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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1918-7-18, Page 2MeTAGGARY M. D. MeTAGGA Rif McTaggart Eros. EA NE111119 VENERAL BARRING BUST. NESS TRANSACTED, NOTES DISCOUNTED, DRAFTS ISSUED INTEREfir • ALLOWED ON DE POSITS. SALE MOTEIII CHASED — IL T. RAINCIII •••••, EOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY, "ANCEtt, YINANGIAL. REAL: ESTATE ANT) EIRE 11'00111' ANON AGENT. REPRESENT- 1NO 14 EIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES. S IVISION COUR/ CNITICE, *MINTON. W. OUTDOES, BA RR I STER SOLICITOR. BOTI.ItY PUBLIC; ETC. °Bee— Sloan Sloe—CLINTON N. O. CA3tlBON S.D. BARRI STER, SOLICITOR, CONVEYANCER, ETC. O gle* oa Albert /Street oceuped b) Mr. Hooper. In Clintuu on every Thursday, and on ,any day for which &le paintmento are made. Office hones from 9 a.m. to pest - A goad vault in connection 'rite Ii e ofEes, VUel open every week -day. r. Hooper will teaks any appolotments for U' Cameron, DR, GUNN office cases at: his residence, cor. High and Kirk streets. DR. J C. GANDIER Office Hours; -1,30 to 3.30 p.m., 7.30 to 9.00 pen, Sundays 12.30 to 1.30 p,m. • Other hours by appointment only. Office and Residenee—Victoria St. CHARLES B. HALE, Conveyancer, Notary Public, Commissioner, Etc. REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE Issuer of Marriage Licenses HURON STREET, — CLINTON. GEORGE ELLIOT? Licensed Anetioneer foe the County ef Huron. Correspondence promptly answered.. Immediate arrangements can be grade for Salt Date at The Nowe-Record, Clinton, et Ivy eftiting Phoee 18 en 16/. Charges moderate and satisfaction' guaranteed Sole Agent for Scranton and DAL & L. Coal We are going to give every person a load of coal as the names appear on the order book and must insist on pay- ment being madie for same imme- diately after delivery. This is necessary as deliveries will he extended well on in to the fall months. TERMS STRICTLY mgr. We also have on hand a stock' of Canada Cement. A. J. HOLLOWAY. At Your Service B. R. HIGGINS Box 127, Clinton - Phone 100. <Formerly of Brucefteld) Agent for The Huron & Erie Mortgage Cor- poration and The Canada Trust Company Comm'er H. C. of J., Conveyancer, Fire and. Tornado Insurance, • Notary Public At Brueefield on Wednesday each week. 1/41#1Y" —TIME TABLE.— Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton Station as follows: BUFFALO AND GODERICH DIV. Going east, depart 0.18 a.m. is ol 2.58 p.m. Going West, ar. 11.10, dp, 11,10 a.m. ar, 6.08, dp, 6.45 p.m. • It dr " 11.1 p.m, LONDON, HURON & 13RUCE DIV. Going South, ar, 7.33, dp. 7.50 a.m. re 4.15 p,m. Going North, depart 6.40 p.m. 10.30, 11.11 Beni. The. lloKillop Mutual Fire Insurance Company Head office, Seaforth, Ont. DIRECTORY: President, Jepies Connolly, Goderich; Vice., James Evans, Beechwood; Sec. -Treasurer, Thos. E Hays Sea - forth. Directors: George MeCtirthey, Sea. forth; D. F. McGregor, Seaforth; ,T, G. Grieve, Waitoe; Wm. Rine, Sea- forth;rd. McEwen, Clinton; Robert Ferries, Ilerlock; John Bermeweli, Brodliagen; Jas. Connolly, Goderich. Agents Alex I.eitell, Ctinten; J. W. Yeti, Getter/eh; ltd. Hinchley, Seaferth; W, Cheeneee Egmendville; R. Or Jar. meth, Brodhagen. ' Any motley to be paid bitty he paid to Moorish Olethieg 00,, Clinton,, or et Claes Grocery, Goderieb, Parties desirieg to effect insurance or transact other busi»oss fl e - promptly atteeded t. 00appliedfort to thy Of alb abeno officers addressed to theft reepectivri Pose office. Leggett Irspected by the direetot who flees is.et1eest the edenti, w • • _ • -A , ^ , ar). `tla .4AtIP I tr. .Srt, By AeronWtniet. • This Department hi for the usetef oUr farm readers who want the Advice of an expert on any question regarding eoll, seed, crops, etc, If your question ele of ellificieet general interest, It Will be answered through this column. If stamped and addressed envelope is enclosed With yoer letter, a complete answer will be mailed to you, Address Agronoiniet, oafs af. Wilson PubliehIng Co., Ltd., 73 Adelaide St. \V, Toronto, HANDLING FARM MAN TIRE IN RUSU SEASONS, Alined everyone" who has Mule a water this gas may be driven off very s u y of the matter would agree that quickly by an application of heat so the only way to conserve all Of the in both the liquid.and solid portions of fertilizing e1ement in .n manure manure there is a large amount of is to place A on the land as soon as it ammonia gas, It is a well lcnown is available. There are some condi- fact that when horse manure or any tions, however, which preclude such other day mantle& is thrown out in a disposition of the wribure supply and heap, there le bound to be some heat it becomes 