HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1914-01-22, Page 3Thursday, January 22nd, 1914.
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THE CLIINTON N1tW. ERA.'
Page 8
lea-Dru-Co•Laxatives
are different in that they
do not gripe, purge nor
cause nausea, nor dots
continued use lessen their
effectiveness. You can
always depend on- them.
250. a box at your
Druggist's. 17s'
National Drug and Chemical Co.
of Canada, Limited.
bola. i'ieo. A. Cox Dead:
Continued From Pagie '1
Edifices of business have lost their
capital! Machines' et industry move
but Heartlessly. There will rise
new heeds, new capitals, teem?.
heads to occupy the place heheld,
But the man, who from . a pool`
shoemaker' son in Peterboro, from
an oljQc1Yrte te•teglapth .oponator,
from a house to house insurance
agent, rose. indomitably to the very
heights of achievement has, vanish-
ed.
At a quarter past five this morn-
ing, as; the heavy belle' of the; City
'Hall tolled another quaiitee gone,-,
the end canlleJ'to a six months' ill.
need. At the fin!ej old residence on
SHerbouene ,street, servants, phy-
s cian•s, friends, relatives, and wife
knew that their vigils and hopes
were tended. For a long time the
Seratlor had'bcen umwe.11. Thetall
figure, the long benevolent face,
had long born the maij st of fail-
ing vigor. Ten days ago he was
able to drive in the parks,. A week
ago the diseaste. made a bold ad-
vance, warning the ,physicians of
aproaching dissolution. On Tues-.
day last came•acol ltyplsei--ancis a
recovery! Last night asecond col-
lapse, the sheep of exhaustion and
the •end+ All that affectionand
science could do was exhausted.
Dr. John L. Davison, with his assist
ants, Drs. 11.13, Anderson and Perry
G. Goidsmith, found their efforts
no Ion.ger necessary. The nearrel-
.atives, gathered about the peaceful
bedside, bid adieu to the man wlio
was to 'them not master financier,
not great business main,—but hus-
band, father and friend. Through
out a strong city and aproudProv-
ince, in great and in humblte homes,
a grief was carried with. the news,
grief for a ben!eifnetoi' [taken, a
friend removed.
In tribute to the late Senator G.
A. Cox, and ass mark of the high
s•eepeetf in which 1ewas head by
his associates in his particular lino
of financial activity, Mr, HE Wood
managing director of •the Central
Canada Loan and Savings Co., mak
esthe following comment;
"In the death of Senator Cox, Can
ada has lost one of her greatest
men, one whose •congaructive abil-
ity has contributed in a very mark-
ed degree to the development of
the resources of this country. His
outstanding qualities were great in-
itiative, extraordinary patience, un-
failing courage, and wondeefulytact
in dealing 'with. the nisi( and prob-
lems connected with his various
'great entleilprises. His confidence
in the 'future of Canada never al-
lowed him to hesitate about engag
le g g
ing in new fields; infect:, one of
the outstanding features of his busi
ness carer his almost 'prophetic
vision of the financial and commer-
cial expansion of the Dominion. Of
him itmay besaid'with 'special apt-
ness that helves .aself-made man,
his constructive genius laying the
foundation for his .pens'onal fortune
while atthe same time materially
contributing to the general prosper
ity and development of the coun-
Interested in Young Mem.
"No one`'vlio came in contactr
with the late Sumter Cox could fail
tttotbe impressted hy his cheery op-
4imism and his kindly character.
To him ' it was always a pleasure to
'.do a favor for a friend, and atyotrou-
ble was too great in that conn!c.e-
ttlion. One of his most marked char,,
acteristics was his interest in young
:risen, and while there aie many who
• owe their .start in life financially to
:lanatt5he. bels, service ' het rendered
them was -he continuamte,e of, his
.counsel and advice' het thteir affairs,;
In this i connection it is worthyto
con pec i n
-note that lztineverha hesitated to
:place responsibilitytoan ino e
as-
ik' .degreupon a menselected
by
him to fill the important
.Itive offices in his various leanterr
prises. In their activities betook
the greatete pegsonal' interest.. a i,d
'iwouldamst .seem theta t almost that Fin_
s
dividuat success gave him gre;ater
• 'satisfaction than that 09 the enter
-
-prise itself.
