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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1919-8-14, Page 3SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN CANADA Three months ,, , , ... $ 40 1-lalfyear , ,,.,,,, ,.,,,,, $ .75. Year ; 1.50 -if not paid in advance, $2.00 per a131A1n1- w•t er Office Phone 30. too MAGIC -r' ENG .,POWDER Contains no alum We unhesitatingly re- commend Magic Baking ,Powder as being the best and purest baking L powder possible to -1 produce. It possesses elements of food that have to do the building t, up of brain and nerve matter and is absolutely free from alum or other injurious substitutes. SCIENCE NOTES * * * * * * * * * * * * * s * * Playing cards that are triangular are covered by a recent patent. Disease germs in butter become fewer in number as that commodity is stored. The Malay peninsu?s is now supply-, ing more than two-thirds of the • world's tin. A vacuum brush which cleans draftsmen's drawings and removes the dust has been patented. A recentrly patented toy soldier can be made to hold a rifle in several po- sitions, including that of liring. SUMMER HEAT HARD ON BABY No season of the year is so dan- gerous to the life of little ones as is, the summer. The excessive heat throws the little stomach out of ord- er so quickly that unless prompt aid is at 1)pnd the baby may he beyond all human help before the mother re- alizes lie is i1). Sumpter is the sea- son when diarrhoea, cholera , infan- tun, dysntry and colic are most prevalent. Any one of these troubles may prove deadly if not promptly treated. During the summer the mothers best fried is Baby's Own Tablets, They regulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach and keep baby healthy. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co„ Brockville, Out. An artificial rubber of Dutch been - tion is said to bse freshly caught *ea - fish as the chief Ingredient. LIF` OFF CORNS! - n Apply few drops then lift sore. touchy corns off with fingers 1 C- G Deana t hurt a bill Drop, a little (f+'reezone on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then you lift Itt right out. Yes, magic; A tiny bottle of Froezone posts but a, dew cents at any drug store, but is suffi- cient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irritation. Freezone fs the sensational discovery of a Cincinnati genius. It is wonderful. Plain Language You'll find that common words, simple explanations nd quicic action are the rule at the Willard Service Station. It is part of Willard policy to make it easy for every user of a Willard Battery to get the most out of it. So our instructions are plain: 1 -Add pure water. 2 -Take hydrometer test every two weeks. 3 -If hydrometer test' is loss than 1,285 at any twoiv suocess) readings come straight to tlaeWillard Serv- ice Station 1d' RUM, Garage tour Willard Service Stal;itni. ,age Battery recharged and )verllatlled. Accessories for Jttomobiles and bicycles. e 80 : Residence 140 r a l$TON, `ONT. 1°a1° 1111 .. .9 - ; 'MPH OVEOVNIPORMINTERNATIONAL BAR ERRYCAtdSES RUS THE CLINT J1IOL Provincial Campaign Advocated to Destroy This Shrub, Currant and Gooseberry Worms Causes Great Losses - clow to Identify .U -Simple i4ensnl'es of Control -Spraying, With 'Orsenote of Lead Solution Most Effective. lOontrlbuted by Ontario Department or Agrloultu re, Toren to:) TIIF, Barberry should not he tolerated by the farmers of Ontario. ° It is a thief it r their midst, which every year takes money from their pockets, by increasing the amount of 1•ust up- on their grain, and thus reducing their crops. The Barberry Increases the Amount and Severity of l.tust. It is not necessary to go into the complicated life -history of the fun- gus which causes stem rust of grain. Scientists have known for many years that one phase of its life -cycle is passed on the Barberry, and *11 who have made a study of this mat- ter agree that the amount and sev- erity of stem rust is very much in- creased by the presence of the Bar- berry in the neighborhood of grain fields, While scientists do not expect to see rust entirely disappear if the Barberry is destroyed, the general consensus of opinion is that 1f it were completely exterminated the chances of severe epidemics of stem rustoccurring curring would be greatly (By RISV, P. B. PITL1wA CDR, D. D„ Teacher of English .Bible in the MoodY Bible Institute of Chicago,). (Copyright. Itis, Western Newspaper Union) LESSON FOR AUGUST 17 CHRISTIAN MISSIONS. LESSON 'TEXTS -Acts 1:5; 15:1; 14:20, GOLDEN TEXT -Go ye into all the world. and preach the Gospel to every creature,•-alurl( .6:15, ADDITIONAL MATERIAL - Matthew 115:18-20; Luke 24;45-55; Acts 20:12-20, PRIMARY TOPIC -Helping everybody to know Jesus. JUNIOR TOPIC -The whole world needs Jesus. INTERMEDIATE TOPIC -Taking the gospel to the whole world. SENIOR AND ADULT TOPIC -Chris- tian missions; aims and results. 