HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1919-6-26, Page 3SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN CANADA
Three months ... $ 40
Half year , . • • • $ ,75
Year .. , , , , . , , ,., . 9,50
-if not paid in advance, $2.00 per annum -
he Th
Office Phone 30.
THE WORKMEN'S
COMPENSATION REPORT
The Report for the fourth year's
operation of The Workmen's Compen-
sation Act, which is now printed, con-
tains much interesting information
concerning industry, workmen, and ac-
cidents in the Province.
During th year $3,514,648.47 was
awarded for compensation, of $11,600
a day, and $369,346.57 for medical
aid, or $1,219 a day, the number of,
cheques issued per day being 248 for
compensation and 139 for medical aid.
Payment was made for $40,930 ac-
cidents, 382 of these being deathrcases,
2,549 causing some degree of perntan-
en disability, 25,446 causing only tem-
porary disability, and' 12,553 involving
only medical aid.
It is estimated that over 500,000
workmen are covered by the provisions
of the Act, with total wages amount-
ing to about $400,000,000 annually.
• As the disability in serious accidents
often continues into and sometimes be-
yond the following year, complete
statistics can only be given for the
prior year,
These show that about 75 per cent.
of the injured workmen were British
subjects and 25 per cent, foreign, 614
per cent. being Austrians, 6 per cent.
Atalians, 5 IA per cent Russians and 224
per cent citizens of the United States.
The average weekly wage of injured
workmen was $19.06, and the average
age 34.07 years.
The total time loss from accidents
during the year was 565,526 days; the
average length of temporary disability
was 21 days.
Machinery caused about 32 per cent
of all the accidents; the handling or
moving of objects, 28 per cent; and
Lulls of the workmen, 10 percent. The
most prolific individual causes were
saws which caused 892 accidents;
• lathes, 891; presses, 813; hoisting
apparatus, 785; abrasive wheels, 781;
belts, pulleys, chains and sprockets,
390, of which 7 were fatal; planers,
jointers, and edgers, '260; shapers,
moulders, and headers, 121; shafting,
eoupiings, and set screws, 75, of which
6 were fatal. Falls front vehicles caus-
ed 260; collapse of support, 276. Hot
and' inflammable substances caused
1,018 accidents; falling objects caused
1,256; and runaway animals, 98.
In the present industrial conditions
the existence of a law which is just
and satisfactory to labor and not un-
duly burdensome to industry is of the
highest importance, and the success of
the present Ontario Act must be a
great satisfaction to those responsible
for its enactment, among whom the re-
presentatives of -labor took a leading
part,
While the amendments at the last
Session have put the Ontario law in
the first .place in regard to benefits to
workmen, the rates of assessment are
low compared with those of .other
places, The explanation is In the
fact that Ontario haste collective liabil-
ity state system in which the compar-
aively snsali cost of administration is
mostly borne by the Province, and in
the fact that the provisions and meth-
ods of administration of the Act are
very,simple, speedy, and inexpensive.
Statistics show that from 40 to 60
per cent, of what is 'paid by employers
for private insurance elsewhere is
consumed in expenses -and profits, and
less than 25 per cent, of what the em-
ployer paid under the old employers'
liability system actually reached the
workmen or his dependants, the rest
. being absorbed in legal and other ex-
penses.
Comparisons of rates of assessment
are significant. The steel works rate,
for instance, under the collective lia-
bility system is in Ontario $1.70, Nova
Scotia $1.9o, and Ohio $t.75, as com-
pared wish a rate under the private or
mixed system of $3.74 in Michigan and
$5.02 in New York, For mason work
the rates are Ontario $1.50, Nova
Scotia $2, Ohio $2.85, Michigan $5,41,
and New York $3.74. In Michigan
the benefits are little more than half
what they are in Ontario.
Children Cry
��oo
FOR FLETCHER'S
CAaSTO RIA
Fifty Yearn Ago
On the 3rd of June, 1869, fifty
years ago, it was so cold that stone-
masons had to work with overcoats
and woollen mitts on . It froze so
hard that night that their tools had to
be thawed out of the ntorar with hot
water.
Appointed Superintendent at Hensel!