Made Many Gifts..
"His generosity was unboundjed,
For Over
Ten CM'S.
Weakening the body will never denote
dyspepsia or ilige tion, on the con-
trary, alt efforts shouldbe. lo' maintain
and increase the strength.
Burdock nlood 1:,,.ters will do this,
end at the same time enable you to
partake of all the whui .ut:tie food re-
quired, without fear' of any unpleasant
Mr. I-Ienry(f P. White, Surrettey!lle,
N.B„ writes:—"I have been troubled
with Indigestion for more than ten years;
tried •several doctors,` and different
medicines, hut all without succuss.
Having heard of tile many cures effected
by Burdock Blood Bitters, 1 decided
to give it a trial. '1 have taken one
bottle, and :I feel haat I an cured at
last; I can now do the same herd work
I could before I was taken sick
Burdock Blood Bitters is Manufac-
tured only by The T. Milburn Co.,
Limited, Toronto, Oat. '
and, unlike the majority ,ofmen' in
;his life -Lime, h{e;was' his own elx-
ecullor. None but those in closest
personal contact aha aware of the
wide field that his ibenefactions
covered, saline gifts metre made
without ostentation,
"The removal of such an outstand
ing figure arSenator Cox ieagreo-rt
;loss tothe community as a whole,
but the lare number ofmeta idea;-
tified with the various' sentegprises
ofwhich ' he, was, head will, to . a
greater text:ent than tyhey nowre-
size, 'long miss their day to day as-
aociation with hid delightful per-
sonality."
.Beloved: by Associates.
Sir•Edldnund Walker •expresseshhs
re,spectj in•'these words ; -
"I first' knew Mr. Cox about 28
years' ago. Ifound him a man of
most nnuslnal` alertness i'nt : niinck,
with ax(!exceptionally sunny iem-
peraanenti, which ntiuec(ntedl to be
impossible to diminish by any ltiszd
of eventl, Be1was markedly genera
ous in his opinions, regarding other
people, and most. liberal, in,extend-
ing aid to every good lenterprise.
He had an almost phenomleleal in-
mltinct for the valve ofrieal estatie
and while some might have thought
him an unduly ,sanguine mars. there.
is no doubt that his foresight was
amply justified.
"He was a • ;strong friend, and
much beloved by tI:ia Briny of life
insurance men who worked under
him. I am sure that his life was
'Sprinkled with many charities' and
kindly acts, of which the world is
not likely to hear." '
Some of Hie Positions.
He founded thee. Canada Loan and
Savings in 1885, was presidentof•tha
Canadian Bank of Commerce for 17
years, was a director of the Nation -
at Trust Company, of the :Western
Fire and Marine Insurange Com-
pany, the British American ,Fire
and Marine Insurance !Company,
and anumber of othner companies.
He was a direo'tor of the Canada
Cement, Limited, a $30,000.000 com-
pany, the biggest merger of associ-
ated intenests ever attempted in
Canli4a. Nine tcomtpa'nies ;were
amalgamated in'thisi merger. tie
was one of the principal ,sharfehold-
ers of the 1N1rexican Light and Power
Company, incorporated in 1903, with
a capital of $12,000,000. Ile was pres
ident of the Crow's Nest Pass Coal
Company, a director of the Domin-
ion Iron and Steel Company, a
director of the Toronto StneetRail
way Company, and of the Canadian
General Eleeetric Company.
Some of the interests of Geoyge
Colt were the P7ovident Invest.
meat Company, Toronto Savings
and Loan Company, Russell Motor
Car Company, Canada IFoundrty,
Canadian Shipbuilding ,Company,
Dunlop Tire and Rubber ;Goods
Company, Dominion Coal Company
London Electric Compain{yj;Ottawa
Elegtaic Railway, Sao Paulo, To-
ronto and Niagara Power Company
Toronto and York Radial Railway,
Toronto Electric Light Company,
Toronto Land and Investment Con
poration, Keystone .Fire -Insurance
Company, Ontario IEectrical De-
velopment Company, United States
Mortgage Company, Imperial Guar
antee and Accident Insurance Com
parry,' Frost. d' Wood Company,
Land Mortgage Association, Toren
10- (General Trusts' 'Corporation,
Havana Traction Company, ,
Domin-
ion Securities Company, th,e Rob-
ert Simpson Company and the Van
couver Cement Company.
