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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1914-03-26, Page 211111111111 11111 IPage S RVOUS WOMEN Made Well By Lydia E. Pink ' harm's Vegetable Compound.. " Philadelphia, Pa. --"I had Ia severe ease of nervous'rprostration, with palpi- tation of the heart, constipation, head- aches, dizziness,/ noise in my ears', titnid, nervous, rest- leas feelings and sleeplessness. "I read in the pa- per where a young woman had been cured of the same troubles by taking "a'"`m`®" Lydia E: Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound so I threw away the medicines the doctor left me and be- gan taking the Compound. Before I had taken half a bottle I was able to sit up and in a short time I was able to do all my work. • Your•medicine has proved itself able to do all you say it will and I have recommended it in everyhousehold I have visited.`—Mrs. MARY JOBNSTON, 210 Siegel Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Another Bad Case. r Ephrata, Pa.=-j"About a year ago I was down with nervous prostration. I was pale and weak and would have hys- teric spells, sick headaches and a bad pain under my shoulder -blade. I was under the care of different doctors but did not improve. I was sq weak I could hardly stand long enough to do mydishes. "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound has made me well and happy and I have begun to gain in weight and my face looks healthy now." -Mcg. d- W. RORNBERGaR, R. No. 3, Ephrata,'Pa. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (conn. dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held In strict confidence. The New Era. 47 NI 1'EAP.- "IN THE PUSLIC SERVICE,' -W. Jt.,�d lilt ells sON, Props. d. d.cslie Herr, Business 31aaauger New Era, One Year in advance $1.00 Now Era, when not paid in ad- vance $1.50 New Era, to, the United States in advance $1.50 ,Advertising Rates on Application - Job work prics advance on July t 17:3, in accordance Svith the.Hui•on Co.' Piers Asso- c:at on I.ates- Gi'sc:: '''core i:0 }muse Phony, el MIEN 11,10.1. F, a.4 lVhen your baby is ill ; when he is erase and bard to mind; when his teeth are bothering him or he is troubled with constipation or indigestion; give Bila Baby's Own Tablets; They are the best medi- cine 'for ,little ones, They never fait to regulate the bowels and sweeten the •stomach, thus making teething easy; curing constipation, colic indigestion and breaking up colds and Izevers. The Tablets ore sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr, Williams Medicine Co., Brock- vine, Ont. HINTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. • Write on one side of paper only. trio's tp re ch: ue Wednesday of eachfweek or ooner, Avoid all items respecting on per- sonal character but ,send All the News. • Cheeh off this list it may assist you to remember an important ite•ne. Births, Marriagbs, Deaths. Accidents, Church News Suppere or Presentations. Removals, Visitors. Lodge News, FLres, Public Improvements. Law'., LwCaea Cases, the 'Crops. School Matters. op Correspondents will please re- frain from sending ,notices of en- tertainments where an admission fee is charged, unless ,they send word who is responsible for the payment of such advertisment. The charge is, five' cents a line—six words make. a line. Watch ' Your -Liver. if It Is Lax Slow w or Torpid Stir it Up By the Use of Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills. A lazy, slow w or id'li P for ver is l terrible afliietionsl as itholds back the bile, which is required to move the bowels, and lets it into the blood instead, thus causing Constipation; Catarrh of the Stomach, Sick headache, Langour, Pain under. the Right Shoulder, etc, Mrs, Wesley Y .Esta bre els, Midgic Sta.' Hon, N,B„ 'writes.—"'her several years t's'ars been troubled with pains in the live'•, I have had medicine from several doctors, but was only relieved for a time by them. I then tried .Milhurna I Liver r Pills, and I have had no trouble with my liver since. I can honestly recommend theca to every person who' has liver trouble,' Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25c a vial, or 5 vials for $1.00, at all dealers,, or nailed direct on reeeilyt of price by The T. Milburn C. ,, I,i>•nited, Toronto, Ont.'