O[Y M
D[FOMFRUT
Ex1racrdivary Success which
"Fruit -a -lives" Has Achieved
One reason why "Fruit-a-tivos"
is so extraordinarily successful in
giving relief to those suffering with
Constipation, Torpid Liver, Indiges-
tion, Chronic Headaches, Neuralgia,
kidney and Bladder Troubles,
Rheumatism, Paha in floe Rack,
Eczema and other Skin Affections,
is, because it is the only medicine in
the world made from fruit juices.
It is composed of the medicinal
principles found in apples, oranges,
figs and prunes, together with the
nerve tonics and antiseptics of
proven repute.
50c. a box, 0 for $2.50, trial size 25e.
At all dealers or sent postpaid
by Pruit-a-tives Limited,_ Ottawa.-
BRITISH
ttawa.-
BRITISH AIR FORCE
MAKES ATLANTIC FLIGHT
Capt. Alcock, Noted Manchester Aviat-
or, With. Lieut. Brown, as His Navi-
gator, Succeeds Where Hawker Fail-
ed; Lands et Clifton, Ireland, After
Trip of Over 1,950 Miles From SL.
Johns, Newfoundland; Much of
Flight Made Through tine Fog, with
Occasional Drizzle; Airmen Hamper-
ed Considerably Throughout Jour-
ney, But Make About 122 Miles an
Hour.
..London, June 15.—The final goal of
all the ambitions which flying men
have ventured to dream, since the
Wright Brothers first arose from the
earth in a heavier-than-air machine,
was realized this morning, when two
young British officers, Capt. John Al-
cock and Lieut, Arthur W. Brown,
landed on 'the Irish cost in a Vimy-
Vickers plane after the first nonstop
flight across the Atlantic ocean
The aviators left St, Johns. Nfld.,
shortly after 4 o'clock yesterday after-
noon.
Their voyage was without accident
and without unforseen incident so far
as can be learned. It was a straight-
away, clean-cut flight achieved in 16
hours and 12 minutes from Newfound-
land to Clifton, Ireland, a distance of
more than 1,900 miles,
Machine Used In Crossing Atlantic New
THE CLINTON NEW, ERA,
* * * :k Y :K e;: 4' >9 *
* MEN AND EVENTS '"
• ****15*****
W. P. Gundy, a prominent Toronto
business man who succumbed 'n Ot-
tawa last week. He was one of three
appointed on the War Purchasing
Committee. Written for the Weekly Sun by J.A.S.
SUBSCRIPTIONS OUTSIDE OP CANADA
(.Advance Only)
Great Britain , , , , , , $1.50
United States 2,00
France 2.00
Thursday, June 160, 1919;
�? •» *
* MEN
r * x• .e
* it * * s * s
AND. EVENTS
•s
* * .s r• w •a•
appy,51114aUorttorngNo-rwl sINEciiONai0B1otaf Va.
IMIEr
CRERAR, PRACTICAL
IDEALIST
MOTORISTS ARE LIABLE
Thomas Alexander Crerar is sprung
from that Scottish yeoman stock
UNDER HEADLIGHT RULE British. has
civilization tl� in backbone
for
one hundred years. The name Crerar
means miller and the fancily is recog-
nized as a sept of the great McIn-
tosh clan, 111
the forties
No Proclamation Has Been Issued To
Make Law Operative Says Writer
Who Criticizes Proposed Limitations
Of Headlight Glares.
Pending legislation in Ontario on
the restriction of the "baneful glare"
on head lights is referred to by Mr.
H. Warren Lloyd, in the last issue of
the Toronto Motor Magazine. He says
in part:
"One of these days the anti -glare
legislation is going to descend upon
us like a bolt from the blue, or (to
express it harmoniously) like an 1.111 -
di 1111115th headlight cooling around a
curve at you on a pitch-black night.
That is, it will unless—hanging
over the heads of Ontario motorists
(to confine our attention to these
for the moment) is the following
subsection of section 9 of the Motor
Vehicles Acf: "It shall be unlawful
to carry on a motor vehicle any
lighting device of over four candle
power, equipped with a reflector, un-
less the same shall be so designed
deflected or arranged that no por-
tion of the beans of reflected light
when measuered seventy-five feet or
more ahead of the Lamy shall rise
above forty-two inches from the level
surface on which the vehicle stands."
