HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1915-06-17, Page 6:tea
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TEW Er,a.
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The chief, syniptnins ofcholera are
vomiting and purging occurs either
simultaneously or alternately, and are
a'vary it 'and
usually sudden and v, y violent;
the matter ejected by the stoinach,has
a bilious appearance and a nasty bitter
taste. On the first sy nptom pl earill g
Dr. howlers Extract of Wild strawberry
should be taken, and the trouble cured,:
1\2rs:: 'T Slade, .3713 'Logan -Ave.,
Toronto, Ont., writes "When I first
�l"Canada,nearly
years ago
anile in uc y four ,
my entire family was stricken with
cholera, front which the youngest child
died.Saai1 after, a friend recommended
Dr. Trawler's, Extrael of Wild Strawberry,
and acting on this advice I,' administered:
it to all who were suffei, ing,,whit the most
gratifying results. ;nee that first 'at-
tack ni;y, children have been subject
stotnaela troubles, but 4n the first'
symptoms I resort to De. Trawler's:,
and it always brings relief. I have
imtnense faith in L' medicine, and
always .l keep a 'bot: on hand. Also
I never fail to recommend to anyone
who is similarly troubled."
When you ,ask:fo. ,D:. Veinier's" sec
that you get it.
It has been on the macicd for enc prsf.
There' is nothing "just as good."
P.eilManufacttired ly The T. Milburn Co., •
Limited, Toronto, Ont.
Price; 35 curt:
vegetable diet, such as potatoes; white
bread oeitiueu1, hominy, rte.
31eat ogee a day is enough for those
taking moderntc exercise, with 'eggs,
Vegetables, bread And a little. sugar
and butter ar Other fits,
a
x x.
MPL
CS ARE PICTURESQUE.
H�1, xi a3nyxu,tyt �.. S vx3i y ty,t�.,$ % S 1K 0
°AR
SEARCHLIGliTS..
NeW Ones They Aro Using: on the Sat.
tlelieldo, of Europe.
Now searchlights that ;form exceed-'
ingly djffieult targets for an enemy's
phots„ire now used in the European
,gving been perfected 3ust before,:
It,co{umenced. Ordinary .searchlights
ale,• of-:`eour'e,:'goad marks for au' en-
emy, ;though not so good as might be'
expected. Their use 011 ,a battle dine'
has many restrictions because of the
aim they afford;'.
The new 'lights are designed to have
all tire power,of the biggest search-
lights in the Service but to offer a tar-
get
arget no larger than a baseball. ,The re-
ectors of these lights are three feet
dilldiarneter, but all the fight rays are
e hccuratel3 reflected that they cam be
eenfthrougb at three inch orifice. Thus'
the light can be :armored against. at-
tack lay small arm fire ot• quick -thing
machine guns;' leaving open only a
throe Trach apertut e
AS'a fur•ther'piotecbk0.0)fist shots
the reflector ;lass is eomi of many
small Sections' bounc e o hy�WiR
netting, which will hold',ti
gthcr,even after being iii kill
enang Post.
VAOne rats, Or \) nen ale tmu um),
e
the scarf is taken from his eyes and
another scout takes his turn, and so on
unidl all have made the attempt, The
`scout who places his staff nearest the'
flag wins f:ho gams..
When the game Is'played .between
'
patrols marks are given to each scoot
according to the position he gains, and
the patrol with the highest total of
marks wins.
A sense of direction, a good 'idea 01
distance and the effects of wind and
sun are very important scout qualities
Which this game encourages.
` Delicate Wings.
f fun to
catch a
Some people think it 1 1
So a
butterfly and hold it prisoner for a
n that the
few minutes. They think y
have not harmed it ,because they soon
release it. But the butterfly suffers
greatly even in this way, On the top
Cows
n there aro rows and
of each wing
of little feathers, about two
million on
each wing. When the butterfly is held
in the hand these delicate feathers arc
bruised and rubbed off and do not
grow again. This affects the butterfly
the same as pullingour hair out by
its roots hurts us.