. he Nope Trade ocaimelireollemiefessime. gooses ...YOUR..... 1�OME� MARKET, Farmers Should Patronize Lo- cal Trade Centers. AVOID BOX CAR MERCHANT. interest Your, Local Newspaper. Pub- lisher, Bankers and Lawyers In Plan to Advance Your Town—Mail Order , Houses Stifle Development of Small Loealitiee. There are two ways of looking at the, subjects of home markets, and the sub- jects 'should be studied from both viewpoints If a reassQet�ably correct un- derstanding is to be hfarived at. k sE It, should be understood in advance that each community, inclusive of all the people who live in the market town and the farmers who surround It, is an industrial- unit. and that the prosperity of the individuals living in the community rises and falls, ebbs and flows, with the prosperity of the community as a whole. et aS One important aspect of the situa- tion is that the farmer has a rigbt to look for a good market for what he falser and bas to dispose of. He is a producer, first of all, and must pro- duce before he can consume. ' tt eC The trading center, where he would naturally expect to dispose of his sur- plus products, is not performing its functions as a part of the community it it does not make preparation for buying everything the farmer wishes to sell, and the market should always be a cash market, It k This mach the farmer bas a right to demand In return for the support he fd able to give the town. Could Get Better Prices. If the farmers have in their local town a market for their products or a great part of them they would obtain a much better price for everything they raise, and the consumer, would pay considerably less than the people living in large congested centers. st To supply the needs and demands of the people living in the,large cities great quantities of country produce are daily shipped to the commission merchants operating there. zt The city consumer pays the price for living in the center of excitement, as he joins with the producer in sharing the cost of moving the farm products to the large cities; also the expense entailed in handling, storing and dis- posing of them. Town Is Entitled to Support. On the other hand, having provided for a good, adequate market, the town Ls entitled to the support of the farm- ers. le p Furthermore, the only manner in which the market can be .maintained Ls for the farmers to give all their trade to their local merchants—keep their money at home, et st The cow must be fed if she is to con - lime giving milk. You cannot draw more out of a cask than has been put into that cask. If the farmers of a community per- sist in sending the money they receive for their products away from home to buy goods the time surely will come When there will be no money at home with which the town's tradesmen can buy the farmers' products. This is the philosophy of the situa- tion in a nutshell. - The resident of a town who does not exert his evily effort in its interest, to build it up and make it strong and prosperous, is indeed retarding his own 'advancement That's t s the logical reply. Dev6Iop a Home Market. I- The first step in the rightdirection la the creation and development of a home market, • l lverything within your, power should be done to make your town the trading mecca'of your vein. ; Yon should volunteer your services Mad co-operate with the other citizens, in making your town the trading envy of your sectloa of the state. Give %the question a little thought end when yon' -have reached a conclu- Bion do not hesitate to voice your sen- timent& ' 3o ,to year local newspaper publish- er, your -banker, your merchant, your lawyer, ;yi!vr hotel., keeper and your druggist and tell them what you think Would be the beet way to build up and 'advance your town. ' Citizens Are Thoughtless. The efforts spent should not be di- rected ed in specific channels, but should embrace the betterment of rural life and conditions. 1 .The work for the improvement of both town and country • ought to be bade a commualty job, and every res. !dent should engage in the work, with equal zest, Local development will be hindered lust as long as the thougbtless citl- zeus' line up at the counter of the - faker andnae ' t e rhlmf• the t hard earned dollars and wbile they continue to aid Itn'increashig the bank accounts of the Ilanormous corporations engaged in sell - goods by mail through deceptive pictures in catalogues. Is ' Let the community rise up in one body and put a stop to tbls practice., THE CLINTON NEW WlLA. r .� 4° je4 1 , . fir' ,irfiri6 11r :1 r f — - s 'lllPli:all 7_�t!►llll 10 ll 111��1 urning The:` , ti, idnight 01 1-1 E e thin er' knows that a light, easily digested and assimilated food is `on'dicive to hard meatal work. His knowledge of', what is good for hien leads straight to" 9 Be sure of the right signature. 10c per package al *a-ctt ttlara./211.0...41K.11.3101110MOUPPIE4611.11011111•1011:42.10W 411.1101111111S16.1.11.311:111111.0 -0/111111/.