Sounds sintplel but as it stands it
could be made to, obtain a convic-
tion if the authorities so desired„ on
almost any existing light that is
bright enough for night driving in
the country. The only saving feature
British Type. ' on the subsection at present is the
St. Johns, Nfld., June 15.—The Ilssterisk which draws your atttention
tmachine in which Alcock and Brown e a note thatat the bottom the page
to
crossed the Atlantic is one of a British bexplaning theo regulation only.b is pro.
type built to bomb Berlin. - Tanks for cl brought into force only .by pro -
fuel displaced the bombs and bombing claSo far,.
apparatus' to shell an extent t'iiat In So far, fortunately, there has been
skeleton while being assembled the no Proclamation
machine looked like a collection of
cane. The bow was formed of one
tank, the center section of the upper
wing for another, and running back
from the cockpit were six other
barrels, holding about 100 gallons
each, "The life raft" tank was car-
ried in much the same manner as Haw-
ker carried the emergency boat on his
Sopwith.
The fliers had scanty room in their
cockpit. Alcock, in the pilot's seat,
was separated by inches only from the
wheel with which he controlled the
machine, and his instruments on ail
sides of him• Brown, as navigator,
had slightly more room for his work
in making observation.
Alcock said the cramped seat was
the only drawback in the design of the
machine, which, he said, he felt abso-
lutely confident would make the pass-
age,
The Transatlantic Flyers.
Capls John Alcock, D. S. 0., and
Lieut, Arthur Whitten Brown, the
aviators who made the first non-stop
flight across the Atlantic, are officers
with war records. The former also is
distinguished as an inventor and build-
er of air craft, iie was and is the
only pilot in the air service of the
allies to have designed and constructed
a machine of his own, distinctly orig-
inal in its outstanding features while in
active service.
This was in 1916, the Alcock fight-
ing -scout biplane being conceived and
given actually in off -day intervals be-
tween bombing expeditions from the
Mudros base directed against Constan-
Mr. Wilfred Goodwill, who has tinople,
formerly connected with the Jackson Alcock then was with the R.' N. A. S.
Manufacturing Co's Goderich plant, of Great Britain. It was every day,
and who has just lately returned from either with Handley Page bomber to
overseas, will be superintendent of the drop explosives calling cards on Turk-
new plant the company is opening up ash military depots, orelse, with a
at liensall. scout machine, to engage one or more
of Frites air fighters, lending their
support to the Turkish partner.
Excellent returns are being receiv- lie was one of the first pair of avia-
ed by the Salvation Army in the world- tors to bomb Adrianople and Constan-
wide appeal for "Self -Denial Week." tinople, besides which he ryas officially
The funds so received go to further credited with having 'satisfactorily vs -
the work of the army in many ways counted for seven Hun machines there -
throughout the world. by winning his.D. S. 0. He was forc-
ed to land in the sea one day and later
fell into the hands of the Turks.
Lieut, Brown was beim' in :Glasgow,
i Scotland, of American parents.
He had his first war experience with
a
Manchester, England
)fns regiment
from which he transferred to the air
force as aft observer, Ile was shot
down, badly wounded and sent to Ger-
many n Irl 1
915 as a
Y prisoner of war.
He was repatriated to Switzerland and
returned to England on an ezchauge in
1917.
Self.Denial Week
Disturbed ' sleep usually
comes from some form of
indigestion. Strengthen
the stomach and stimulate
the liver with a course of
ti�i
liar*
t11s
tele wsl&World.
Sold MMs Medicine
of last' cen-
tury this
grandparents
joined the
tide of im-
migrants
which was
flowing a-
cross the
Atlantic and ;
settled in
,the County
09 Perth. H
There in ufi.T.A,Crerar.
1376 on a farm near Molesworth the
future Ministed of Agriculture was
born, the son of William S. Crerar and
Margaret McTavish.
In 1881 Mr, W. S. Crerar heard Ike
call of the West, being attracted by
the tales of the wonders of Manitoba,
and moved his family and his house-
hold goods out to the Silver Creek
settlement near the Town of Russell
in Northern Manitoba. The last stage
of the journey was a trek of 160 miles
by wagon from Portage la Prairie,.the
-
then terminus of the railway.
Here tine Crerar family settled
down to real pioneer life, and the
future cabinet minister, when he di-
lates about the hardships of the
prairie settler, knows whereof he
speaks. Once the early boom was
over there were dull times in Mani-
toba; prices were low, oppressive
monopolies were abundant and a liv-
ing was hard to come by The near-
est railway lay sixty miles distant at
Moosornin, and all the hard-won pro-
duce of the farm that could be sold
had to be, taken there by tedious
Ijourneys.
