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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1916-09-21, Page 3PAGE FOM, Womeird?nce Jiwalid� Now in Good Health `Through Use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Say it is Household Necessity. Doctor Called it a Miracle. All women ought to know the wonderful effects of taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound even on those who seem hopelessly i1L Here are three actual cases: Harrisburg, Penn,—" When I was single I suf. fered a great deal from female weakness because my work compelled me to stand all day.: I took Lydia E. Pinkhaut's Vegetable Compound . or that and was made stronger by its use. After I was married I took the Compound again for a female trouble and after three months I passed what the doctor called a growth. He said it was a miracle .- that it carne away as one generally goes under the knife'to have them removed. I never want to be without your Compound in the house:'—Mrs, FnAN$ BNosn, 1642 Fulton St., Harrisburg, Penn. Hardly Able to Move. Albert Lea, Minn. "For about a year I had sharp pains across my back and hips and was hardly able to move around the house. My head would ache and I was dizzy and had no appetite. After taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and 'Liver Pills, I am feeling stronger than for years. I have a little boy eight months old and am doing my work all alone. I would not be without your remedies in the house as there are none like them."Mrs. F. E. YOST, 611 Water St., _Albert Lea, Minn. Three Doctors Gave Her Up. Pittsburg, Penn.—" Your medicine has helped me wonderfully. When I was a girl 18 years old I was always sickly and delicate and suffered from irregtilarities. Three doctors gave nie up and said I would, go into consumption, I took Lydia E. Pinkhanl's Vegetable Compound and with the third bottle began to feel better.. I soon became regular and I got strong and shortly after I was married,. Now I have two nice stout healthy children and am able to work hard every day."— OLEsssNTirrs Dnsnateree 34 Gardner St.,TroyHill, Pittsburg, Penn, All women are invited to write to the Lydia E. Pinkham lvledi- •ine Co., Lynn, Mast., for special advice,—it will be confidential. .Hg MINTON NSW MME. PORTUGAL As far back as 1386 Portugal, which has been a Republic since October 6th. 1910, entered into its first treaty ,with Great Britaiu. Under the present treaty Britain is pledged to defend Portugal In case of an attack In re- turn for certain coaling and harbor facilities. When war broke out, Portu- gal offered Britain an expeditionary corps for Flanders. Portugal has a population of close upon 6,000,000 and a peace army of 30,000 men. When- fully mobilized, however, it should consist of a quarter of a million nen of the first and second lite. Military service in Portu- gal is compulsory. All man from the age of seventeen to forty-five are liable to he called out, but practically ser- vice only begins at the age of twenty. Portugal's extensive colonial pos- sessions have always aroused the envy of Germany, The Huns have cast very covetous eyes on Angola, with its stretch of 1,000 miles on the West African coast, and Mozambique, the Portuguese territories on the East coast of Africa, extending for a dis- tance of 1.,300 miles,' LIEUT.-COL. S. J, DONALDSON, M.P. Commander of the 188th Battalion, Prince Albert, Sask. Col. Donald- son was for many years with the P. GERMANY'S LIE BUREAU Hun Paper Tells Truth For Once About Wolff's "The Wolff bureau le hopelessly un- able to do the work expected of it, but this is no reason why our world Journals should feel themselves com- pelled to print the most idiotic tele- grams of the bureau and inflict them in heavy type on their unfortunate readers," says thea Munich (Bavaria) Poet "Several times every week we receive from Zurich and Bern tele- glrame from _ Weige agents there. These messages are carefully selectee extracts from. certain Swiss journals, whi„h in Bern and Zurich do not en- joy any authority. The same applies to the Wolff despatches from Holland. The Swiss news comes with official authority, and in pious awe it is print- ed by the great Garman journals, As a rule the despatches are the most foolish and impudent Iles which it is possible to conceive. And always, no matter whether it is a telegram that tells us of Italians being bribed with milliards by John 13n11 or of the march of 100,000 Italian soidters through Switzerland to France, or the invented dictum of some statesmen of the En- tente, Wolff adopts 1t and the `great' German press prints it. "It is quite certain that were Wolff to telegraph from London that As- quith and Grey had learned German secretly, and that they sang every morning at