A Tireless' Worker.
A tireless' brain worker, gifbetd
with 'good constitution, he was
able to retain his wondjeetul grasp
of business till ho'had passer). the
allotted age of man. Long after he
was' almull1i-millionaire, he toiled.
BM his desk day in and day out, as
though he were a salaried emplyee
trying to make both ends mieet..ae
was every approachable. man, and
iS he were walking down Kiang
eltreet with the governor and met
an +engiaie wiper wham het had been
accuslloined, tospeak to, h,e would
qtop and shake 'hands with him
His charities aveile many, and. but
few of his most notable donations
were ever made public.
Was Twice Married.
He !parried Miss Margaiyek! Young
awas> tire: fat her
' 1862,and 1
HopkinstinI
of three sons and '`.wq daughtlelds.
She died inJanuary 1905.,c
atox
Co
s latest great lenefa
ceti
on was
000 in
ons 'hitt of ,'300
an auom ni $
IY g
her.memory for the erection of a
nurse's home, in connection with the
new Toronto General 'Hospital. In
April, 1909, he,marri!ed Amy alert
rude, the eldest daughter of his.
olid friend, Walter Sterling, ;the
city auditor.
A Biography 9s>j Brief.
Of English' parentage, 1•3anaton
Cox was born at Colborne, Ont.,
oast of Cobourg, on May 7th, 1840.
He, was +edascettgd in the public
and grammar schoote of the village,
and ,started bushiness, as a telegraph
' eperalt;or at the age of sixteen.
the age of(18,hieaves incharge of
[the Pe'tterbodo office. ofltho. Mont-
real Tclsisci oaan i 13e'
became soiatad with the
h1
an.
Canada
Life Assurance Company, while in
charge atPeterloro, where he lived
thirty yeagg, for seven' of which he
was mayor of that place. 'He also.
came within a few voiles ofrepre-
tslein'ting' Wiest 'l'lerte(rbon'o in - the
House of Commons.
Al; the agetof 38, thleput netw;life
into the moribund) Micllamd Railway
ancUsolcl it at a profit to the Share-
holders,. He came to Tot?onto (at
the age: of 48, 'twenty-six' years ago,
and was Tatecl • rata .uillionair,e i1n
1907.
In 1909, he [vas' charadt(el(hyaed as
one (Atha 23 mien who \vea'eta't'tlre
basis'. of Canadian finance.
A Coniis:tenit.'Methodist .and a
generous giver to charitable, relig-
ious' anci educational ppurpos•s.% een,
arbor Cox's death will . ba widgity
reget,%`jtied,,
ottL
quickly aeons coughs,' cured colds, and heals
the throat and tunas.' . .86 cents.
Advertisement.
.
Huron County Business Men's;
AssOciatiOn
Articles on Prohibition- -Pp er Na. 11.
We regret this is our last paper before the day of voting..
The time has been to short for an educational campaign. And
is it any wonder, that our friends, who styles themselves the
Temperance Party, would have rushed this vote on in November,.
had they had their own way. Anything but information that
bears down on prohibition for them. Of what value is anything
that will not bear ,the light of scrutiny'?
In our papers we have shown beyond contradiction, that
Prohibition is absolutely bad. We submit for the careful con-
sideration of our readers these facts concerning Prohibition.
1. It does not prohibit.
2. It brings into existence a contempt for law.
3. It breeds deceit, lying, malice and ill -will in any community.
4. It tends to deteriorate the mental and physical natures of
those oppressed by it.
5. It leads to a consumption of drugs and patented nostrums.
most detrimental to health.
6. It produces the worst form of drunkenness there is, owing
to the adulteration of the intoxicants sold in prohibited
territory.