The settlement was largely Scotch
"The present tentative adoption of
of the second generation in Canada,
the statue has drawn attention to ' and they maintained the .Scotch tra-
ditions of hard work, , neighborliness
the natter however ,and a large pro- ! and hospitality. Young Crerar got a
portion of car owners seeking to scanty schooling in his early' days,
avoid the use of offensive lights, I and all his summers were spent in
have procured lenses and other de- the hardest of farm work. There
vices which moderate the glare; so' was ploughing to be done; there was
that the difficulty is largely curing ' the bush to be cleared; there were
itself, and the writer is of the opin-
ion that no date should be fixed for round of chores. But there Lived
bringing the statute into effect. Be- nearby an old neighbor, a man of
fore this done the law might be knowledge and culture, who lent
ascended in certain particulars, so as , him books that awoke the divine fer-
to establish a standard of glare applic- ; menland craving for knowledge in
able to all. types of head -lamps and de- his soul. As the years rolled on
vices, and one which is readily ape tines became better and he was able
plied." to afford himself the luxury of a high
school education, which he supple-
ir
mieented byCollegiate.
a course at Portage la Pra-
For a time that refuge of lost
souls, the teaching profession,
claimed him, but its scope was limit-
ed and he soon abandoned it for
other fields. He was asked to under-
take the management of a farmers
elevator which had been established
at Silver Creek, and in this work his
lot. for several years was cast. Fle got
an insight into the business end of
the grain trade and having already
acquired a knowledge of the diffi-
culties and trials under which the
farmers labored, when the Grain
Growers' movement began in the the
early years of this century, T. A.
Crerar was one of the first to sup-
port it. He was a delegate to some
of the meetings and a few short
speecises that he made and the gen-
eral tenor of his attitude caught the
fancy of E, A. Partridge, a fine old
Western idealist who was the soul,
if not the brains, of the early stages
of the Grain Growers' movement.
Partridge had been called a dreamer
and an impractical idealist, but front
his brain, more than ashy other, was
born the idea of the co-operative
agricultural commonwealth which is
now moving t0 embrace all 'Canada,
An inventor has received a patent
for electrical apparatus to raise theatre
ehafrs several fiches as buttois in their
arms are pressed.
According to a British scientist who
investigated 78 families, including
more than 3,000 individuals, left
handedness is inherited, often through
several generations.
jay✓....;$f,.yteeiii•:`v"eetiiretteeiteielit: eeeiih-seet. eette,
ts:
Ont.
Nature's Way
` Is Best
Nature's laxative h bile.
If your liver is sending
the bile on its way as it
should, you'll never be
constipated.
'Keep the Main Burden.
Keep the liver tuned
right up to its Work. The Grain Growers' Company was
struggling with difficulties and Mr,
Take one pill regularly Partridge discerned in Mr. Crerar a
s; (more only if necessary) 't1 man who could solve there. He had
untilytiurbowelsactreg knowledge;115fsiIse had youth and energy 10
aturall on his side, so he was summoned to
aloft freely, naturally. Winnipeg and that `•.< P g told he was Presi-
CEQ. is dent of the Grain Growers' Grain
ARTT'6E ``•`'• CoCompany, Mr. Crerar's • stabsequent
ITTLE
TLE history is the . story. of the Grain
tP1LSGrowers'
Company,
now called Uni
e Grain n Gro er
tv S Ltd, and't
1
, Is ho
6•nulnce bears 'SlgAefnra !3 idle statement to declare that with-
ed
his a lque personality at the
ceeeti
' Aiie- kelm
the c -
o erative movement
Ss could never have reached its present
;z• success,
With Mr, Crerar for the fast twelve
ear,
s the bans;
Y Hess end of the Gran
+ Growers' Movement leas been the
i ' object of all his energies and abili-
ties and be can look with pride to a
splehdld achievement when to -day
S
Yt
Colorless faces often thew this
ehdenoo of
iron in the blood.
Carter's i' 1
ion Fills
'Will help this condition.