breakfast, '>;Iell dir im Siegerkranz,' or that the news had come from Rome that the Freemasons had killed the Pope, the 'great' German press, the 'instructors of the nation,' would print it right honestly, with leaded typo. What an unsurpassable flatten of thinkers we aro in regard to our press." The New Era is Me $1' in au- vance. Send in the local news. Guard Baby's health In i he Summer 1• The summer months are the most dangerous to children The complaints of that season, which are cholera lnfantum. colic, diarr- hoea and dysentry, come on so quickly that often a little' one is beyond aid heforeethe mother' ,re- alizes he is ill. The mother must • be on leer guard to prevent these troubles or if they do come on i suddenly to cure them. No other medicine is of such aid to mothers during the hot weather as is Baby's Own Tablets. ;'They regn late the stomach and bowels and are absolutely safe. Sold ''bymed.,' • Mine or by mail at i 120 cents a box from The Dr, Williams' Med- icine Coe Brockville, Ont. Premier Has no Seat @o far as Parliamentary law goes not even the e'rime Mdniater hoe an actual right to any definite place la the House, Indeed, It le on record that in the first reformed Mouse of Commons Cobbett took possession of the accustomed seat of the leader of the Tory party, Sir Robert Peel, and that nothing' could be done to evict the intruder. Harvest all Red Clover Seed Prospective supplies of red clover seed are very much reduced and at best Canadian farmers next year will face an extreme ehortage with high prices. Farmers should endeavor yet this Autumn to save every bit of the red clover crop that promisee to yield good seed. Bt1sine5s and Shorthand Westervelt School. Y. M. C. Rada, London, Ontario <l, College in $essron Sept* -1st to Jii1"y Catalogue -1 xee.,. mEnt any time, J Vi Wes ervelt )lrina , •44-1-I-1-1 Farm and. Garden .t. . Making the Little Farm Pay 1 By C. C. BOWSPIELD .. 1-1.1-1-11 1I1i1111111i611+611 Experiences are rapidly multiplying to show the broadening of farm pro- grams and the high earning power of land when It le properly managed. There aro many products which pay $200 to 3500 an acre under skillful cul- tivation, and it becomes vitally nee• essary for those who are restricted' to a few acres to devote themselves to money making crops. The fact is eas- ily demonstrated that the more profit- able commodities are almost as easily raised as those which pay the least. B. V. Egbert of Mercer county, Pa„ has made a great success of two prod- ucts which can be depended on to re- turn something between $100 and $300 an acre above the cost of labor. One of these is tomatoes and the other ber- ries, both of which naturally belong in a little farm scheme. Both are reason- ably prolific and sure, find ready sale at fair prices and are not beyond ordi- nary skill. Berries may be made to utilize odd places, unoccupied corners or rough spots around the premises. Mr. Egbert's method of pruning to- matoes is unusual and unique. He al- lows the plant to make four leaves, then clips off the top. If a cluster of buds bas formed it makes no differ- ence; they are not saved, as they sel- dom develop into perreet fruit. The effect of this topping is to cause four strong side branches to form, one in the axil of each leaf. On these branch- es a fruit cluster will develop in. the BED aAsPnEEniss. ux11 of each third leaf. Three clusters lire allowed to form on each branch; Then the end of the branch is clipped off. This provides fur twelve clusters of fruit. which ,lir•. Egbert finds to be all that the plant can mature. Side shoots which spring from the brunches later are pinched off. leaving only the main framework of the plant and the leaves growing ou it. Ile gains much by keeping the fruit oft the ground. The important point is the effect this method of training has ill hasten- ing the ripening of the fruit. Mr. Eg- bert claims that while a plant allowed to mature its first cluster undisturbed may ripen a single fruit sooner than a plant pruned in this way the pruned plant will be far ahead in the raee of producing fruit to go on the market :led (hat by this means he reaps a handsome reward for his pare ill the higher price obtained for the crop. fie also holds some ideas of his own in remelting . tensive methods of grow- ig ret] ruspherrles and blackberries. lie is not content to grow these Plants he the ordinary method of hedgerows and self supporting plaits, but insists se keeping the plants in hills and not allotting' store than six ernes to each hill Ile objects to a spreading, self suppotei, g bush because it interferes with eultivation, and he believes that thorough cultivation throughout the growing and ripening period of the t'r•511 as a menus of maintaining the moisture supply is