'necessary therefore, to so with further dedomposition of the arrange the materials and appliances solid or woody portions. at hand that the greatest amount of Sometimes in the morning we AP- fertzlizieg ennetztuents bi the manure Proach the . barn and if we had not .shall be saved and made available for seen the sight many times before, we future use. At the same time it is would believe the manure to be on fire, agreed manure should be put on. the with danger of burning up since there land as soon as made, it is just as, seems tee be mush smoke and gas well agreed that It should not be corning out of the top of the pile, placed upon hilly or rolling land, but However, the gas that is passing off is a short while .before that land is to the most valuable part of the manure, be plewed or worked up. " 'Freshets The fact that the manure heats, of it - and showers when falling upon ma- self, does no particular harm, but the nure so placed on rolling or hilly landCoincidence that the manure in heat. carry away a very large amount a ing drives off the ammonia gas which is dissolved in the moisture of the ma- nure is the fact which makes it dan- gerous to allow this thing to occur. And so in any system of manure storage, ib is absolutely imperative to have the bottom of the pit tightly closed so that the liquid portion of the manure will be saved and to have the place while the manure is being stored eaves of the storage house so arrang- under ordinary contlitions for three or ed that rain water- can be put in four weeks until the work lightens:from time to time when needed to cool sufficiently to put it on the soil, we down the decomposing pile of manure probably would find that there is no and to re -dissolve the ammonia that season too rushing nor 1,o work that' may have been partially expelled It pays better than putting the manure' the heating, directly onto the soil as soon as it is; This year when the various fertiliz- nzade. However, since we have been Mg elements are so costly, it be - accustomed to think this job can not, hooves us even more than any other be done during these rush seasons, I year, to save all that is available in it becomes necessary to provide some the supply of farm manure on every suitable storage place for the manine, farm.- To do this requires some sort Taking all the Lan manures, by of a storage house.- An 051 shed may and large, it comes about as close to be used and ,the manure dumped into the truth as we can get to say that! this. With:h little cement and time, sixty per cent. of all the fertilizing it will be possible to hollow out the elements lie in the liquid part of the floor of the shed so that the liquid manure, while forty per cent. lie in portion 'of the manure will neither be the solid part. If we wish to put it wasted nor allowed to leech away. in another way, we might say that I Then too, the roof of the shed should eighty -eve per cent. of theavailable be arranged with eave spouts st) at fertilizing, elements are in the liquid • any time surplus water may be ran manure while fifteen per cent. are in I on the pile of, manure. If there is the solid portion. In other words, the enough cow manure mined with the liquid portion is much. more valuable horse manure'however, it is not nee - than the solid, and where manure is essary to runin extra amounts of wa- placed out in piles under the eaves ter. Added to this, there is another of the barn or wheeled out to the side precaution which should be taken and of the hill with the expectation that that is to keep the flies out. The ma-- swent-glands to become clogged with the ramwill wash out portions of it nure pile is the place where flies Many people who use three -horse particles for lack of dirt and sweat that are too heavy to haul to the fleld, breed, with all the consequent clamageeteams seldom give a thought to tht: grooming. it will readily be seen that any ma- which an army of flies can do, and if strain on the middle horse. His post- Tankage, which is composed of the nure supply so handled might as }yell there are any windows in this numure tion is the hardest in pulling, back- scraps and refuse from packing be dumped into the river in its efitire- shed, they should by all meansbe ing and turning, especially if he is a houses. has received a great deal of ty since the solid portions of the ma. screened. The door, however, should free worker, for many three-horseattention from hog feeders the last nure that remain are very- inert and it be solid and fly -tight. In this way teams are improperly reined, so that, few years. Its composition makes takes a Icing time before they axe de- the flies will gather on the screens