Admiral Von Tirpitz, who makes denial
in his book about to be published,
that he was father of unrestricted U-
boat warfare.
his company is probably the most
powerful economic organization in
the Western Provinces, after the Ca-
nadian Pacific Railway. Its rennin -
cations are numerous and grow wider
every week.
It is true that there has been a
disappointment' in the failure to bring
the Saskatchewan Grain Growers in-
to a unified organization, but time
will remedy this error and there is
every reason to expect that the ag-
ricultural business of the West, with-
in the next decade will be embraced
in one all pervading co-operative 'or-
ganization.
Mr. Crerar has had many helpers
and able assistants, but on his own
shoulders the main burden has been
borne. He is that rarest of human
beings, .s practical idealist, He has
always had a sound business head
and has gained great business ex-
perience which in the service of a
private corporation would earn him
five tunes the salary he has hitherto
received What is more, he has afundamentall passion for the beter-
meet of his fellow -?nen and though
he is no believer in any short cuts to
the nnillennuim, he is willing to give
his best to the amelioration of the lot
of the farmers of Canada whose lives
he knows so well.
Though his time has been immersed
in a financial round of business cares
and of late years he has had to spend
half of his existence on trains, he
has always made time tor ead good
books and take an interest in the
affairs of the outer world. Go into
Isis house and you gain the impres-
sion of being in the abode of a cul-
tivated citizen of the World; there
are books and papers all around and
the owner is usually to be found
reading good literature or some pro-
gressive paper. lie is fortunate in s
wife who shares his tastes and ideals
and in two "bonny" youlfg daughters,
it took some time and difficulty to
persuade Mr. Crerar that his best
services to his fellow countrymen.
could, for the time being, be given in
the political rather than in the eco-
nomic field and great pressure had
to be brought to bear on hint to join
the Union Government. No one
entered it from a purer sense of
duty and probably none of its mem-
•
The System is
Poisoned
By Failure of the ' Liver and
Kidneys to Purify the Blood
Relief Obtained by Use •
of Dr. Chase's Kidney -
Liver Pills.
Too much eating of heavy, highly-
seasoned foods and too little out-
door exercise are the most frequent
causes. The liver Is upset, becomes
torpid and inactive, the bowels are
constipated, the kidneys are over-
worked in an effort to get rid of
the accumulating poisons and break-
down. Headache, backache, aching
limbus sound a warming note, and
when this is not heeded the natural
development is rheumatism, lum-
bago, and painful and fatal forms
of kidney 'disease.
To best overcome this condition
Dr. Chase worked out in his private
practice a prescription which has
come to be known as )Sr. Chase's
Kidney -Liver Pills, beoause .of their
combined action on these filtering
organs. No treatment has, ever
provaction o•P then so .e kidneysssful In , and
theh
bowels, and thereby eleasssingt the
system of all impurities. .For this
reason Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver
Fills have a world-wide reputation
an the most thorough euro for
rheumatism, lumbago, chronic in-
digestion and constipation.
Mee. Alex. Gordon, Walkerton,
Ont, writes: "A few years ago I
suffered" from kiuney and laver
trouble, with pains in my back. I
had heard of Dr. Chase's Kidney-
Liver Pills being good for this, so
I commenced taking them. I had
only taken a couple of boxes when
the trouble was all removed."
Mrs, M. Nickels, 192 Milton
street, Sarnia, writes: "I have found
3)r. Chaao's Kidney -Liver Pills an ex-
cellent remedy. I suffered consider-
ably with kidney trouble and back-
aahe, but after I had taken five
boxes of the Kidney -Elver fills they
a me relief. Since then,which
Irev
was about eve -years ago, I keep them
en hand, and use' them whenever I
noel the need of them."
T'r, Chase's ICidneyLlvor Pills, one
1dose,26 cents a bo all deal-
ers, finis z 1
e r Ildnianson hates & C
Limited, Toronto. entestitutes will
only diseopotnt. Insist on gritting
wain You 4ek tee.
bers have a greater distaste for the
chicanery and trickery In which Ot-
tawa politics are so hopelessly en-
meshed, The atmosphere of the RI -
dean Club, fatal to so nonny well-
meaning reformers, has never cap-
tured hien,
Mr. 'Orerar, although( he has not
made many eloquent speeches in the
House, has earned ibe• respect and
liking both of friend and foe and he
has certainly worked wonders in 1119
Department. His whole staff are e
unit in his praise and the greatest
compliment which has been given to
any Minister in many a long day
Was recently paid when the Civil
Service in their dispute with the
Government, agreed to arbitrate
only on the terns that Mr. Crerar
should be the Government's nomi-
nee, and should, himself appoint the
third referee.
s a (natter of speculation what
Mr. Crerar's political future will be.