CEILIA FLASD, GOVS,
Pia ds are picturesque, hence their
popularity for the small toll•:.- The
larger and gayer designs may be used,
with plain thaterlals,'this combination
being one in which, these,fabrics arc'
particulariy:teatured. •
Very eharining. is the little gown ii•
i,natrated Clare. The }trite maiden who
w,edks it 'looks like a veritable'; Scotch
.))mated,
The mode; is. of Scotch,plaid
.))mated, with plaited skirt and lens
}ya}L9t crit 0n the bias of materiat. The
`i glkigtie and sash aro of velvet, the tat
wter;` emelgina from -sides - of 'waist,
which lap ovor it"In basgoe fash'lon
Ye.
TO FOLK�
ting Pets That Can; I
e a Source. of Profit.
A Puzzle,
The answer is a very useful article.
I am long and slender, and my outer
covering is 01 wood.; 1 am bought in
the stationer's store, and you all have
me in your homes,
51 you drop me, as a rule, my head
will break.'. Then l have to have a new
one put on, but 1, don't like this be.
cause I become smaller,
Yon and all your friends Iilte me.
,Answer;''A Pend)
A Kite Tale.
This Is the tale :...
Ofakite .
And Its, flight
Through:the :5lty.
'Tis -a tato,
Full ,of knots
"!ln you'll see
By and' by.
Had It not
Trieda tiler
with a wire
In the way.
'Twould Have been
Hero to fly
Throughthe sky
Still. teeny.
:'But it's not
It to bent.
Torn and rent.
Ranging there.'>
Tell your Otte,
In its. doers.
Of an wires
To beware:,
Philadelphia t.edl
Thurrday, ,runes i.7:th, 1915.
is too useful a peephole into their
trenches for us to damage: 'Our own
periscopes consist of a box of wood
4 inches "Wide and two fent long, with,
little squares of looking' glass four
'Inches square at either end. When
you 10011 Into tho:lower glass you can
see refiected a piece of the landscape
to front,' and so call get a good,'steady'
look at the country in front of your,
'trench while keeping your Bead in-
perfect safety under the '.parapet,
The only drawback is that, the top
mirror and the end of the wooden
box showing above the parapet, they
are liable 50 be hit by a bullet 'and
knocked -,out of „your hands. This: ac-
atually happened to a fellow the other
day, and he had his
face covered, with
tiny cuts and got same powdered
glasshis
Y
in eye.
Since the last few days rain Paris
of the trenches are over three feet
'deep In water, and one has to wade
throughthevery cold water to get to
the
next11atsen We are gettingg
pumps to work, 'o �k but it is a difficult
business. The Germans havo a b'omb-
thrower called a' "Winysfelminer,"
'which throws a bomb about a couple
of hundred yards. Their bombs ex-
plode on striking' the ground, and
consequently any that do not actually
fall'in the trench explode harmlessly.
We, or rather an officer in the corps,
have rigged up,an iron drain pipe as
a gun, which throws hand bombs, to
that distance. These bombs are fitted
with time fuses, and most of them
explode in the air about 12, feet above
the ground. Consequently they are
more likely to do, damage to the occu-
pants of the trench, as these weapons
are not very acourate at the best of
times, and it Is impossible to make
sure of getting within five yards of
the object aimed at.
Quick Bridge Work.
Exactly eleven minutes after a Penn-
eylvania train reeved over a 720 foot
three span Steel bridge weighing 7,000,-
000 pounds, which was in a temporary
position, another train passed over the
bridge, which had been moved side-
%viee forty-seven feet to its permanent
place: , Between the breaking of the
rails and reconnecting thorn ten min-
utes andseventeen seconds'' elapsed.