at poor control is exercised over the will- si good source of protein for use with compased sufficiently to be used by the windows whereas if a screen door ing worker, and the draftee are not corn in feeding shotes. the growing plants. is used, flies would gather on the door made to work into their collars or Cows may have a pedigree a foot There are some facts concerning and as soon as it is opened they flock against their breechings and do their long and not have a sixteenth part of manure that should be kept in mind directly inside. share. an inch in cream on their milk. It whenever any system for its handling It is necessary to have some sort of Another great strain on the middle pays to find out about that before is mapped out. One of the first is a manure storage plan arid this plan; horse, especially in summer, is the putting good, hard-earned money into that the liquid portion of the manure should have in mind not only the sav-; heat thrown off by the horses on , a pure-bred cow. What we want is is much more valuable than the solid; ing of the greatest amount of the fer-! either side of him. This is severe cream, not simply a big name. Cream the next one Is that undet normal eon- utilizer value of the manure, but also' where heavy hauling is being done by pays the bills. ditions the nitrogen of the manure is the bettering of sanitary conditions ' free -sweating horses. meth of thisOften when a cow freshens the the most valuable part of it. When about the farm. There is no one nuis-! injustice to the middle horse can be udder is milked dry, stimulating the the small boy goes out to the barn to ance thareauses so much trouble as overcome. Teams should be so handled flow of milk, Soon the -udder gets clean out the stable that he.negleeted the fie and since he and his rem may; by their drivers that "turn and turn sore, and milk fever may result. To the morning before, he usually gets be "nipped in the bud" by screening; about" is the order of the day's work,' prevent this trouble, take only a few an eye full of foul smelling gas. This in their breeding places, or the ma -'and the middle horse to -day is the quarts of milk the first time, and gas is nothing other than ammonia, a nine piles, it would seem that any outside horse to -morrow. In this. gradually ,encrease the amoune In combination of nitrogen and hydro- manure shed should profitably eon -111,11y each horse win have his turn,: a few days it will be safe to milk gen, and for this reason every bit of Belle the liquid portion of the ma -I and the general efficiency of the team, her dry. ammonia gas should be saved since mire as well as providing some means! will be greatly increased for too many Rape d 1 at tha l0st cultivatiosu it contains the nitrogen which is so whereby the escaping ammonia gas horses get so used to working on one of corn will furnish abundant nitroe costly when bought as a fertilizer. caused in heating may be retained and ! side of the pole that they are almost genons feed for hogs when corn is The commercial ammonia, so-called, redissolved in water. If in addition; useless on the other. "hogged" clown. By suspending a which is bought on the market for use to this, this shed is by some means or tin can with a small hole in it, on on wash day is nothing more nor less other kept free front flies, we shall each side of the- cultivator, rape seed than ammonia gas dissolved in water, have a manure storage that is directly Iti Paddock and Pasture. may be distributed in the corn -field Ammonia gas dissolves very readily in line with the spirit of the times— This is a good eine to rediscover without extra labor. From one to in water and is somewl.at heavier than embodying both conservation and the value of Lam manure. Manure two pounds of seed to the acre is the air and when ammonia is dissolved in sanitatioe,e_ 1 reinforced with acid phosphate is the! usual rate. most effective fertilizer known. More' Thousands of horses will suffer of It is needed. 1 with tender or scalded shoulders this the fertilizing ingredients and for this reason it is not wise to make such a risk. The other -condition which makes it impossible to sprawl manure as soon as it is made is in the rush season. If there was some way of getting., at the exact amount of loss that takes ••• yeanweteeeeeetteeteeete.....terneittere,377. tz4RAf"-$ e • fox q IiIII.1'.a0 Sut i 4'1" • .r*. ., „ell ,2„1.1,11.,;;I; ',Jo hivnuir a p 4 , / I 1 , ! 1 , , , . • ' ; ' ' j'''' -'x ;"------.; ' f ' ' 1 \\\1( I Pril IPPI J eTe"-- . -----=------- ----)y ...„., - --- et I ie 11811)01 , II iFe heat em-nee, WZMIte.