7. It is utterly and entirely un -scriptural. Whatever ground
the Temperance Party may have from the standpoint of
expediency, they literally have not any support whatsoever
from the Bible.
S. THE BIBLE DENOUNCES DRUNKENNESS, BUT IT
DISTINCTLY ENJOINS, EVEN COMMANDS, THE
PROPER USE OF INTOXICATING BEVERAGES.
We have every confidence that the men of Huron will not
be mislead by the representatives ofAhose, who, while generally
sincere, are pursuing an ignis fatugus, they call Prohibition. We
have no hesitation in pronouncing PROHIBITION TO BE A
CURSE, AND NOT A BLESSING.
Respectfully,
HURON COUNTY BUSINESS MEN'S ASSOCIATION.
John Ransford,' President
Win. Jackson, Secretary.
r—
A MOTHER'S DUTY
"Oh, I learned a good many things,"
he young man answered.
At the end of the third day the fa -
TO HER DAUGHTER then again asked:
"Well, Robert, what did you learn to-
day?"
"Gee, dad," the boy replied, "I never
can learn that business!"
Then the delighted father clapped a
hand upon his son's shoulder and said:
"Robert, you're all right. I guess
you'll be able to take hold of things
when I have to let go, but you had me
worriedatthe start."—Chicago Rec-
ord -Herald.
Is to Guard Her Health by
Keeping Her Blood
Supply Pure.
•
n see their
mothers e
Anxious t rs wh
daughters fail in strength, become
pail and languid, can be certain that
the cause of their anxiety is the con-
dition of the growing girl's blood, At
no time in her life does a girl stand in
greater need of pure, red blood and the.
strength which it alone can give her,
than when she ie developing into
womanhood. It is then that anemia
rapidly develops and the growing girl
finds herself in declining health. If
your daughter complains of feeling
constantly tired, if her appetite isfickle
If she ie breathless from slight exertion
or if the heart palpitates violently on
going upstairs ie it a certain sign that
hes blood is failing to meet the de-
mands upon it, because it is thin and
watery. It is at such times that Dr,
Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People
are worth their weight in gold to tired
anaemic girls. They actually make the
new, red blood, that brings brightness
to the eye, the bloom of health tc the
cheeks, and strength and activity to
the whole body. The following is an
instance of their value to young girls.
Miss Hilda Pearl Snows Barrington,
ton
,
N, S., gradually drooped
under an
attack of anaemia. At first t she was
Rale
and listless suffering Fin from occa-
sional 1
!Dualheadaches
progressed, a severe
as the trouble
re cough also attack-
ed her, and her friends feared she was
in the grip ot consumption. Almost
trom the outset she was being treated
medically, but with no apparent bene-
fit. At a critical stage an her illness
Miss Snowe' wisely decided that she
would give .)r. Williams' Pink Pills a
trial. After taking them for some
time there was a noticeable improve-
ment in her case and the Pills were
gladly continued until she was fully
restored to health. Miss Snowe is to-
day as healthy and rugged as any girl
could wish "to be, and ber friends be -
MECHANICAL EXHIBITS.
The New Idea le "Try It Yourself" In-
stead of "Hands Off."
"Try It Yourself," instead of "Hands
Off" is proving to be such a success
for the motto of a museum that an
euormous one to be run on this prin-
ciple Is to he built at,Mnnich. Thou-
sands of machines will be so arranged.
that any pers011, who wishes—even
boys and girls—may turn a lever or
touch a button aid so start an electric
motor rnuning 0 pump or a machine
tool drilling a hole into a block of
steel. '
The idea has been well tested and
found to be practical. in the present
industrial museum at Munich about'
half of the great number otm aebin e
s
I i ion ore arranger so that vis.
on ertib t t
Itoz•s naw run n t h
r r. m without assist -
mice. Ailtomatic nttachlueuts are pro-
vided so that uo injury eau come to
the machines; in fact, in most in
strinces all the visitor is allowed to do
is to press the button to start the
wheels moving.
The fascination of controlling power
is enough to draw great numbers of
people to the museum and to make the
erection of a much larger and more
ambitious exhibition worth 'while.-
Saturday Evening Post.
lieve that Dr....William's Pink Pills
Cooking With Cold.