1. The Obligation of Missions (Mark 16:15). God saves men for a purpose. That purpose is to be laborers together with him in the salvation of others. Christ's parting message, yea, his final com- mission to the disciples was, "Go, preach the Gospel to every creature." This obligation still rests upon the church. Since the command is to preach the Gospel\ to every creature, this obligation will obtain as long as there Is one unredched soul, II. The Power of Missions (Acts 1:8). This power is the supernatural hr- dncement of the Iloly Spirit. Mission- ary endeavor without the Holy Spirit is doomed to failure. Power to witness for Christ is the purpose of the gift of the Spirit. Success will crown the efforts of those who go forth under the leadership and power or the holy Spirit. The Spirit was not given pri- .mnrily to make Christians happy, but to make them strong to carry the Gospel to the henthen. However, those who go fo•tlrin this blessed serv- lee in the Spl'it's power are truly happy, III. The Scope of Missionary En- deavor (Acts 1 :S). The disciples were to begin their witnessing where they were when the T3oly Spirit roll upon them--Jer•nsn- lem. But they were I0 gn 0111 from there to the "uttermost mitts 02 the earth." This is the program for e'v- ery disciple df Christ. Begin witness - Ina where Christ snves you, end then go t0 your neighbor's. next to you, and on to the remotest bounds of the earth. There Is no such thing as Thome mis- sions," except ;that you begin nt hone. IV. The, First Foreign Missionaries (13:1-14; 23). 1. Who .they .were (18:2). Bar- nabus and Saul were selected -the very best two men in the church. The evangelization of the world is a task of such tremendous importance that it 1?hellengeg the church. to offer her best men and women. Since an institution is judged by Its represdntatives, it be- comes the church to put Iter mos capa- letam to the front. TIT tela sent 13:2„ 4). T 0 H oly Spirit chose these. men and sent em fortis tie their work. The.citurch e o have Antioch seetuave del ira e pla- nne�t� liils Issionu y enterprise. gaiter prayer and fasting that e Spirit ordered the church to Send nth, these missloonaries, It should be e businefis of the church To constant- se(at the mind of God relative to tiding forth laborers into the Lord's neyard• The Spirit calls and sends en forth, but he does this through e church. 8. Some experiences of the first for- gn missionaries: (1) Withstood by Elymas the sou- rer (13:0-12). Elymns moved by the vil, sought to turn the mind of Sergi - Paulus from the faith, thus barring e Gospel ns it enters upon its widest scion of salvation. The most vil- nous act which one can commit 18 o turn a soul from the Gospel. (2), Worshiper) ns gods (34:3-13), (a) The ccnslon (vv. 3-10), God accotnpau)ed he testimony of these tntssiouttries by tis mighty power. He wrought n. mir- de through Pnul. At his call the pveternte cripple -one who had never waked -leaped up and walked. The lure was Instant, (b) The method (vv. 1-18). They coiled Boronbas, .111O1- , mid Paul, Mercury, because he was chief speaker. They declared that gods hnd come down in the like - ss of men, and they brought oxen and e•lands to offer sacrifice, (c) Their arts foiled (vv. 19-13). 1. The mis- nnrles rent their clothes and ran among the,peopl'e, saying they were divine but beings of like passions 15 themselves. 