Some think of him as the leader of
the future progressive party that
Canada must see born and others
declare that he is sick of politics
and will return to the management
of his beloved co-operative company.
If he leaves political life, he has
enough work before him to keep
three men busy, for in addition to
his headship of the United Grain
Growers, Limited, he is president of
the Grain Growers' Export Company
which carries on an enormous busi-
ness from New York, and is also pres-
ident of the Grain Growers' Guide.
The chances are that he will pro-
bably combine both political and
business activities for his exper-
iences at Ottawa must have made
(tint well aware that economic or-
ganization without complementary
action in the political field will not
aval to remedy the ills front which
Canada suffers Be that as it may
there is a lard place for T. A. Cre-
rar in the future life of Canada. He
bears a close resemblance 111 many
respects to Sir Horace Plunkett, the
man who has regenerated the rural
life of Ireland. He has the same
forward-looking mind the same
practical outlook upon economic
problems, the same human sympa-
thies and the sante winning person-
ality that have made Sir Horace
Plunkett an ideal leader of rural re-
form and agricultural betterment. It
is not a wild conjecture to venture
that in the years to come Alec. Cre-
rar will he regarded as the tireless,
skilful worker who built the road,
which others had dreamt of , lo a bet-
ter, happier and more prosperous
world for the farmers of Canada.
Ottawa, June 6.—The resignation of
Host, T. A. Crerar as minister of ngri-
•culture has been accepted. lin the
House of Commons this afternoon, Sir
Robert Borden will read the corres-
pondence which passed between him
and Mr. Crerar in regard to the tat-
ter's resignation. Although the cor-
respondence has not yet been made
public, it is understood that Mr. Crerar
takes definite issue with the Govern-
ment on the budget, and on that issue
tendered his resignation. it is ex-
pected that during the course of the
budget debate Mr, Crerar will further
outline his position.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S.
CA..,TORiA
r•..^.ecooOepaememe mess **0168
Local News
Q9ufusTUNui1o9®��u�•w!�®�Y
Newspaper Advertising Best
Bankers have conte to more fully ap-
preciate the value of advertising and
they attribute most of their success to
wise and judicious advertising in the
newspapers. 'rhe Mississippi Bankers
Association passed the resolution at its
recent annual convention, therein urg-
ing the fraternity to use advertising ap-
propriation in buying space in news-
papers only. This is also true of every
other business and profession. Much
stoney is spent in foolish advertising
and not enough in judicious advertis-
ing. All the large retail' businesses and
patient medicine millionaires in the
country owe their success chiefly to a
system of liberal and judicious adver-
tising. •
Appreciation Of Newspaper
An appreciation of the newspaper
and of what the editor does for the
community is well expressed in an
article we have noticed in some of the
exchanges credited to Ex -Governor
Francis, of Missouri. It follows: Ex -
Governor Francis once said the fol.
lowing of newspapers: ;'Each year the
local paper gives from $500 to $1000
in free lines to the community in
which it is located. No other agency
can or will do this. The editor in pro-
portion to his means, does more for
his town than any other ten men and
in all fairness he ought to he support-
ed not because you like him or admire
his writings, but because the local
paper is the best investment a com-
munity can make. It may not be bril-
liantly edited. or crowded with thought,
but financial* it is more benefit to
the'consIunnty than the preacher or
teacher. Understand me, I do not
mean mentally and yet on amoral clues.
tions you will find most of the papers
on the right side, Today the editors
of the local papers do the most for the
least money of any people on earth."
On fine principle of the old-fashion-
ed bullet 'told is a mold for recasting
on an iron handle the head of a lead
hammer that has been bettered,
The discovery cover of
a vitt ectricla
partly
of
and partly chemical process for the
.produdlion of nfirogen ,feetilizers.
front
relatively vel
Y inexpensiveensfve And ens•
fly obtained nsaterfal5 is ciafiised H a
professor.
Brown UniversityY
.
A new current regulating attach.
meat for any inaandaaeenl !AMP gives
House Phone 95.