That meat'ean be cooked by extreme
cold as well as by extreme heat is the
v s ig
contention of a German n to a t eator.
He leas taken the laminar phenomenon'.
, 't
that extreme cold seems'to the ti rc t
like extl'etne bent and applied it to
meats. Elis tests have rei'esled the.
feet tint' a temperature of 00 degrees
below pro, F., seems to do the hest•
and he conteeds that pleat cooked in
this way' is equal to meat cooked with
[.teat.. He reeommottds, however, that
the ment be kept in'tightly -sealed j:rs
after being cooked with cold.
A Busy,.Flying School.
it has U&en left to the militney ant.
thorities of England to erect the first
signboard warning people against aero.
planes, .This is; erected ou SatIslnlef'
plant; near the Ccutrnl Flying school,
where the naval Sand 0!litsry flying.
teen are trained. On. busy :wee
'vo
pinne5 pass and volipse over the plebs
with such frequency, tltit an tinsespeet-
ing civltinnmight cane receive clime`
ige from ono of the 'defensive :'wasps'
• of Great Bratsk).
These Pills not only euro anaemia,_
but all troubles due to poor blood and
weak nerves.
Sold by all medicine
dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box, or
six boxes for $2,50, from the Dr. Wil-
lie -ins' Ont,
Medicine Co,,3
li•trua'.
ti,
GETTING A' LINE ON HIM.
For That, Robert Had His Dad
Worried atFirst.
The president of a largee o nufactur
frig
Concern decided it little while ogo
to -tort his sou In the btisanese, letting
I
rim begin at the bottom. After the
hey's first day to the i'acto-y his 01-
1her netted:
Hebert, what dlcl you lan111
"1\'ell, .oke ,t, � y
today?" •
"Oh there's not.hiug much to learn
in that hhtee,'' the 90)1114 01 airily Te
plied.'
The father looked worried. but he re-
frained from giving cxpresslon to his
dem ppointm era,
After Robert's second day ut the
works' the fethet !steeds'
"Even. wiser. did von le16r0, tariel"
LAST IRISH SECRETARY
LISTORYOOx'iB9Ot+, MAY I9ND WITH
AUGU;3TINE BIRRELL.
Man of Whom Least Is Heard In Con-
vection With Home itide Is Per-
haps the Most Iltisily Engaged of
Ail' In the Prea'nt Struggle Ile
Is.(- i'iefly 1 amour Thor this Lhter-
ary Activities.•
To these days, when there is eo
much tall[ for and against Home Rule.
for Ireland, there is one man behind
the scenes who'. says little and does
much. He is the man destined, so it
would seem, to he the last ,Chief Sec-
retary for Ireland in the British Cabi-
net, for when Home Rule Is in force
there will be no n. d' of the office, in
its present form at any rate: There
is no more sincere Home Ruler than
he, and few are the British' politicians"
who have a better knowledge of the
Irish people, and their problems.
Mr. Birrell is a most benevolent
looking man. He looks like one of
the Cherryble brothers. But you
mustn't think he is as grandmotherly
as he looks. He resents with vebem-
m e any attempt to misconstrue
something he has said. When one of
the eloquent Cecils misquoted him in
the House, he at once interrupted the
oration (in that lion's roar of a voice
that is at once the terror and delight
of his opponents) with, "I may be a
fool, but I'm not such a silly tool as
to have said anyt' ing of the sort."
And he corrects his friends with the
same }nuffness. He never lends his
name to a misconception, nor cares
to be the peg for all the virtues with
which Party seeks to drapea Re lead-
ers.
His education bill failod.P rob
RT, 0010. L000STINE nIRRRLL.
ably, because it was a bad bill; but it
would have stood a greater chance of
success had its maker known more of
the art of humbugging. Many other
politicians would make capital out of
an exterior so benevolent, says a writ-
er in The London Sketch.