a matter of the ut- most importance. He ties the canes to a trellis Made of two wires ending on posts. The canes are allowed -to grow tall, being left six feet in height after being cut back. He finds tbat the young canes (10' not develop strong fruit buds until they get above tare fruiting canes. In' order to overcome this trouble And get well developed buds without too great height he bends the fruiting canes' over and ties them to the wires, thns giving the young shoots a free field in which to develop, Mr. Egbert estimates it costs him as much to grow one acre by this method as it would to grow two in the 010,1 - nary way, but he is confident that the greater yields more than repay the 'ex- tra cost. Ile is after cheaper bushels and feels that this is the wry he gets them. The thorough cultivation which be gives enables the plants to carry a 'crop through a drouglit that cuts off the crop entirely on flushes as ordinarily grown. His method also makes 010 acre yield ,ss much as many growers obtain from two. Danger from late emitter frosts may be lessened by planting orchards oe small fruit plantations on elevated Sides, Severe frosts may occur in the lowland near dila elevated orchard Without doing any injury to the trees located higher up. Sometimes ala ele- vation of five to ten feet will save a pla:utation from injury, 'If there is an unobstructed valley near the orchard where the current of cold air can run down and escape, similar to the cute rent of a creek or river, this will often peeveat danger from frosts. WHAT SOLDIERS WANT Capt. Brooks, of No. 4 Company, 7th Battalion, writing from the front, says: "My men would be very grateful to anyone who w111 send them Zam.luk. It is Ins great demand for cuts, blistered heels, etc. Parcels should be od. dressed to Co, Sergt.-Major, No. 4 Co., 7th Batt., B.E.F." Be sure to include some tam-Buk. In your next par- cel to the front. 50c box, 3 for $1.25, all druggists, or Zam-Buk Co., Toronto. AM -BU K 1).4414+44444444444444•444.4. • Editorial Notes • • 0 •••••••••++.4.4.4-4 4.40+4++++44-4, are feeling, the pinch of high pri- ces for the rear material and the London Advertiser and Free Press are increasing their subscription rates from $2,00%to $300, the new. rete to come into effect fgn,,Sep- tembev 30th. No doubt other dail- ies will also advance as ;the tad Price is not covering the cost Netaspapers nave been about the last of many tradesfolk to asst a small increase but the public ,gen- erally need no special argument to Prove the necessity for such a.move on the part of the press when the sitnation is taken into the count In some cases cost of material has more than doubled, , Welt's Cotton 'Root Compound. A safe, reliable reau,atini medicine, Sold in three de grecs of strength—No, 0, $1, No. 2, 33; No, 3, $5 per boas Bold by all druggists, or sent prepaid on tvempt of price. FIee pamphlet. Address. THE COOK MEDICINE CO - 4 TORONTO, ONT. (Formol M1lndar.) MINOR LOCAI.S. Live merchants recognize adver- tising not as an expenditure but as an investment. Persistent use of The New Era will verify this. Everybody in town and vicinity reads the New Era, They trust have it even if they 'borrow it. Have it sent to you for 25c in ad- vance, to the end of the year. Children Cry FOR, FLETCHER'S CASTORIA FOR THE HERD'S SAKE Breeders Advise Farmers Not to Part With Good Butts Many inexperienced breeders make the mistake of going it blindly from year to year in their use of herd bulls. They keep eternally changing, using one a couple of years and then super- seding him with a calf. On the other hand, the constructive breeders rely mainly on tested sires, mostly with quite a bit of age. Indeed, .such breeders have been known to buy en- tire herds, which they did not want, merely to acquire the old bulls at their heads. A Shorthorn bull that has proved satisfactory should be kept to service until death or impotence ends his usefulness. When fully ma- tured, hulls often get hard to do with, and too often for this reason alone are bundled into the cars and ship- ped to the shambles. A big loss is sustained each year by each unneces- sary and tux:ailed for sacrifices. The wise breeder goes mighty slow with tate use of any untried calf, until he knows what the youngster cau. do. New .bulls must be introduced into every herd, but there is never any occasion to make the change sudden ly, dropping one outright and using another to all the breeding females. A very little ingenuity will enable the breeder to discover what the chosen one is going to do, It doesn't make much difference in what herd a bull succeeds, Every good bull should be allowed to live out his ellotted span of Life begetting calves eater his kind. The wise breeder has always in use a bull on which