2. They urged the ple to turn to God, 3. Pani nett (vv. 10-22). Stirred np by ked Jews from Antioch and Icons. , the rabble who a moment ago were shaping are filled with sntaalc hate. ubtless Paul remembered Stephen's erience..God raised him up and he rt forth to discharge his duties as nisslonnry, Such men of courage needed today. th at It th fo th ly se vi m ter el ce de Ua th sill tai 0 a 1 ter the the 11e ga off Sin in not wit pee Ste WIC tam \ver Do exp mei a 1 ora (enforce the Law Regarding the Barberry. In Ontario legislation has been passed regarding the destruction of this shrub. Let all concerned realise that the Barberry does increase the amount and severity or steal rust and a sentiment will be created for the enforcement of the present act. This act should be enforced. The Barberry in Ontario should be de- stroyed. There is strong evidence to show that Barberry bushes are cen- tres of infection which in wet rea- Sons may give rise to severe opt. dentics of rust. The Common Barberry arut Its Pur- ple-leci.ved Variety the Culprit. The Cotnuron Barberry and its purple -leaved variety harbor grain rust. The average man does not know this shrub when he sees it. it is a spiny shrub from six to nine feet high, with yellow wood, arching branches and gray twigs. The leaves are bright green, sniooth, somewhat oval, from one to three inches Deng, the, margins with bristly teeth. The flowers are small, yellow and borne in long, drooping clusters. The ber- ries are oblong, red and sour. The purple -leaved variety is similar ex- cept for the color of the leaves, which are purple. Unfortunately, the Bar- betuy-has'been much planted in some, sections of Ontario for ornamental. purposes and has become wild in many localities. The Japanese. Barberry Harmless. If-Barberries.are required for or- namental • shrubs the low growing, small leaved; Japanese Barberry (alerbei'la thumbergii, D.C.) may be pIp�tg(i as this species sloes not har- bor th' • rusts;-.e�e.;'r1f J. E. .C011ege, Guelph .. r 4l1' % l`iT`Ittid Get'egs e4 glia ';`o uli� P18 ii ds 0117(1011; insect enemy of eurrante and gooseberries • is the Qdi'raa.t: and Gooseberry Worm. The larva is a greenish caterpillar, about three-quarters .of an inch long when fu)- .grQwn,.with a black head and liunterous black spots over the body. The larvae attack the foliage of gooseberries and of red and white currants but seldom injure that of black currants. At first they work chiefly in the central part of the bush, stripping the leaves nearly all off. there, and doing • much damage before they are observed, Later they may devour the foliage any place. It is common to see nearly all the• leaves eaten off numerous bushes. -K' The life history or the Insect is as follows: --The adults, --which are known as Saweles-are small four - winged flies, about a quarter or an inch in length. The female ]las the abdomen yellowish and the rest of lire body blackish in color. The male V MEN Suffering from lassitude, low spirits and loss of appetite will find re- newed strength, brighter looks, better health and clearer complexions byusing Beecham's Pills. They give you the very help you need, and are a natural aid to the stomach,. liver, bowels and blood. Gentle and positive in action, without any disa- greeable ,after -effects -Use Without Loyalty to Christ.ff A Christianity withoiit loyalty tie the 'Christ nS its motiver anti lits lir i1at Onm b e likna e e ted to -y moll- may we say, Our solar system minus_ the Sun. An Inward Beauty. ' There is an Inward benlSty, life, and PILli. ioveiinegs•lis divine truth, which MOS- hot Wholly i are ■Aort (Petal ec and 11 h not be ItnnWe but Wiled it id' digesteda d'etat by taking ltway with thorn the into Bfe and practice, -Jbhn Smith, a skdil, �f� The duke wrote a boot( about MS Trate Heed of the Bret Stumble, for it Val o : �, travels in *well he tate is ominous; and at best thele l' `-„ . States, in aedls s a good ilrtitttVsl�iMi►wst+tr 0. ..,ll morticing th the rell of l0.14 p11osst step lost,--¢tan3amto i�tlucgeota.y� yup tltmt. "1,011 auulla anti plrar,r ry .,.� 1,,111. ,,..,. • ..,..� r , SUBSCRIPTIONS OUTSIDE OF CANADA (Advance Only) Great Britain $1.50 United States 2.40 France 2,00 O N NEW E R A. "Thursday, August 14th, 1 91 9 House Phone 95. _.. 333 3 su TO ALL WO EllHO A ILL This Woman Recorrinnen'ds Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound -Her Personal Experience. McLean, Neb.