He has half succeeded in establish-
ing his ferocity, "Have you ever
known'a female Birrell?" asks Lady
biI Grant, Sybil
i b1 voice ren-
dered
1f the g
dared it futile for any woman to as-
pire to fin in politics the place that
he fills. His wit, too, fr of a mascu-
line quality. Based upon fact, rather
than fancy, it is the wit of the stu-
dent; his jokes are cracked in the
bard -headed school of logic. "Bob
Logic," Sir Frank Lockwood used to
call him;, and it is in the company of
lawyers and doctors and politicians
that his humor flourishes.
Mr. BfrreIl's taste in books, while
dt is sane and thorough, has the same
bias as bis humor. His inclination is
for the weighty syllables of the
eighteenth century. No, trend of fash-
ion beguiles him from the things that
naturally appeal to him. He loves his
Dr,' Johnson whatever befalls, and
could go on editing him to the end of
time. Charles Lamb, and Browning,
and Charlotte Bronte are also among
his authors, and he has read "the
young men." But bis preferences are
o lous his e
easily ,tested byp
quota-
tions. In talk, in speech -making, in
essay -writing, he is continually citing
the heavy couplets, that lighter
mem-
ories em -
cries cannot carry,even if they care
to,
his onlyguide
in g
The tasting sense is
In literature; for him booke, like ap-
ples, are .tither good or bad. He
likes to tell of the child who -rite to
his mother, crying: "Why, here's
better hook than the Bible," and so
began a long series of adventures
among masterpieces. That child,
probably, was no other than A. B., for
it is characteristic of him to break
with Genesis,and start again at the
beginning on his own account. One
of his weaknesses has been a certain
willingness to sneer at the reader
who approaches' literature in the re-
ligious, rather than the ]iter ary,
mood.' Mr. Birrell is irreverent, not
necessarily toward religion, but to-
wards certain classes of the religious.
Birreligion .becomes very mu
en the
same thing as irreligion when the
Chief Secretary thinks he finds that
the devout parent, with no sense t.9
humor, 0500 his devotions much as
he uses castor-oil.
City Solicitor Orta Faggots.
The Y700 -year-old ceremony of the
cutting of two faggots in connection
with the rendering of 'quit _rent ser-
vices by the London City Corporation
to the crown took place recently at
the Law Courts.
Two faggots, :abort 12 inches in
girth, were cut on the solicitors' table
by. the City Solicitor with a billhook
and Hatchet as quit rent for a piece
of laud, known ,as the ' Mo.or,, in
Shropshire. Then he counted six
horseshoes and sixty-one nails when
the arish
forge in
tenants of a n
the g
of St. Clement Danes were called up=
on, to reader service.
Busy �Vindniillr
Aw
indm ill' is employed in England
to light :a church and parsonage teed
pump the organ. .
e
r
rrioy
Concrete Hog Houses
7 and Feeding Floors
Enable you to raise bigger hogs and
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Mean Bagger Profits
a Hog houses of concrete are sanitary, easily cleaned,
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structures. 'Write for this beautifully illustrated book
h "What the Farmer can do with Concrete." It shows how
to build Hog Houses, Feeding Floors and many other
things the farmer needs.
Farmer's Information Bureau
Canada Cement Company Limited
520 Herald Building, Montreal
fi
TRANSFORMING A CITY.
Progress Rio de Janiero Has Made In
the Past Few Years.
Within fifteen years Rio de Janeiro
has been transformed. Up to that time
the city had taken little advantage of
its wonderful natural location, The
streets were narrow. with rough pave-
ments and open. noisome sewers, As
the city is almost under the equator
the death rate tinder such conditions
was high.
A decade or so ago Brazil, under the
leadership of Dr. Muller and others,
began ber awakening. Her statesmen
realized her tremendous resources and
knew that capital and immigration
could make her one of the great na-
tions of the world. With that motive.
therefore, the work of improving Rio
de Janeiro began. Eventually the
im-
provements cost $200,000,000.
The city now gives an imposing Im-
pression of wealth and prosperity. It
has a growing millionaire colony and
is gradually coming into its own as a
mecca for tourists. The city's water
front, many miles long, which former-
ly was a fever swamp, has become one
of the most magnificent boulevards on
earth, thoroughly protected from the.
bay. It a winding double drive of
macadam, separated by lawns and
groves of royal palms. while there are
walks for pedestrians along the wa-
ter's edge.—Argonaut,
His Regret.