% Varied Activities of Womefi In Siam old maids are unknown. Women act as steamship captains in Norway. London has twerty womep adver tiring canvassers. Germany has women carters and sigreet cleaners. Russia employs .nearly 400,000 wo man in factories. Women workers in Chili recelive an average of 38 cents a day. Philadelphia has' five women hold ing muni,npal •positions., Nevada, with 16,989 has the small est unmber ;of children in thee T nited States. Out of a -population of 33,130 in Mustapha, Pasha, there, are only 4,000 males. The club women of Concord, NM. have won .their fight for lowest' street ear ,st eps. Ninety-eight per Gent, of the wo- men in Kansas ere members of farmers' institutes. Women mix motar and carry the hod for building opeeations in Munich, Germany; Several women have passed the examination for the bar in Georgia but have not been allowed to prac- tice. • Divorces drawing alimony ft\ ex- cess'cil 413,000 !are,'compelleII ;to pay an income tax to the govern- ment. The women's Leight hour law .lu Denver now includes bookkeepers, e'tessogra hers, and cashiers, Forty babies t out of every 100. born in the 'United States do not receive medical 'attention at birth, Frau Bertha Krupp, daughter of the (founder of the .Krupp gun works in Germany has an income of $500,000 a year. German women have started a campaign for admission to the floor of the stock exchange in Berlin. Believing that evomen will have .!the vote in New York Statje by 1916, the Somalist women in New York City have opened a natural- ization instruction : ibueeau .for women, Olga Meyendorff, a Russian bar- oness, is a 'student at the interna- tional training .school for Y,W,C,A„ workers in New York, Mrs. Elizabeth Townsend, the wile of a showman at Weyniouth, Eng- land, has been granted the king's bounty having given birth to trip- lets. iV TlbFliG EH As soon as we can let • the fur- • nace out we'll bring cup the • coal shovel and ,start to dig, IN TH SP4ENG Nltil➢rt`• Needs lid in Hais- iiig New Dl&l:tilil Giving El owl In the .spring the system needs a tonic, To be healthy you must have new blood just as the treses must have, new sap to roniet,v their vitality. Nature demands it, and without this new blood you • will feel weak and languid. You may, la,ave twinges of rheumatism at the sharp, stabbing pains of neur- algia. Often there atcr disfiguring pimples or eruptions en the skin. In other cases there is merely a 'feeling of tiredness .and a variable appettitte. Any of these 'are signs that the blood is out of order— that the indoor life of 'winter has lessened your vitality. What you need in spring is a tonic mediciartl:r to put you right, and. in all the' world of medicine there is. no tonic can equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pill,(: These Pills (actually make. now, rich, red blood—your great- est need ineeSpring. This new blood drives out the seeds of di- sease and mattes ieasilyr, tired men,. women and' children bright, active and 'strong, Mrs. ,Geo. Borns, Al- bany, P.E.I., writes; "I was ter- ribly run edow,n and so Weak that I could hardly drag myself around. I was so nervout that I was afraid to walk across the floor for fear I would lea. Our family doctor dart r treated me but without success and' finally I began taking Dr. Wil llama' Pink Pills, Gradually they brought me back to good health and now I lam as well As ever I was and have every cbnfiderpce in recommending these Pills to other su'fferrers,'i These Pills are sold by.' an medi eine dealers or can be had by }nail at 50 Bents a box or six boxes for $2,50 from Th•e Dr. Williams' Medi cine Co,, 13roci{vine, Ont, !'%nr•trroirt,,t Mail hi. 2211, i•hnf Attvt %1.11) 11,,. 121u81 IU1'In, Initf I,,'.,22 ;2tll.U.— "Belling the Cat" "R'ho will bell the eat?" is a (1111 ooe old proverb, ft leolle 1 parable 1181 in history. The alive, .says the para bre, held a consultation huts to severe 1hem velyes froth the 111 t. and they ret- ynt' �edt to hang ii hill shunt the (.'ll t'K neck to give nuuilnl when she ap- ronchtd, but atter they had resolved on doing it they were as far off IS .ever, for who would do 115 Roth parable mad proverb have lin. tL ' ui taliz + , t,fl t hemve r 1 Ca'' in bis'o'n. 3vttott the Scottish nobles met sit Stir- ling in a body they pruliosed to -take Spence, the obnoxious' favorite of James 11„ and hang him and so get ri d of Mtn. "Ah" t sr. d ford Grey, "Chat's ,very. well said, but wheal bell the eat?' "That will 'I," said the black Earl August He undertook the task, accom- plished it and was called "Alichibaid Bell the Oat" until Ifs dying day,.-' Glasgow Times. 