The new .;bridge spans the biusldngum:
river at Tyndall, O.
a TRkNCH PERISCOPES;
AiSE BELGIAN HARES.
sled R1lc e.W o, Live ate Farms and:r
math ylliepos 0.0 Gt w 8i- .res
�.+ y'ItC,� i'uarioe and e1w:Qios For
'Wren. •
lt$'eselyoung peoplq,who, live on'
ms or who Stave large grounds near
souses • the raising 'of Belgian
catty be made Both asource of
iasii11e,and;profit The meat of these
Mnais sells readily. In the city mar. -
at good prices, and. their skins are
6111e1•tor furs These skins are
epresent fprs eoi different
Boxes With'1'wo Mirrors Are Used To
Spy, Istto Enemy's Positions.
Britishi'and German 'methods of
'employing priacopes and other meth-
ods: of trench warfare are: described'
by an officer of .the' Royal Engineers,
who, :Writing to his wife, Says: "In
,the lines the Germans have a very
le.rge periscope. Ad:their trenches are::'
only '100 .or 150 yards from ours ave
Mtn see, by loo ing through field
glasses, the face of the German who
M using reflected in the' top glass.
Yesterday' We could:distinctly see the
face of the observer. ' He was an offi-
cer; clean-shaven, and with a red cap.
Unfortunately, his shoulders were not
"in-, the picture,'; and we couldn't tell
bus regiment, But 'we could see him
exchanging ,jokes with someone over'
his shoulder and 'laughing and smii-:
a}ng. We have orders not to fire at
it, and perhaps the. Germans are won -
',daring :why
on-':daring'•why wo are ,unable to bit 50
lame n = nia.rlr a.i s:n,ahort a, range.. it
Stylish Evening Wraps.
For 'evening wear there are wraps
and loose, voluminous, coats made of
rich fabrics in a variety of styles. Vel.
vets, light weight plusbes and broad-
tails are particularly desirable for
coats of this character. Ip the cheaper
grades of evening wraps broadcloths
and light colored: woolens are used to
some extent, as well asInc fabrics.
UNDER .FIRE.
British Officer Tells How the Passive
Party, Takes" It.
A British officer gives the following
account of his impressions under fire:
"There is a good deal of, rot talked
of heroism at present. If it is all true
there' are many millions Of heroes is
Europe Just now, and I leave that to
you. I'•ve found it harder to go
straight inlife than go under fire. I
don't think men find it hard to go un-
der Are.' First of all, there is a, mass
suggestion and the tradition of your.
people to give you a bias to bravery.
Then when you are in the thick of it
you -.forget psychology after awhile
and get interested in the explosions.
"When thoroughly warmed up you
care nothing about yourown skin-
you forget you've got a skin -but you
are very hot about damaging the
hides of the ruffians who are the
cause of that fiendish ;noise. ,You
want to hurt them badly and make
them feel infernally sorry. 'When you
do get 'cold feet is before you've start-
: ed for a hot place. When you are at
the base your imagination is' far
worse: than shrapnel.
"Certainly when you do come un- •
der fire' for the first time you feel sure
YOB' cannot survive. 'I shall •never
live through this,' you keep saying to
yourself. • The noises are, abrupt, er-
ratic and shockingly violent and the
mess made is very nasty., but`when
you recognize your number, is certain-
ly^up you sort of congeal -you, lose
recollection of your" body and become
only a clear and observant point of
intelligence, doing; your jobsubcon-
sciously but surely, like a man dead
in everything but his•eyes. When you
are out of it .you 'come' to,' leo to
speak, and can' hardly believe you are
still .really in one piege. Then you
find yourself very pleased, smiling all
over and shaking a little fair a long
time afterward.'
'Trace Airships In Fog. ,
Tests 'over Londonproved that
searchlights can detect a Zeppelin
even in foggy 'weather. •
A British airship which has been
making experimental flights over
London 'by day and by night for the
Past '• fortnight,made her appearance
at dusk and sailed over the city for
several hours. Searchlights were
land tney managea t0 tolidw Iter '{Cher-.
ever she went. Most of the time there
were two shafts, playing upon the big
brown sausage shaped craft, arid they
kept Iter in sight when 'she dropped
down near the roofs of high build-
ings and followed her upward course
and her sudden turnings and Wind -
Aeroplanes fully equipped for fight-
ing are kept in reserve, and could be
launched like fire engines on the
Stroke of thebell if an alarm of an.
approaching Zeppelin were sunt out.
trained from several strategib Points,
CARE OF COOKING UTENSILS.
housewife ta- _
The upto date T e
noes all hes cooking utensils.