%,-,*:Mts"E:e.ti• ,lit, 111141i Dom1100 Ittiteenn 5 14 CerA iiiiitho. , 091 --e comes as a welcome comfort as well as a summer economy to the farmer, his wife, his son and daughter. FLEET FOOT SHOES will make farm work easier because they are light and springy, and so staunch that they stand up to any farm work. Their. sturdy wear and low price make them the most economical shoes you can put on this- summer, for you can have two or three pairs of FLEET FOOT for the price of one pair of leather shoes. None genuine without the name FLEET FOOT stamped on the sole. Look for it. The best Shoe Stores sell FLEET FOOT • iffeciese glands of the horse eliminate waste material equal to that passed through the lungs. Never allow the News- Record CLINTON, ONTARIO. Terms of subseription—$1.50 per year, in advance to Canadian addressee; $2.00 to the US. or other foreign countries. No paper discontinued until all arrears are paid unless at the .ontion of the publisher. The date to which every subscription is paid- is denoted on the label. Advertising rates—Tz•ansient adver- ' tiserriente, 10 cents' per nonpareil line for first insertion and 5 cents per line for each subsequent inser- tion. Small advertisements not to exceed one inch, such as "Lost," "Strayed," or "Stolen,' etc., insert- ed once for 35 cents, and each subse- quent inserted 10 cents. Communications intended for publica- tion must, as a guarantee of good faith, be accompanied by the name of the writer :\ G. E. HALL, M. R. CLARK, Proprietor. Editor. You ohould always kerma bottle of NamborlaIn'o Storoach and Liver 'tablets) on the AWL The little folk so often need a mild and traf0 eathartio and they. do appracirdo Chamberlarn instead olliolteottli oihr and 'mixture& For t Odd c it ir�tblossasini,o555s51,5, gitra &la Ate t beforo fraine, to boil. All drubleto, Me, dr 51110eleimilkinee Nenfeltre co TORONTO to Doctoring Your Plants. The fertilizer shortage is real—not summer, and galls will develop later. Sonia times plants need a little doc- imaginary. Even at advanced prices,1To prevent the galls, get a Calt of toning just as human beings do, They its use is warranted. Get the fertili-, talcum powder and dust the shoulders have a tendency to catch diseases ser if you can. If it is not to be , well before putting on the collars, which cause 'them to wilt and die. had, keep 'up the fertility of the land; Your druggist will sell you a pound Occasionally the outside evidence ofby raising more stock and feeding for about fifty cents, which is very disease is lacking and the plants die snore crops to animals. 1 cheap. This will save many times quiclely; others, again, dry -up and dm An acre of alfalfa furnishes- twice by slow degrees. To the first class as much protein as a ton of bran, belong the tomato, cucumber and four times as much as a ton of corn - muskmelon and to the latter the pota- meal, and nine times as meth as an to and bean. The wilt diseases are caused by bacteria which work inside the plant and clog it up :so that it chokes. The only remedy is to pull up the wilted plants and burn them. Before pull- ing them up, however, you should be quite sure that the wilting is not caused by dry weather or by a worm e p ground. The other diseases are called fungus diseases. They are really caused by tiny invisible plants which are para- sites living upon -the larger plants. sh They ow tip 5 the form of diecolor- ed spots or portions of leaves or stems which die and dry off, These diseases can only be prevented or con- trolled by spraying. e stem of thlant near the its cost later. Devices for mixing milk with but- ter to make the latter "go further" should be regarded with caution. Such acre of timothy, and it eanehe grown I a product soon becomes sour in warm succesefully, weather and wastes the butter it con - In twenty-four hours the sweat- tains, • reallearaeratassererr.atrerarreararmerstemersraiSm. CUT OUT AND in th 4 Reaseured. Jenkins was always trying to bor- row money, and his friends had begun to avoid him. One morning he tackled an ac- gtutintance in the street before the latter had a chance to nscape, "I say, old man," began Jenkins. "I'm in a terrible fix. I went some money badly, and I haven't the eligtit- est idea, Where I'm going to get it frone4 "Glad to bear it, my boy," returned the ()thee promptly. "I was afraid that you might have the idea you amid borrow it from me, Observittil, 011151. Teather,—"Whnt is miter?" -colorless fluid that turns black when you wash your hands," 4J MIS" FOLD ON DOTTED ,LINE5 eeeeeeeereeeerereeree-eeeeeeeeeeeere. e [ GOD'S RURDENS —AND OURS --'—,...... .,.) . . 