-"I want to recom- mend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to aII women who suffer from any functional disturbance, as it has done il'le more good than all the doctor's medicine. Since taking it I have a fine healthy baby girl and have gained in health and strength. My hus- band and I both praise your med- women."-Mrs. JOHNtKorne raansuffering . No. 1, McLean, Nebraska. This famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's ' Vegetable Com- pound, has been restoring women of America to health for more than forty years and it will well pay any, woman who au(ers from displacements, in- flammation, ulceration, irregularities, backache, headaches, nervousness or "the blues" to give this successful remedy a trial. For special suggestions in regard to your ailment write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co-, Lynn, Mass: The result of its long experience is at yew- serelee. 1S .u, Lu„ a,tra, pe, L ulSSJUsrl or black. The flies appear in spring very soon after the leaves have expanded, Eggs aro laid on the under surface of the leaves in chains along the main veins. The young larvae on hatching feed upon the foliage and become full grown in two or three weeks. Then they drop to the ground and form tittle cases in which they pupate. A new blood of tiles emerge., lay their eggs and from these there comes a second brood of larvae, which may be seen on the plants at the time when the currants are ripe. When these larvae are full grown they enter the soil, Usern little cases or cocoons, and remain there till the next year, when they pupate and emerge as adults: Method of Control, - These are easy insects to kill. Ml currant bushes and gooseberries should be sprayed with from two to three pounds arsenate of lead paste or half that amount of the powder form in forty gallons of water as soon its the leaves have become well expanded. Particular care should be. taken to spray thoroughly the Inner parts of the bush, This will kill all the first brood, If -a second brood appears hellebore should be used instead of arsenate of lead, In the proportion of one ounce to one gailon of water. Arsenate of lead would he dangerous on the ripe fruit, The insSet,roccurs everywhere in the province, and everyone should prevent his plants being weakened and seriously injur- ed by it, especially as it is so easy to control. Note. -Hellebore noses its insecti- cidal properties unless 'kept in ail. - tight . packages. - Prof. L, Caesar, p, A, College, Guelph, 1 Do not suffer another da with: y1 ltohor Jit@e,., ing, or Protracts No !ng Piles. No surgical open. - -- - noon required. , Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once and as certainly ours ou. 30c. a box; all dealers, or 10dmuneon, gates & Co., Limited, Toronto, Sample box fres if you mention thle paper and enclose 2c. stamp to pay poataga. Okwawa's Skull Is Important' 0 much curiosity was aroused by the provision in the Peace Treaty that the German Gov- ernment should restore the skull of the Sultan Ok.wawa that the National Geographic Society issued a special bulletin giving an explana- tion. Even though there are as many sultans as there are tribes in Ger- man East Africa the Sultan Okwawa was a •very special sort of sultan, it appears, and in getting possession of his skull the British Government will accomplish more than It ;night be able to do with a small army to paci- fy the former German East African possessions. Tho National Geogra- phic Society's bulletin gives this ac- count of the skull and its former owner: Sultan Okwawa was a sort' of Mo- hammed' or Confucius among his clansmen, and it is to be inferred that the nation which assumes sovereign- ty over the people Wino revere his memory, and probably 'worship his remains, will be received. with great- er friendliness if it can restore the precious talisman. Furthermore, the removal of the skull sheds a side- light upon the long atm of German propaganda,reaching even into dark - eat Africa in contemplation of Prus- sia's day under the scorching equa- torial sun. The German Government contri- buted a goodly sunt' for. an expedition headed by Adolphus Frederick, Duke of Mecklenburg, which ostensibly made a scientific study of the Ger- man protectorate in Melee in 1907- 1 908, There is good reason to be- lieve