. b heavy g
• Those of light aluminium, granite
' save' en
and plated double"tin
ergs. ,
Tinware may bo cleaned with
• very little 'trouble'by using dry
flour applied with a piece of •)
newspaper.
Pie tins greased with butter
will make the bottom crust of
pies flaky and prevent them •;
from being soggy.
When using a double boiler the,
food will cook more' quickly if
the water in the outer vessel is:
salted in the proportion of a
•fourth of a cupful of salt to one
quart of water.
An oven that is constantly in
use requires. to be kept scrupu-
lously clean. It should not only
have the shelves scrubbed out
with soda occasionally, but in
• addition the shelves should be
painted with quicklime two or
three time's: a year. An oven
treated in this way never be-
comes caked with grease, and
there 'is 1, no unpleasant smell
when it .is being used.
AI) VERTISING-ISMS
Some ai•si ")Vora to
Eogreatness, I
'CASTPR mine • it;
For Infants and Children
So says Tull Shakot;pcl.rsy and we
. a it ; in Use For ®veer 3®1FearS
But
(belieone lnigh`t, add to lois coo - i Always bears
•
Mlizing ' the
way.
, Signature of .rl:
That some gnaw' great byctdver_ S gn e
Mahogany Frames.
Small furnishings add so much ilto'the
beauty and comfort of a room that
they are always especiallytempting to
the: wise shopper. There, are some
,charming little mirrors set in,=hogs
any frames and hung from mahogany
frames on a Tittle crossbar swung in
two %nights. It is just like a big pier
glass, only that it stands not more than
ten inches' high..
Children's Storm Capes.
There is a new storm cape for chit.
dren It is so long it is practically a
sleeveless raincoat Itis fall rubber
lined on the •inside and plaid: cloth on
the outside.
Grand Trunk Railway System
Railway. Time Table
London, Huron and Bruce.
North Passenger
London, depart 8,30 a m 4,40 p m
Centralia 9.88 5.45
Exeter 9.44 5.541
11 email .......... 9.55 6.05
Kippen •5 10.01 6.11
Brucedeld 19.09 6.19_
Clinton 11,00 6.35'
Londeeboro 11.18 6.52;
Blyth 11.27 7.00
Belgrave 11.40 ' 7.13
W Ingham; ,arrive11.54 7.85
South Pasaenge'
Winl;ham, depart8.35 a m 3.80 p
Belgrave 6.50 3.44
Blyth 7.04 8.68
Londesboro 7.13 4.04
Olin ton 8.10 4.23
13rucefleld 8.27 4.39
Kippen 8,35 4.47
Henson; 8.41 4,52
lfxeto 8.54 5.05
Centralia
'ti5ing' -
London, motive 10 00 8.10
Buffalo and 1joderich
6Vec` Passenger
ata pm pm pm
Stratford 10.00 12,80 525 10.25
Mitchell10.22 12.55 5.55 10.49
Seaforth 1...,10.45 1.20 6.18'11;11
Clinton .11.07' 1.35 8.40,11.2
Eloluiesaiile 11.16 1.43 646 I1.3
God 11-35 2.00 7.05 11,
East Passenger
,., am pm pm
dlodeeich 7.05 • 2.35 4552
13ofinesviile.
7.22 2,52 '5.1.0
Cllinton.,....... .. . 7.82 8,03, 5.10.
Se;north 7.51 3.21 6,55
Mitchell .. 8.16 3.44 6 19
Stratford 3 40 415' 6`20
Q
CANADA'S , NATIONAL NEWSPAPER
:`The War Summary" .