They were going along the public
highway at a leisurely rate of forty
miles per hour when a decrepit hen
adthechicken
and rooster started to do,
specialty—cross the road.
The front and bind wheels on the
right side struck the poor, old, Buff
Jointed rooster amidships,
and
with
besuccumbed.
ones squawk
q
i 1 he man at the tee
Fin
formed ate t S
Y
look
t *u it,tSd t
o
wheel starter[ to Slow dew
about for a place to turn.
His solicitous .wife turned to her
sent mate and said:
"Isn't that just like his tencler heart?.
He won't be satisfied unless he goes
hack and settles for that rooster. Ile
just can't bear to feel he has injured
any one or anything."
Then. lousier, to her husband she
said:
"George, remember that appoint
nient, We haven't nny time to go buck
for anything."
Glanciug at the clock near his feet
and at the speedometer near by. he
Melted and said:
i'
"'You're 'right, ;Lennie, but Y ;had
know if I' had turned, back i ceekl
have killed that old hen just as easy
as I did the rooster!"-i+'un,
WHILE
YOli
ELEP
The, most[ reh.aikable Cough and
Cold remedy known to: science.
For all lung andt hroat trouble
it has no equal, 25e and 500 per 1.
boltitle, at all drugstores,
It Wouldn't Start.
They've got a new joke over at the ,
automobile club. They spring it on ev.
ery stranger that will bite, hut they
won't spring it any more because ev-
erybody will know it after it is print-
ed
rinted here.
The stranger is led to ask, "Who is
that man over in the corner?"
Then the other fellow says, "That's
Blank, a new member. He's not very
popular here."
"Why not?"
"Oh, he's always trying to start
something."
"I see. Quarrelsome disposition, eh?"
"No, not at all. He owns a motor-
cycle."—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
COA
U. S. Government Standard
Below is an extract, from U.S. st
Gov. ad, for tenders—"'Phe Guth
recite coal must he equal to that
mined and prepared by Philadel
phia & Reading Coal & Iron Co"
We handle nothing but the first
grade Philadelphia & Reading.
ollowa,y
House phone 12. Office phone 40
Live rouarg wanted
2500 (thickens 1000 Bens. ipe
Ducks Each Week il.•oin slow
until January
To finish your own poultry, w
have Beat Oats .smd Buckwheat
he
specially ground
for fattening pur
Poses as very
reasonable prices.
8,000 dozen Strictly New La
id
Eggs,. wanted each week during
the winter months. To produce
these eggs we have 'a full lime 01
Poultry Foods to keep your layers.
iln
the pink of condition.
A full stock of Brain, Shorts, Feed
Flour, Oat Chop, Barley Chop
Etc., Atc., always on, hand.
GIVE US A CALL,
POULTRY TAKEN ANY DAY OF•
EACH WEEK.
The Gill ooglois Co.
The up-to-date Firm, \,
ono 04.
N. W. TRF
WAEIPhTHA, W. JE
CLUBBING BATES
r�
1� li S
New Era and Daily Globe $4,:,t•
New Era: and Daly iYlail and
Empire 4.912
Now Era and Daily World .3.
New Era 'Rad Daly Neave
New Era and Da.Iy Stat• 2, .
Drew .ora and dam ly lieradct
and ati cokly Star.
Naw Era and Weekly Witness. ea..
New Era and Northern Mese
• senger- -
New. Era tied Canadian Farm
New Era and Far'mer's Sun...
New Era and 1Da:ly Freer
Press, mornilzg'
Naw Era, and Deily !Free,
Press', o e i
a vii
g •
New Era end 'Weekly F, e
Pies'
1.91
1,8'.
1.8:
3.31
2
,SC
Now Era and Daily Advertiser 24a,,,,,
iii eav Era and Weekly Adver-
t' sc
fi1.80
Nosy Era and !Faint ald Dair,y 1.8.
New Era and Farmer's Advo-
cate 2,35