1' Two Yen 111' The Canadian Courier, from the pen of 1'.1?..Burditt, prints the ex- lperience of St. John, N.B., with re- gard 'to 'nmmission 'government, not of the utilities, but of the whole city, That experience is of a very satislfactory character. Under the dispensation, council rule, the -pub- lie service Isu;ffered in almost every dtopatrmteclt,' The streets were in a deplorable condi tion. The water ,service was ineffective. Practically the mains were re- plaee . Very 'few of the streets sere paved ,-most• ems m esion governmenit' a progressive• policy was adopted. As aresult thecan- `a'al parts of the city has taken on a new appearance. "Alt this it may be saicl, might and 'should be done in any city, and by anyseity council, belt large or ,small, which is 'very true. Yet the people of St, John will say in rePly that muck that 'night have been done by the old city council was not donee, and that they are getting done better work and more of it, with, ,greater celerity, than aver before, Moicov.er, it is being done with comparative economy, -and with a much cleaner and more distinct knowledge of, what it costs." A 'further summing up in these words ; "Thousands of dollars have been saved the city as a result of the better sat ie atizatiot o water and 'sewage dieipline,better' control, 'better (discipline, and more efficient seryice, The first thing the commissioner did was thorough ly reorganize the department. Sub letads—a.superintendent of works, and a chief' clerk—are directly re- aponsible tits the comenisaloner; and each subordinate official learned that .efficiency instead of '(pull" is' the password. to advancement. Sim- ilar remarks would apply to other ;departments." "The working of commission gov ernment in St. John,".says Mr, Bur lttt, "seems to' indicate that its greatest advantage is not so much in any .superiority of the personnel which it secures, as in the fact that by providing ,for. the constant and, WHEN BUYINCtYEAST INSIST ON HAVING, THIS PACKAGE a/4 t ,.....ae MARTS THE WHRESt LIGHTS r... 1 r t 5 Y k•" � S ou ;"--7: a`t1n 1?. S c 1111TCQMPANYLIMif g)...1 O N70..OMo�7RERra IE��1NE 5USTIWTES Undivided attention of the 'PeoPle's re!lirele011ativ;es, to the city's af- lame; it erasures prompt despatch of business ands a degree ofeeler- ity in, dealing with matters, of public concern as they arise from day to day, which was never known under the old systelp. Were the question of commission 'govern- men.t again.•submnitted to vote in St. John it probable, the the rde- cision of three years ago would be conifinmeld by a largely increasied majority), , Tnlerealosis An initerosting 'exg'aninient in the Mine treatment of tuberculosis has just been eompleleed in New York, under the care et the Association for, Improving 'the Condition of the Poor. In a Vanderbilt model tene- ment a home hospital was .estab-s listed', in whezh, for a' period, of ono year, 27 families; of whom 79 were "tuberoulars;" have .lived "in sanitary homes, with ample sun- shine and fresh air, good • •and° abundant nourishment, I, ;freedom ;from undue work and worry, rea- sonable segregation, skilful medic- al care and eoustant nursing sup- elz'vision," The results have been most remarkable. No new caste of ll;uliet_,culosis devedepe1 after ad- mission, 01 the ,adult patients 61 per cent, wenn apparently cured, 22 'per cent, had their disease ar- rested, and al per cent. were much improved, In only four cases was there no progress',; The improve- ment' of the children and infants was likewise very satitifactory: Much (stress lei laid on the ade vantage of securing tsuccessfui 'treatment without the necessity of breaking up the home, or cleaner ing the able-bodied of the, oppor- tunity to work and contribute at leat in part to their support. Upon admission to the hospital the aver- age 'weekly income of the six fam- ilies discharged las "rehabilitated" was $6,42. When discharged the average weekly income of those !families ware a trifle less than $15, From Holland' comes an account of a white plague cure which, itis o behoped, will prove more val- uable than any of the pretvious European panaceas which after vaunting, have .proven so illusory, Dr. Van Stackum, of Rotterdam, he Heves that if X-rays are 'efficac- ious in the case of lumps and can- cerous skin 'tumors, their curative power is not due to their imme- diate action on the diseased parte, but to the chemical aubstanee form- ed under their influence in the ad'jacent tissues,, Ole pias placed under the skin of animals strick- en with tuberculosis a piece of ox spleen, and [submitted to the action o£ X-rays the diseased parts of 'these subjetits, Twefgty-tfour hours sufficed for a considerable improvement and after sam'aweoks a cure could be pronounced. In ord or to apply this treatment to hu- man tuberculosis, the doctor tried oto isolate the curative substance, which formed in the spleen under the influence of the Xerays. Re slucceedied, and found that that substance, which exists in the form of a grey powder, is soluable in wa- ter. Ile h used Ibe, treatment up on people affectled with