'I can't mulerstandi" Mrs. Holman cried, with her hollow eyes full of bo- wildered trouble, "Doesn't God Prom- ise to give us strength for our dons? You said so Yourself, Dr, 1<erri Tho last sermon I beard you preach before I was taken ill was upon, 'As thy days, s� shall thy strength be; You seici God copidn't fall, 7 was fighting to keeefrom breaking down under all the worlc 7 was doing, and it comforted me so! I went home feeling beTter than I had for a month, And -then, three days, later, everything came to an end! 7 don't mean to be irreverent, but 7 don't see how . I can believe God's word. Certainly He has failed me now. It isn't of. myself I'm think- ing, but of the children; they need me so, and it makes things so terribly hard for Sharlee—",,, • Her voice broke abruptly, Al! her life she had been trying to keep hard things Iron Sharley, Dr. Kerr's eyes, grave and tender and understanding, met hers steadily. "1 am here to repeat it, Mrs. Holman. I could not come to you if I came with any other message. ,,I could not go into my pulpit anotrer Sunday. The God whom I serve and whom I, declare to my people never breaks His! word. He has said that He will give strength for every duty and every burden that He sends—and He wile" "Then how—" Mrs. Holman falter- ed. I "Because He never promised strength for all ,the burdens that we pick up for ourselves along the waye Tell me what you have been doing this winter besides the necessary things feir your family. Didn't I hear Shanley say something about al party gown?" e "But they can be girls only once— and a party gown means so much to a girl!" "Didn't Marley have any?" "Why, of course, she had a couple of old ones; but a girl can't wear them f , , Jr . "Whiell would Sharley rather have, a new party gown or—a mother? Did you give her a choice?" There was no answer.'Dr. Kerr had not expected one. He went on gravely: "And that entertainment you GET RIP OF HUMORS AND AVOID 6101(11.E8s Turners in the blood eallee derangeneepts 1h 011001 the whole system, as well as piinplos, boils and other eruptions, and are, responsible for the readiness wit4 which many people contract discuss, For forty years Lioort's Saesape- rine hns been more successful then any other medicine in expellln litimore and removing their limas and outward effects,Get 119041'S.Io other medicine aetklilte gave the Fortnightly last month. Everyone was speaking of it—of all the work you did, Would the Fort- nightly have gone to Pieces if you hadn't entertained it this 'winter?" Again Mrs, Holman was silent, Hen pastor's strong hand took hers in a min -darting grasp, "That's „sermon enough for to -day have just given you the text—clod never fails. Yon can Preach your- self the sermon. Only, I've one more suggestion: Suppose you talk the whole matter over with Sharley.; tette her Into the hard and responsible places; nothing in the world will meke such a women of her. The child wants It. You are robbing her if you give her party dresses instead of her mother." Onee more Mrs. Holman was silent, CCM p ast Heap. In every war garden this year a place should be set apart in which an- used green stuff from the house— weeds, leaves and so on—may be kept to be used, when thoroughly decom- posed, as manure for the following „ seagpn's crops. If a sprinkling, of lime is added from time to time, It will sweeten the material. This peo- yides the basis for excellent manure and none of it should be allowed to go to waste. If the compost heap was made up early in the season or if part of an old one remains, it is an ideal place to grow squash or other creepbng vegetables, provided that it is not situated in too shady a part of the garden. Every square inch of ground should be made to count, Habit is often mistaken for the cravin,g of hunger. GOOD HEALTH QUESTION BOX By Andrew F. Currier, Dr. Currier will answer all signed letters pretalning to Health, If Your question is of general interest it will be answered through these columns; if not, it will be answered personally if stamped, addressed envelope is en- closed. Dr. Currier will not prescribe for individual cases or make diagnosis. Address Dr, Andrew Ie. Cureier, care of Wilson Publishing Co, 73 Adelaide, St. West, Toronto. Movable or Floating Kidney. Mrs. S. MeE.