Almost fiom the very any ibe great European war began in August
last, the outstanding feature in'Canadlan Journalism coveting the conflict
'than been "The war Summary" dolly on pages 1 and 2 of TEE GLOBE.
In the concisest possible form the wetter has givenh1.0 readers a
pen picture of the developments in all parts of .the world. While the
details or the.. movements along -;the extended frontiers have; not been
,overlooked, the readers of TEIE' OLOBE •nave been „enabled to follow
intelligently and•wlth'- confidence She' general outlines of the stupendous,'
conflict, "Thi War Summary" 5f TEE :GLOBE '1e reproduced daily by
several papers throughout the Dominion.
The Editorial Page
TEE GLOBE on Be editorial page has striven to place before the
public in proper perspective the broad Background of the tttanie
struggle 'Phis series of artteles.ha0 attracted the attention not, only of
rho Canadian people, but of 'leading ;nen and journals.'.in all parts
of the world... The eanse0 leading. up to the war, the elements entering
into its conduct._ and the results likely. to dew from the cessation of
hostilities bate been dealt with an that hold and clear-cut form charac-
teristic of TUE GLOBE'S editorial page. ,.
News Service
The above features, in addition to a cable and letter service: from the
frons vnruatcbed: to Canada have place/1.71E G0OBH tar in',the lead of
Canadian papers, and par't1Y eglilaln thehenomenal increase of 181-8
por cent, in THE GLOBE'S eleealafioa fling; recent months.
Other Features
I
t it `� lien On v inter tie
l?ld tie fed twice a day,,
sin and on3m teens,
.Ltept, eonstali before'
p 'a ,Plea of pbca; salt ns
cit pct; itod provide an alllwndauce of
.New Soeuting Gums:'
Ifere is a ,new scouting gain which
should prove Very' popular. 'lt can u,0'
p ayed'eitller between the members oi^
a patrol • or the varlOSat patrols in a'
troop can play against one another.
A stick or tla as placed 10 l be'grooliel,
and the 'Scouts take up their position
at least fifty or a tit attired rands away
f:ora it. One of them 'is lnen blind-
folded end told to walk to the flag and.
Place his own statf:an the ground )vbere
e thinks the f3ag is. :When he 1.171.0'
�:ru,l"t4tyF,iYu- 3.,i,�w�sa cd
P.S.•-•According to Lord Kitchener,
the bl{t war alaeonly begun,
The sporting pages, the financial and commercial pages,. the woman's
psgaq, ate., etc., with the additional pages 111 Wodnesdau's 150110 devoted
to Larm. and Country Life," arc maintained at a --high standard .of
excellence, a standard that h'ns Justified *KIT GLOBE in its title of
Canada's. Natienal' Newspaper, and has 'given 11 bymany thousands the
largest eiriulation of any morning'Paper in the Dominion.
Local and City Papers
11y. fill Means talie your local paler,' 1110 in the field of metropolitan
newspapers Pun GLOBE nnquestion.ibly offers you the greatest' value
to be. had in Canada. Order i1: to -day. 25' cents per month -one -dollar
for Sony months -three dollars per Year..
THE GLOBE, Toronto.
till ;i fr 95 Nf:1+ i 11Aielloe ifd0'0i y ii'.13il 3; RPM I rw..1?'
The New Era
Job Department
If it is AnY Kind of Jobb.
Printing We can do it
At Home Cards
Bills of Fare
Ball Programs
Bill Heads
Blotters
Bookletsa'
By -Laws
Cheques
Counter Check Books
Deeds
Envelopes)
Legal Fornisp
Letter Heads
Lodge Constitutions
Meal Tickets!
Memo Heads
Milk Tickets".
Note Circulars
Note Heads
Notes
Pamphlets
Posters?
Prize Lists;
Receipts]
Statements)
Society Stationery
Stock Certificates
Shipping Tags
Wedding Invitations
Etc., Etc., Ec.
anaissiennaiwornam
Everything from a C , fling
Card to a Newspaper.
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OUR SPECIALTY
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cell on yo i; ani 5 bk.
mit '"rices and Samples
1