that the explorers Were not unaware of political advan- tages aceomp shed a tri hal Soup 4,3t,Tull; pis w'•fo colleeted.r Ile erect -Wel lisps 1.0 vai•Ibtis "sot. lams Al one point he digresses from botany and linguistics to give 11115 naive imminent an German pol- icy: 1l is desl'ed to strengthen and em•it ll late Sultan and persons in 0110101'11 .y, and Io increase [beroby their interest in 1bu continuance o Gorman role. At lbs seine time, by steadily controlling and directing the suittlu and using his Dowel e, civilizing influ- ences would be introduced, Thee -by degrees, and almost. imperceptibly to the' sultan hitnaelf, he eventually be- comes nothing less than the execu- tive e in strtunont of the German gots- "Germany's Get•ntany's early policy in her APtican colonial expansion was mark- ed by n0 such adrolt methods; rather by just such disregard of native cus- toms and ruthless measures as that 'Indicated by her removal er the skull referred to In the treaty. Karl Peters, one of the first Germans to seek to exploit- African resources,•instituted such a reign4ot terror among the na- tives by inhuman treatment, and especially by wholesale murders of their women, that the German Gov- ernment was compelled to remove hie commission until the storm of civi- lized protest blew over, But Peters was soon restored and other bureaucratic German officials rudely deposed'. native rulers, instead of co-operating with thorn as did the British, and Haus incited numerous native uprisings. One of these, in 1906, oost nearly 125,000 native lives before the Africans succumbed to the same sort of terrorism as that Insti- tuted in Belgium in 1914. The duke commented on the gen- erosity of the natives in presenting gifts but noted that "yet the pur- chase of. ethnological material met with obstinate opposition." He ex- plained that each clan reveres some totem, believing that the spirit of the deceased enters these objects of rev- erence, The totem is just as likely to be an animal, or part of an animal - the duke mentions the toad, crested crane, the leopard, and the goat -as a skull. Incidentally this fact helps to explain the reverence of the old- time Southern darkey for such tok- ens as the "left hing leg of a grave- yard rabbit caught on a dark night." u,, Ino will' 11 putts treat 11111;Lary 5110 Volitive! diet al or, 1.tlden(lorl'i'„ judgment was fir lees sound than Hindenburg's, and Germany suffered from the subs' 1tu- f Boit, But the ;'omen's prnp,+n,;lly to An Unsinkable Ship. For many years, and particularly during the war, much time has been spent In producing an unsinkable ship. Now a vessel has been de- signed on the northeast coast of England, which, it is claimed, has this attribute. The idea'is simple, but very ingen- ious, and consists of the bridge (which will be larger than usual) be- ing hollow and air -tight. Its normal position will be close down to the decks, to which it will be attached by an apparatus which will permit of its being raised to a certain height above the deck. o Should the ship be so damaged d that the hull will sink, the bridge I ° will be elevated to the full extent allowed by the deck attachment, and 1 i when the hull sinks the bridge not only remains afloat, but will °airy F ,alt» big risks null c'npage In .showy enterprises oracle' hire nun -t' lopulat' ai(h true clique lvhictt controlled the lialeer. What part 1•Ilndenbere had in planning the 1938 offensives In Prance to still uncertain. But 11 was not a derisive purl.. Logicatl;•, there- fore, he injures the Ila Kaiser's when he tries lu relieve hili ofe u' - for the liciee ofothe iGernuin IIigheCon ts uman 1. if lle is accountable for what others did, William 11 is similarly account- able. Icor the latter was always leg- ally and constitutionally the supreme commander' of the at•nriee and the head of the state. Hindenburg was responsible to hint as "War,Lord" to the same extent to which Ludendorff and others were responsible to Hin- denburg. Modern fit. Bernard Dogs. Although the tunnels which no connect Switzerland with Italy haw greatly decreased the importance o the' Saint Bernard and. other passes especially during the eight month of snow, it is still deemed advisable to employ Saint Bernard dogs. It