he can rely for the transmission of ,true Shorthorn char- acter, conformation, weight, substance and flesh. ide never goes It blind it hie choice of bulls. Resolve to Succeed Throw off the handicap of petty ills that make you grouchy, Iistless and de- pressed. Get at the root of your ailments—clearyour digestive system of impur- ities, put it in good working order—keep it healthy with $EEC TAM'S ETT T alealliallailsisseassessesessIMISIMIIMII • MY LADY'S el. -1' COLUMN. ft • +44+4444 TH77 PRESERVING KETTLE. Practical and Useful Receipts for the Housekeeper. Watermelon Preserves -Peel and prepare the rind ofonelarge melon,. Cut pieces a' thin as possible and soak overnight in salt water. In the. morning wash off salt, water and drain. To each quart of rind add one quart of sugar and a pint of water and one lemon sliced thin,' Cook until rind becomes transparent. Canned Blueberries,—Pick ovet and wash berries, then put in pre- serving kettle with a small quantity of water to prevent berries from burning, Cook until soft -- not mushy—stirring frequently and put ' in jars. No sugar is required, but a i sprinkling of salt is an agreeable ad' dition, Cherry Preserves. — Take one quart cherries (pitted), one fresh pineapple (cut into small cubes) and one quart sugar. Put one pint water on sugar and boil until it will spin a thread; then drop in the cherries and pineapple and boil twenty minutes.' Tomato Preserves.—Choose small yellow tomatoes if yellow preserves are desired or little red tomatoes ft red preserves are desired. Peel and prick them with a large needle and boil slowly for half an hour in pre- serving sirup (using on pound of su- gar to one pound or tomatoes), with juice of one lemon to every two pounds of tomatoes; then skim out the tomatoes and let them remain two or three hours in the sun to harden. Then put the white of an egg, well beaten, into the sirup, boil well, pour over tomatoes, and then seal, Damson Preserves. — Take an earthen vessel that will stand heal and place in it equal quantities of damsons and sugar in alternate lay. ere until the jar is three-fourths full Then cover and place in slow oven, Cook three hours, Cherries Preserved With Currant Jules.—Select the sour variety, using Thursday, Sept, 21st 1910 Inimemoseemmamommeemesmorammememomor Children Cry for Fletcher's Tho Rind 'Lou Ilave Always Idonglt, and which has been.. in use for over ,CO years, has born tho signature Of and has been made under his per- sonal supervision since its infancy. 1' Allow loo one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations anti "Just -as -good " are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Cluldren—Experience agaitlst. Experiment. ;What is_CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless'snbstitute for Castor 0i1, Pare.. goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. ' It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee, It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, 'Wind Collo, all Teething Troubles ani Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the rood, giving healthy ad natural Sleep. The Children's Panaccar-Elie; Mother's Friend. GENUINE CAST I ALWAYS` Bears the Signature Of • in Use For Over '30 Years The Kind You H Have �� /wa 's Bought THE E U COMPANY.N YORK rY •l+. -. moron or rye oreau ane "puttee; 1 According to statistics recently boiled .—Mines sturgeon, bard compiled byBj.adatreets,itisshown ,..r. -re, boi ed eggs, watercress, Eley, oil that eighty-four per cent. of the lettogether; add a little French failures in mercantile institutions mustard, spread this mixture on are among non -advertisers. The thin, nutmeg dusted s� lices of butter, • lesson needs nos comment. ed bread. urran P *'"r - Rain is much needed in preparing jars, and seal. This makes an acid .hfinee the meat of tqr for fall seeding. quarts of sugar to three quarts salted faqir. turtlewater,; then make a on- Era advertising columns. - FROM DRINKING or frog legs, which has The auction ea(e season is note two uarts. sfeat in a preserving nabeen previously boiled in slightly on. Cro get results use the New may kettle, crushing the currants as they Ise dressing and mix the meat tato boil up, Then strain through cheese. it. Spread between lettuce leaves cloth. Add the cherries to the fruit and lay on slices of French bread, • GOT DIARRHOEA juice, stir in the sugar over the fire, This Is a delicious aaandwich, using equal weights of sugar and cherries; bring to a boil slowly and skim. Boll twenty minutes, put in Midnight Spreads. For years it has been dinned turd preserve that is fine. our ears that we should not 'eat be 'tore going to sleep, and we have fore- gone many a pleasant bite for fear of sacrificing our good health. And now along comes,,a