of live stock, to supply the need of Ger- ntany. The extent of Belgium's war losses due to the invasion can only he approximated, but as estimated now they amount to $4,000,000,000. Even before the war, because Bel- gium depended almost wholly on manufacturing, fou r-Iifths of the food required by the Belgian people was imported, from other countries. How can Belgium pay for this if , her workers are not provided at the earliest possible time with the material and machinery for the con- ' duct of those industries whose pro- f ducts are exchanged for fond and other necessaries not found in Bel- ' gium? ..here is a tremendous prnb- lent: First, to keep alive the pope- ' lathe' released by Germany; sec- ; and, to reconstruct the industrial ' machine so they can stake a living. cillOWS Cotton Root Cilr3lytil s&,. •- - - 11, flip, pet/Ohio reran ati.4 ntorucrne. Sold in three do. .(;goes of atre„eth—No. 1, $1' No. 2, $3; No. 3• $3 per bon • Sold by all druggists, or 110E ggrep::d on recmpt 01dr},rice, k'ceo • pamphlet. A 'bili ;(last M,rn,G,,,o so,. t. •• •-.14.e11artTe.eP1r. fierhvy'• w�nJashr• MOTOR' TRUCK IN FRANCE .. American Plant at St. Nazaire Assemb= led Fifty :5f the Vehicles 'a Day. • Besides a' railway car' assembling plant there is`at•St. Nazaire, France, one of the largest motor 'car assembl- ing plants in France Formerly motor cars were shipped complete, but a hew weeks ago It Was decided to box them .and use. the wood and hay in the service, "thus econontizin in space. Twenty thousand vehicles have been assembled here in the lastsix months One hundred men can put together fifty trucks in a day. You cannot pass from Tours to St. Nazaire without meeting manerelays of them. They move in armies on the highway, and about this port you will see them early and late, each carrying as high as fifty men td;'and from construction work.— Wall Street Journal. McTagq irs Brost i• AmeaRis ALBERT iT I CJLi1 TOlto : Genarat Sinking Boatnaat, trsneae*ed eiOT188 DISCOUNTED Matte issued, Interest allowed a deneelte The McKillop Mutual Fire Insurance Co. rowan and Isolated Town Preps arty Only Insured. ;cad Office—Seatorth, Ont Officers J. Connolly, Goderich, President,; Jas, Evans, Beechwood, Vlce•Prestdenti Thos. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secretary - Treasurer, Agents Alex, Leitch, No. 1, Clinton; Edward Hinckley, Seaforth; Wm. Chesney. E mondvillcC J. W. Yeo, Goderich; R. G Jertnutb, tlrodhagen. Directors WM, itlhn, No. 2, Seaforth; John Ben. newels, Brodlta en; James; Bvins, Beech- wood; M. McEwan, Clinton; +Times Connolly, Goderich D. 1'. McGregor, Ca t tlo, 3, Seaforth;; J. G. Grieve, lta. 4, walfon Robert Ferris, Ilarleekl Geo, McCartne, rxo. •3, Seatorlh. TWO MONTHS OLD BABY IIAD BAD COLD. DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP fA SIS 1u1FE. it %cher the life out of a mother to see tie ohiid—tbe idol of her hesut—slipping ft , eiiju*unbin to the cruel cough that 111 the remedies she hes tried won't cure.. There -ie nothing rho good for children's coughs, or oolds crou whooping cough, bronchitis onchitis as Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. It is pleasant to take, and it cures so gmwkly andthoroughly that the heart'of i the mother s delighted. Mrs. Angus McKinnon Richmond, writes:—"Leet winter my baby was jest two months old, when he took a bad cold. He could not keep anytivng on his stomach with the cough. 1 tried doctor's medicine, but it gave no relief, 1 told my husband I would try Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, and I must say it saved his life, I lust used four bottles and now he is perfectly cured, and I can't help but express my thanks to you for curing my baby. Two yeare ago 1 used it for one of my girls, film had a cold and cough, but the doetor'e medicine was no good for her, I got six bottles of Dr. Wood's Norway Ping Syrup, and itave her a perfect cure. I eon not praise ithalf enough." The genuine Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup Me been on the market for the past 30 a. Don't accept a Babel tato and Tier ab pa endanger your ehild'ow. Price-25e.only and boos Put up . la r the T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. 717 1CI1E CLINTON NEW ERAS. PAO 3 r How The Toronto Daily Star Gets You the News of the Greatest Event in History. Not since the Christian Era has any event so changed the course of the world's history as will the Decisions of the Peace Conference$. The keenest journalists in the world have gathered at Versailles. All their ingenuity and resources will be exercised to get vital news first, But among them all there will be not finer group than the twenty-four men representing The To- ronto Daily Star. Some of these men also represent the Chicago Daily News. So you may judge of their' ., calibre. How The Toronto Daily Star Illustrates 12.30 p,,m• MAP Betbfq DRAWN Peace Conference ews H''Qurly while the Conference is sitting our men will cable us. As these cables reflect each possible change. in the map of Europe, so will they be recorded by despatch and illustration in The Daily Star. Six o'clock at night, Versailles time, is 12 noon Toronto time. In. our office at 12.30, a map showing changes will be drawn. At 1.50 it will be engraved. At 2.25 it will be on the press. At 3.30 the paper will be on the way. to subscribers. By six or seven in the evening most Toronto Daily Star subscribers will know what hap- pened at Versailles up to and including 6 o'clock the: same evening. ...,r� d.....,.,_. ,.