is no longer customary, however, to send out the dogs alone with baskets of food and drink; a man always ac- companies them. These dogs are not really or the famous old Saint E:er- nard breed, That originated in the fourteenth century„ through a cross between a shepherd dog from Wales and a Scandinavian ,log whose par- ents were a Great Dane and a Pyre- nean mastiff. The last pure descen- dant of this tribe• was buried mailer an avalanche in 1816. Fortunately, there were found subsequently at Martigny and on the Simplon Pass a few dogs which, by crossing with mates from Wales, yielded the mod- ern Saint Bernard dog, which Is phy- sieally even stronger than nis medi- aeval nanteaake anti shares most of his trails. -Family Herald. GENUINE ASPIRIN HAS "BAYER CROSS" Tablets without "Bayer Cross" are not Aspirin at all Q p18hVt Q , Get genuine "Bayer Tableta of Aspirin" in a Bayer". package, plainly marked with the safety "Bayer 'Cross. Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" are now made in Canada by a Canadian Company. No German interest what- ever, all rights being purchased from the United States Government. During the war, acid imitations were 0.8 sold Aspirin in pill boxes and various•. other containers. The "Bayer Cross" is, \y your only way of knowing that you are' e getting genuine Aspirin, proved millions for Headache, Neuralgia, Colds,. Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, and for. ,s' Pain generally, Handy tin boxes of 1.2 tablets -also larger sized "Bayer" packages can be had at drug stores. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada), of Rayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. Jade Very Valuable. Practically all the jade now mince! comes from Burma, though New Zea- land is a producer of some roe. Celina takes practically the entire output. In Burma the privilege of mining it has been held by the same Indian or Shan tribe for many gen.. eratlons. The method employed is the crudest. Indeed experts declare that the ' introduction of modern methods would, even i1 they proved successful, defeat themselves by de- moralising values. The Chinese pr.1- fer jade which is of a dark green color, free from all mottles, and jade of this particular grade is worth its weight in gold. There are imitations f jade on the market, generally pro. uced In Europe, which only experts an detect, and a largo amount of his imitation stone, manufactured oto jewelry in Hong Kong and Can- ton, is sold to tourists as jade,-. amity Herald. the submerged shell. Ott the bridge accomodation is provided for 'those on beard. f ,La,,.-. , • . .§hipowners who have examined the design consider+ the idea justifies the claims made in regard to it, and with a view to testing its practicabil- ity arrangements are being made for the building of a ship in 'accordance with the plan. °F..'•, 4.w+r,.c 1.. o 44.1..44. .°'.4. 11' roe Hiriden$urg Is Anxious "- Vr To Shoulder All Blame __PP More Mystery Ships. �•- y the The first of a now type of "mys- ter she " for b p British Admiralty has been completed in Southwiab, near Brighton. Unlike the "mystery ships" bltilt during the war, the new vessels are not intended for destruc- tion, but for salvaging merchant ves- sels sunk by German sub marines around the coast of, the United King- don. Six &Sips of the new type are 10 be built, each at a cost of neosly 81,000,000, • And Save the Ex -Kaiser Irritations FIELD MARSHAL HINDEN- BURG follows Bethmann Hollweg's example in offering I:o shoulder William II's war responsibilities. He telegraphs the Ebert Government that he was ao- countable for all decisions and acts at Grand Headquarters front August 29, 1916, until the signing of the armistice. In making this assertion Hinden- burg shows generosity. Technically, he was the head of the armies during the period named. But little conceal- ment has been made of the fact that early in 1917 his power passed to WELD A) MARRSHAL HINDI TBUitCI. Ludendorff, Who 1)ecanle flit the west .1• of the Skin 'Are Soothed and Healed by the Use of Dr. Chase's Oint- ment --- Two Interest- ing Cases Reported ' The old method of treating eczema by means of internal medicines is too slow and uncertain of results. 