noted physician People moving from one place to an- e tells us that many morning other are very subject to diarrhoea '019 le headaches were merely the result of ]tenger. This does not mean that we account of the change of water, cltau c of can immediately proceed to gorge climate,, change of diet, etc., and what at ourselves with all sorts of sweets and first appears to be' but a slight looseness not have to pay the penalty the next of the bowels should never be neglected morning, Sweets should be eschew - one should substitute some whole- lior some re serious fllobowel complaint will ed during the midnight repast, and e suto ow. some sandwiches. Cheese and fruit' The safest and quickest cure for diary sandwiches are wholesome and nour- boea, dysentery, colic, cholera, cholera. tslzing and can be eaten with impun- morbus, cholera infantum, pains in the, lty even during the wee amen hours. stomach and all looseness of the bowels fs Dr, Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw. Tussore silk is, needless b M . extremely popular for coats of the to say, 1 Ernest Jeffery, Moose jaw, Sask.. writes: 'A few years ago, when I first sport order, as is also fine navy blue carne out to Canada, I wont to the liar. serge lined In somewhat garish lash- I vest field to work. Somehow or other, ion with a lovely shade of pale lemon the water did not agree with me. I had! Jap silk, which reappears on the col. the darrhoea so bad that blood wars: lar and cuffs. One also often comes coming from me, and I thought my last) across motor and traveling coats de days had come. One of the harvest j= lura made of faille and taffeta still hands advised me to take Dr. Fowler's that are so and so sumptuously ttrimmed ht elle- t Extract bad used thelbottle Ilwas able to goand ore to�illa they vie in beauty with the most slat work again. My advice to all is always gent and expensive evening wraps, keep a bottle of this wonderful diarrhoea cure on hand." National Sandwiches. Russian.—Slice thin cold roasted venison and spread over it a paste of the yolks of hard boiled eggs, rub- bed smooth with butter; season.with pepper, salt, and minced celery, and serve on round pieces of white bread. Irish,—Cream one-half cupful of butter and add to it one teaspoonful of ground mustard seed, a shake of white pepper and a little chopped Parsley. Chop together hard boiled eggs and cold roast pork or boiled ham. Mix well into the butter dress- ing and lay between thin dices olf bread, Scotch,—Blend .three tablespoon,. Eula of fresh butter, one tablespoon+ ful of mixed mustard, salt, peppero and the yolk of an egg. Stir this into minced roast lamb. Lay between A WORD FOR MOTHERS It is a grave mistake for mothers to neg- lect their aches and pains and suffer in silence—this only leads to chronic sick- ness and often shortens life. If your work is tiring; if your nerves are excitable; if you feel languid, weary or depressed, you should know that Scott's Emulsion overcomes just such conditions. It possesses in concentrated form the very elements to invigorate the blood, strengthen the tissues, nourish the nerves and build strength. Scott's is strengthening thousands of mothers—and will help you. Try it BAD WATER. That Standby, Masora. Norfolk Honey Production. A recent bulletin from the Guelph headquarters of the Beekeepers' As- sociation reveals- the fact that the Published statement of the honey in- dustry is entirely misleading. Nor- folk is credited with only 104 colon- The genuine "Dr. Towler's" is mann. les and less than two tons of white factored only by the T, Milburn Co„ 1 honey, which is hardly more than a Limited, Toronto, Ont. Scott & eowaa lbronto. Oat. suunnln of the Norfolk nutnut r Price, 35 cents. Dr. Fowler's" has been on the market for the past seventy years, and has been used in thousands of Canadian homes during that time, and we have yet to, bear of a case of bowel complaint where' it has not given perfect satisfaction, •• •••••••••••!•0••••••0••••• 000••0•••••••••00000•••••••••••••••••0•••0.0••••••0• • • - • • N O •• • • 4 t E RjiC�r► - • • • rII �• •• YOUR TELEPHONE HONE • • • • '� ......,..miff • P• • • R et, • • • •• • • s •• • • • • ••. • • • • •• c41M-' •• • • • • • • • • - • • • i •0 • raaava,es They act promptly on the stomach, liver and bowels, re- • moving waste matters and pu- rifying the blood. Not habit forming, never gripe, but leave • the organs strengthened. To • succeed in life, or work, first i have a healthy body. This fa- . • mous remedy will do much to • Help You • Lament Sale of Aar Medlolo 1 th W • Sete everywhere. la blow, 26 peau. 0 110004111.00 Phone 30 t The New Era Want Ads 25c One Week • w 0 • • •0 • • • 0 • • • 0 •••••••••N0.•0••••a•ssees•••••0•••••000•••••o•••••e••••••••••••••®•••a.