•, ..,�,� �.. The Toronti� A Daily Star .?r�.�•. $'. ills `:: s th Y�4 stest #' e k:n,., s Servi e t 7 � Wires elft . urk in '•h i t , f fire .. In addition,. The ' ornnta.'•tD1ily.,, .....Star is alive to the. entire:pews• o#, the '.. world; and i ,pi se,nts th sinews.t€i its: .Jur ,t ,,• readers lir so gra Illi a.,for l that the :mere reading "of the pirper'e1.ch keeps. them wet'1 infonxreik.• upon'.i:all • • those 'things that every ` man `or woman of..the ,Worldslifauld `lie ,con- • versant with. • • • There isn't a newspaper on this continent that has a faster, more accurate and. more com- prehensive news service at the Peace Confer- ence than has The Toronto Daily. Start v. 30 p Tw5MiNG PAPE To Su85C t8ETzs. You cannot read The Toronto Daily Star' for a short while without feeling that it is "the paper you need." .The truth of this is shown by the thousands of people, who, sending in a trial subscription for three months, re- new their subscriptions for a year before even the three months expire. Send your subscription in now. We will mail The Toronto Daily Star to you each day at the following rats: For 1 month, 25c. For 3 months, 75c. For 6 months, #1.50. For 12 months, $3.00, T_ CUT OFF TIS IS COUPON AND MAIL' I'T' O -DAY i IitYimtliijlilli tn�trwa up.,,■ ..� i�rc. _ - =---•moo To Publishers: Tororjto Daily Star, Toronto: bear Sirs: q,;.•;,-.. a w ,,;,.•'.v.:., xir e.lrc , a af••,i:. ,b. '•'F `i'ts«:t.: 4..,1 i J •4':' t .ad>t)};rH'• A �h r`r'rYbra;;,e ;.,.^�.aii .bti;.0-- �'• , r Please enter me as a subscriber to The Toronto Daily Star for • • • • months --for which please find enclosed stamps or money order for $ • Name in full Address Plen.e write plainly anti rosy whetheY. Mr„ Mte., Mina, or Rev. THS TORONTO DAILY STAR .1 ACON CRETE , WIRELESS TOWER t Ifas Been Erected Over the Chinese 1 Well for Naval System, A roast of concrete 150 feet above the wall of the Tartar City, near Chien - men, has been erected for the United States naval wireless. The column. is 18 'itches in dianieter at the' base• and 12 inches at the top. lts weight is ap. proximately 30,000 pounds and it •in- cludes 2,500 pounds of reinforcing steel and 160 cubic Leet of concrete. Twelve guys fastened to four anchor blocks, secure the utast, The work was completed in seven weeks. Olmaren.Cr f© R FLETCHER' S ,p►S-ert ciA Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S 'r:ASTORIiA GATHER UP WASTE GRAIN Indians of Dakota Clean th,o Field, el White Farmers for Pin Money. Sioux Indians living adjacent to the farms of white farmers in the central parts of South Dakota have made con- siderable "pin" money this fall by vis- iting the faring Of their white neighbors and gleaning tine wheat fields for grain which was lost and scattered 011 the ground during harvesting, shocking Mid hauling. they have gathered every strata, and with sinail,clubs heat out the kernels Ind carefully ,gathered the grain.' using a •Sieve to ,separate the grain from the chafe,. Owing to the present high price of p,;hkat. they found AiranieW the work profitable, marketing the grain thus gathered in the nearest, towns, THERE iS A DIFFERENCE When Ma Is Sick I When Ma is sick, she pegs away, She's quiet, though, not much to Say.. She goes )right on a-doin' things, An' sometimes laughs, or even sings She says she don't feel extra well, But then it's Just a kind o' spell She'll be all right tomorrow, sure, A good oid sleep will be the cure, An' Pa he sniffs an' makes no kick, For women folk is always sick, An' Ma, site smiles, let's On she's glad. When Ma, is sick it airl'f so bad. 'tete Pa le Sidi When Pa is sick he's scared to death , t u est sal s our breath An Ma an s l cJ a MS( J Ile crawls fy, bed,, 401' PUBS and grunts, And does all kinr'A$ of crnzr stouts He wants "Doc" pa,,tsvn an' mighty quick, For when P a's 1411 he's awful sick. He gasps and groans, an' sort o" sighs, Ile ',aiks stn queer, an' rolls Ms eyes„ N'.11 Jumps an' runs, an' all of us, An' all the house is in a fuss. An' peace an' joy is mighty sheerce. When Pa is, sick It's something fierce, Tokio's Bath Houses Tokio has 800 public baths at whtclt persons bathe at very trivet cost, a Eats From Desert Planta, "", os; German scientists claims itr davit discovered that It fat resembling c 808nut oil ca a obtained o b rifro mot �• plants titpt grow abutrdantty •ofa wast , In their country,