'The new method is by the use of Dr. Chase's Ointment. You apply the ointment and obtain almost Im- mediate relief from the itching, stinging sensations. In a few days the sore spots are cleaned out and the healing process is set up. As you apply the ointment from day to day you can see for yourself the splendid results obtained, and this will encourage you to keep on with this treatment until the cure is complete. Mrs. Stafford Leeson, 'Winchester. Ont„ writes; "I can heartily re- commend Dr. Chase's Ointment, as it cured me of a very severe ease of eczema. After using several reme- dies without relief, I was about dis- couraged,thinking T could never en- dure the intense suffering. At last one evening when I felt I could not endure the pain another day or hour longer. I thought of Dr. Cbese's Ointment which I had seen adver- tised, and decided to give it a trial. To my great surprise, after using it A few times, I obtained relief, and in a few days my affliction began to completely disappear, My husband and I often speak of the quick and lasting cure 1 obtained In such 's short time, That was ten years ago, and we have kept it In our homa ever since, and it has been a great healer for many other complaints. I never fait to recommend nd Dr . Chase's Ointment to my friends and neigh- bors. "I might state that we have also used Dr, Chase's Nerve food in our household, and I can recommend It as doing all that you claim for 11." 211 scores of ways Dr. Chase's Ointment Is of use In every hornc. Applled after shaving 11 keeps the skin soft and smooth, 'Used for baby after the bath, It cures chafing and skin irritation, Itis so Soothing and thehear of ;skin, keeping that It It aloft, Stnnooth and velvety, Sixty cents d box, all deYa(th ere, or Edniatiaon, Bates. & Vey o1ltmtted, 'TTot:alto, A gold medal has been awarded' to. the French inventor of a shock ab- sorber for wheelbarrows, Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOA The pressure of water automatic- ally starts and stops a new electric pump for private plants, A mounting of recent invention per- mits a single lens camera to take a. •stereoscopic picture. The Union of South Africa annu- ally produces between 4,000,000 and. 5,000,000 gallons of wine. W. BRYDt»rg -_ BARRISTER 13OLICITOR NOTAR]., PUSILIC, ETO 0L1N'FON H. T. RANCE Notary Public, Conveyancer, Financial and Real Estate, INSURANCE AGENT-Repretienting 11 Fire I Barone Companies., Division Court Office. Plan° Tuning Mr, James Doherty wishes to In-. form the public that he is pre- pared to do fine piano tuning,. tone regulating, and repairing. Orders left at W. Doherty'e phone., 61, will receive nrobant attention tef-�.lu.r i DR. J. C. GANDIER OFFICE HOURS 1.30 p, an. to 3+30 p. m. 7.30 p. an. to 9.00 p. m. Sunday 12.30 to 1.30 Other hours by appointment only. Office at Residence, Victoria Street DR. W. GUNN Office at Residence Corner High Ind Kirk Streets-.. Clinton Ontarion" DR. F. A..AXON DENTIST Crown and Bridge Work a epectalt5c. Graduate of C.O.D.S... Chicago, and 0,0,Dea' Dayfleld to. Mondare, ;Har 181, to D DR. 11. FOWLER, DENT Offices over O'NEISILT'. S shore, Bpeoial care token to make dental Icor meat as painless as possible. THOMAS GUNDRY Live stook and general Auction w- GODERIOH ONT r 3to3,1 sales a specials j. Oteei a at aq 311w ERA odlce, Clinton, pri n, , y nthan„ , '5. Terse reasonnhle, Farmer, alai. •m;h„ 11v .0111ted G.G, Mclaggat't N, D. to.f'aitwr:.1 RrRISIKGRS ALBERT STP, CJ IN"s',.i;t, ;General 'Banking r3u'tir.4es,, tranieactun .VOTES DISCOTIN con Drafts loaned, Interest elioty* r deposits The McKillop 4all tt),J Fire insurance ee. Perm and Isolated 'Town S's'' a erty Only Insured, illeid trice-Seaforth, Ont (Mears J. Connolly, noisy, Goderich, President\ Jas. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President, Thos. B, Hays, Seaforth, Secretary. Treasurer, Atlanta Alex. Leitch, 140. 1, Clinton; Edward Hincpley, Seafortlr; Wm, Chesney, Eg mondville; J. W, Yeo, 0046(105) R. 0 - Jarinuth, Brodhagen, Directors Wm, RRlnn, No, 2, Scatortbl John Bona'. newels, Brodhagen; James Evans, Beed.,, weed: M. McEwati, Clinkont Fi. sir,• Connolly, it3'oadlerl.til.D, 1. McGregurr iIo. 3, Streflortht J. 0, Grieve,No, 4, leitoa; 'llobAtt llorttial, lriariockt Hee Metfssnttfre, to, It. SetiOrt5.