—Please write an ar- ticle on floating kidney, from which I have suffered three years. Was told it would return to its place if I got stouter and wore an abdominal belt. Have suffered severely, of late, parti- -cularly in connection with an attack. of grippe. I desire to avoid an opera- tion, if possible, as I have a weak , heart and barely pulled through an- other kind of operation. .Is there 'danger that floating kidney may lead to something serious like Bright's disease? Could the condition be due ! to strain or injury. Would exercise 'ba beneficial? And what would hap- pen if it got twisted? got so much is heard about this i condition, as was hued a few years 1agoe when it was a novelty. The kidney is enibeclded in a thick layer of fat which is a very 1 yielding tissue and varies in quan- tity from time to time. If this envelope becomes thin and weak, or is subjected to strains, the kidney may become loose and mobile and the en...clone stretched, so that it will wander more and more from its proper site. It may move very little, or it may move as far down as the pelvis, but almost invariably remains extra- abdominal, away fronf the abdominal organs. - This is called movable kid- ney, in distinction from floating kid- ney, which is within the abdominal cavity at birth and swings upon its; pedicle of peritonaeum like a polyp , upon its stalk. The latter is a rare condition and need not receive further considerationl at this time. Movable kidney is much more corn- mon in women than in men, more often o» the right side than on the left. As a is produced, and accentuated by strains and injuries, it often fol -i lows the severe efforts of childbirth,' Prolonged constituation, sudden and violent muscular effott, or ihjuries inI the region of the loins. It may be free from symptoms,. many people beteg unaware that they have it until their attention is called' to it in the course of a phyisical ex-' amination; or it inay-produce discern- Ifort or pain severe in -character or !dull, aching and dragging and intensi- fied by exertion. if the kidney is vary loose aull movable, it may' possibly be' twisted on its axis, which would be a serious !matter for its pedicle containing the ureter, renal artery and renal vein, would be greatly compressed, great. pain or colic would ensure, its blood circulation would be interrupted, the I urine could not pass down to the bled- ; der and the result might be a fatal one. Fortunately this Accident is not oo. f' common occurrence. In addition t pain, this condition is often as- sociated with constipation, indigestion, 'dizziness, palpitation and more or less, ;intense nervousness. I It is not a particularly difficult condition to determine, especially if one is accustomed to the interroga- tion of the organs of the body. I In the majority of eases the eymp- ' Sons may be relieved by a well-litting abdominal belt; but if this does not give relief, an operation may be re- quired. It used to be the fashion to ope- rate upon very case that came along) but since 11 was shown by Treves, tho distinguished Enajlish surgeon iwho has done more than anybody else to inform us in regard to displacements of the kidney, that operation was sel- dom necessary or desiyable, the craze for operating has subsided. Operations are sometimes very desirable, but one should know when, as well as how, to do them. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Mrs. S. M.-1—Is there danger that a floating kidney will develop jute anything serious? Was told by my doctor that if I gained weight and Ware an abdominal supporter, the kid- ney would return to its place, 2—Would playing ball cause the kidney to he misplaced? Answer—I.—You are evidently un- der good advice. Continue to weer your belt and do as your doctor tells you, and you will probably get good results. 2 ---The kidney might be detached by violent exercise while playing ball. -I can see how that meld be possible. ( Awry, rtairra5 ' 01! WUPL tetliee eaki, "ft th" 16k-6 This big machine will delve MO Imoiteff So Willie took the middle out And ountor a little 5. 111.10•... Over 7,2O Customers Are being supplied with Light and Power by the South- ern Canada Power Gee...Limited, in aver 45 Municipalities In the Province of Quebec, and the number is growing daily. in order to supply the 'Increasing demand for Power, and also to enable more manufacturers to locate In MIS Merl - tory, the Company has commenced the development 01 one ht its large Water powers on the Si. Francis River at Drummenfivfile./ Title Plant will have an ultimate caved*, or 17,000 tele to 20,000 ILP. The development of water -powers is a patriotic duty as well as 5, emmhercial advantage, as it seven the import& tion of eclat. Weeloceininend the 8% Seeds of no Southern Canada Power Compariy, Limited, whit% we are offering with a bonus, ot common stock, thus giving Investorau oppor- tunity of participating in the tutted :moues of the Conn Pony, Send for circular and map snowing territory 'reeved. trOVIDO MAY BB rtrzeoleasene mom xis - 1415 AXONtrItTrIC teatetagnire PUN N ESilirro THOMSON et COMPANY Jr, Vstrhent Itailkere • Limited Mercantile Trtist Bldg, - Hamilton 222 $t, joules' Street Montreal .towsimeraaarant....er-