tubercul- osis, and announces most satisfac- tory results. After experimenting upon other parts of the body, he has re•achsd• the lungs, and now !finds that time bacilli (disappear !from the expectoration of those stricken with pulmonary tubercul- osis, Further information ,regarding this achievement will be eagerly awaited by the medical world. Aft- er l+'reidma.nn we must be prep'trecl for 'disappointment, but Jet us hope for the best, iEXCUK Round trip tickets to mina. in _Mani - tole+, Alberta and Saakattehewau via Ilhicagu, St, Paul on Duluth. on sole each Tuesday until October 27. inclus- ive,tit low sates. Through Pullman. Tourist Sleepers to Winnipeg on above cheat, leaving Toronto 11 p.m, No change of cars. IItetus'n Limit, Two heaths Settlers' Fares (One-way Second-class) From stations in Outa.rio, Kingston, Renfrew anis West to points in Alber- ta and Saskatebewsin, each Tuesday daring .March and April, Low Colonist Fares (One way Second•class) Flom stations in On trtr i o to certain points' in Alberts, British Columbia, California, Oregon, Washington, etc. On Sale. March 15 to April16, inclusive: Full particulars at any Grand Trunk Ticket office or write C. 11. HORNING, D. P. A.,. Union Station, Toronto, Ont. John Ransford & Son, city passen- ger and Ticket Agents, phone 57 A. 0. Pattison, station agent LOGS WANTED Highest cash price paid' for all kinds of timber, Soft gmin lengths of 14 feet, other kinds usual lengths. Heading Wanted Basswood, Soft Maple, 41) inches long, 84.00 per cord, STAPLTO SAV/ wiu. filadiffiliMMESMETUIMEMIATME dt. (( r G N' f. A� U. 8, Government Standard Below i.a an extinct from U.S. Gov. 0 id, for tenders "7'}isalath melte coal must Im equal to 511111 mined and prepared by l'trilarlet phia Sc Beading Coal 't'C'Iron Oo" 4Ve hnnr'ile nothing brit the first gradePhiladelphin 11 Remain,' . e�. 011➢ Celateett horse phone 12, Office phone 00 Feels Grain Nn, 21 0. A, C. Jmproveci Manchuria Barley And Siberian Oats. JOHN W. YEO, Holmesville P. 0. Om, line Goderich toe 'or phone 7.153: .o. 6Vl. A first class Toronto pumping mill, 50 foot tower and tank which is on tower. Will he sold reasonable. Ap• ply, to JONATHAN EUGILL, Sea. forth Postoffice, or D. L. Macpherson, Olinton Rads' Fors Wanted I am paying for prime skins Mink 3,r 0 to 3,00 Muskrat .'...25e to 40c Alsohrghret grices•far all other skins, FOR 'SAL]; -5 to 10 pound Barred Rock Cockerels . 10, A. HOVEY, Clinton House 1s,r Sale Storey and a half frame house on Queen Street; 10 rooms, town and soft water in house, t acre of :land with a numherof apple, plum and pear trees. A stable aud.good sized chicken house. Possession April ist. For further particulars apply on premises or ad- dress. • MRS, ALBERT TURNER Olinton, Ontario For Sole Driving Weare for sale. Will be sold cheap for cash or part cash and part feed. Apply to JOE RATTENBURY. Farm for Sale Being lot 24 and 25, 4th Con. of Stanley, '70 acres all cleared, having clever failing spring creek. well tenced, frame house, and barn, 30X50 lean to 1.1X30 stable under whole building, the stables are cement being put in one yhar• ego. Small orchard. Tele- phone and rural mail. 7 acres of alpnlfa good catch, Possessicu and terms In suit purchaser. Apply nn premises or to W. POTTER It"R, No, 5, Clinton Drs. Geo. c M. E. Whitley Ieitenmann Osteopathic Specialists in Women's and Children's Diseases Acute, Chronic, and Nervous Disozders ,Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat. CONSULTATION FREE. Office—Rattenbury Hotel. Tuesday and Friday, 7 to 11 pan. Farm lull' SIIJO Th" t'nders'gnt,:1 offer's for sale ilnp.nv_-d ftmo of it'+) acres, Lots 13 a d 11, Con, 17, Township of God.:rich, siruated nn •Ilio Base Line taus m:l: s north of Clinton, CHARLES C'f.IFTON. Summerhill, 1' idiil'v?gl"u'DHY1y tf'a'$'In From out stock of first-class cows we are p- epar':•d to supply you twice daly with best of milk and cream, and solicit itsliare of your patronage. E. B. STILL. Girls Wanted Experienced, and girls to learn 'Knitting a:,cl Looping, Will pay $5,00 per week- while learning. Steady env lcyme,at, Pleasant position. apply at once CLINTON KNITTING- ,C0., , Clinton, Ontario.' FORD at ItIeLEOD We're now selling Timothy Seed (Government Standaiu,), We also have on hand, Alfalfa, Alsike, and Red Clover, We always have on hand —Goose Wheat, Pdas, Barley and Feed Corn Highest Market Prices paid for Hay and all Grains. FORD & MoUOD rrAAAAAAArA/uAAAAAAAAAAAAr 4 i iffla �A�AA 4' 4 ► See and here our finest l i New Stylish designs of r. Doherty Pianos and 0 i i ' 4 4 +8, 81 -Is Organs, ,special values -in Aitt res 4 Pianos and organs rent ed, choice new Edison phonographs, SIC & variety goods. 1. NumN rall�ry�+ .il D C. Hoare 8 TVorvor !nevem Wv D ID