- • ice., e. --�--
,WILL KALI. MCIRE,FLIE� THAN.
-9 WORTH OF •ANy
STICKY rLY CATCHER)
Clean to handle. Soldby all Drug-
gists, Grocers and General Stores.
it a range of twelve different intens -
rites.
ARE YOUR "ai�;WEgLS
C nsti ,w ted?
If So, Watch Your Health.
Unless ono has a free action of the
bowels, at least once a day, constipation
is sure tp ensue and it is one of the ills
that causes more ill -heaths than any
other trouble of the human system.
Keep your bowels regular by using
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills and you won't
be troubled with your stomach, you will
have no sick or bilious headaches, no
jaundice, piles, heartburn, water brash,
catarrh of the stomaeh, floating specks
before the eyes, and everything will not
turn black and make you feel as if you
were going to faint.
Mrs. Garnet Hutt, Morsieburg; Ont.,
writes:—"Having been troubled for years
with constipation and trying everything
I kgaw of without effect, a friend advised
mato use Mtlbuntt's Laxa-Liver Pills.
I used four vials and am completely
cured. I can gladly recommend them to
every one who suffers from constipation."
I Milburn's Laza-Liver Pills are 25 cents
a vial at all dialers, or mailed direct
o'n receipt of price by Bhe T. Milburn
Co., Limited, Toronto. Ont,.
W. BRYDON16
BARRISTER SOLICITOR NO'L'4H�
PIIBLI0, ETO
CLINTON
H. T. RANCE
Notary Public, Conveyancer,
Financial and Real Iterate
INSURANCE AGENT—Repreeeetloa 14 Pira 1
surance 0ompanias.
Division Court Dllice.
Piano Tuning
Mr. James Doherty wishes to in-
form the public that he is pre-
pared to do fine pieno tuning,
tone regulating, and repairing.
Orders left at W, Doherty's phone
61, will receive nromnt attention
Medic -al.
DR. J. C. GANDIER
OFFICE HOURS
1.30 p. m. to 3.30 p. m.
7.30 p. m. to 9.00 p. m. 1
Sunday 12.30 to 1.30
Other hours by appointment only.
Office at Residence, Victoria Street
DR. W. GUNN
Office at Residence
Corner High and Kirk Streets.
Clinton Ontario
DR. F. It. AXON
DENTIST
crown and Bridge Work a Specialty.
Graduate of 0.0.0.8,.. Obieede, and 51,0.0.8
Toronto.
Bayfield on ,Uondave. alae Int to It
atilt. ll.
FOWLER,
DENTIST.
Offices over O'NEIL'S store.
Special Dare taken to make dente( teal
ment es• painless as *possible.
THOMAS GUNDRV
Live stork and general Auction •e*
GODERIOH ONT
t at al stets 01,150 a Sunmal15. 0fdett it 41
New ERA ortice, Olinton Brno ay aft ann.
to. Terme reaeoeahle. h'annors .ale not..
,t000nnted
G. 0. McTaggart a7. D. MaTagget
(IA eTags art Bros.
RNN•ERTS
ALBERT ST , CLiNTON
General Banking Htseir v -.,a•
of snnactel'
AOTFIS DISOOIINTED
Drafts teemed. Intereni si1o1#e3 e'
deposits
The McKillop slum/.
Fire Insurance eoe
ttnrtn end Isolated Town Pro, 174,
arty Only Insured,
Read Office—'Seal ort.h. Ont,
. • ' Officers .0—
J. Connolly, Goderich, President; Jas.
Evans, Beechwood,, Vice -President;•
Thos. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secretary-
Treasurer,
Agents
Alex. Leitch, No. t, Clinton; Edward.
Hinchley, Seaforth; Wm. Chesney, lig
mosidvfile; J, W. Yeo, Goderich; R. 0,.
Jarmullt Brodhag en.
Directors e`'"'"
Wrn. Rims, No. 2, Setforfa; Jobs Balk
newels, Bro
dhtt;Jases Evans, B
set:
wood; M. Maws% Clinton; .linseed
Gannett", Ooaferleh, li. 1', MsOrsgnrr
t ss. 3, ltellaorikt .1, G. &love, No, ,
Watton; Robert Fcrsls, lisrlepki 'Get
M4f..ttisrtne, No, 3. 8esforth,