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The Clinton New Era, 1914-06-18, Page 7Pala `'tr THE CLINTON NEW EEA V+++++++++++ ♦+++•+.`r++++ *****4+++++++++++0+4+•++••a•••••••++•+++++++++++++++T++•++++•o- •••••oo•o••••••••••o•o••••••••+++•++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++4. .. Thursis.'. b. • • • • • M • • • •. • • • .1.444+++•••••••••••••••••••• A ••••••0000*•••••+ ++►•N••+•••+••••+••+•••• ••••••••••••••e• - • •4. • ••sse•••••y y a••••••••+4••ee ee•++••6++d++*+AY*fO++++4++•+ .. Are Your Hands 'Tied? by a chronic disease common to woman- kind? You feel dull—headachey? Back- ache, pains here and there—dizziness or perhaps hot flashes? There's nothing you can accomplish—nothibg you canenloyl There's no good reason for it—because you can find permanent relief is DR. PIERCE'S Favorite Prescription Mrs. Fannie H. Brent, of Bryant, Nelson Co., Va., writes: "I believe I bad every pain and ache a woman could have, my back was weak, and I suffered with nervouen_ess and couldnot sleep at night. Suffered with eoreneas-in my right hip, and every month would have spells and have to stay in bed. I have taken eight bottles of your `Favorite Prescription' and one vial of your `Pleasant Pellets'-. Can now do my work for six in family, and feel like new woman. I think. it is the best medicine in the world for women. I recommend it to all my friends and many of them have been greatly benefited by it. Dr. PIERCE'S PLEASANT PELLETS Relieve Liver Ills! RETURNING OFFICER FOR } CENTRE HURON. Mr. Wesley' Beacom of Hullett has the appointment ' oft Return - in ffaeer for Centre Huron He should fill the pos:rtion al-. righit. p BUSINESS AND *SHORTHAND Subjects taught by expert instructors. at the • e�V�a?L Y. M. C, A. BLDG„ LONDON, ONT. Students assisted to positions. College in session from Sept. 2nd. Catalogue free. Enter any time. .LW. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr. Principal ChatteredAccoeetant 17 Vice-Princllal CentialfinsinessCoileye Stratford, Ont. Become'. a specialist in busi- ness, It offers more opportuni- ties than any other calling, To reap the full measure of success von must have the best training. This is Ontario's best business school. We give individual rl at- tention. You ma' classes at any time. Three de. partments, Commercial. Shorthand and Telegraphy.. Write at once for our free catalogue. D. A. AIc<. Prit cipal aleadquarteF$ FOR Walking and Wiling Oliver plows • 't. H. C. Gasoline Engines McCormick Machinery Pumps and Windmills. ALL ANIINDBYOP REPAIRS CALL ON (tinier &Little Corner of Princes and Albert streets. mr.,,,fr e+vmve.mm t+r•..1enntle:sac reteerat>Harr;tgatletese!eetsivatstRatata > RURAL CREDIT. — a Generally speaking, the owner 1 of a farm has no trouble in bor- rowing three-fifths of its market value on long time at an interest C rate considerably lower Riau that prevailing in his region for short time loans, but the farm owner f represents less than half the ru- i ral' population. Nearly 2,500,000 farms are worked by' tenants, g being more than one-third .of all if forms. and the proportion of ten - g ant farmers steadily rises: With machinery and the gredunl Intro duction of mor intensive meth- ) ods the proportion of hired la- '* X' borers also tends to rise, 1 Rural credit is almost always dealt with from the point of view of the ,farm owner. but it there is quite as big a problem N 1 from the point of clew of, the -a man who tills the soil, but does lii g not own it. We want no loafing it landlord system here. The Brit- ,a er isb government's land purchase at Ise scheme is already ehanging Ire- Iland from a country of abject' r tenants to one of thrifty, uploolt- ing small owners. We are a vast distance, thank 1 fg goodness, from Ireland's. former I • condition. But even here di- vorce between ownership of the` 1 soil and tillage of it has gone far enough fairly to raise the ques- tion as to whether a credit scheme cannot be worked out that. will make it easier for the ambitious and competent tenant or farm hand to buy land.—Sat- urday and: Sat- urday Evening Post. sesesesessarasegigiehatliaeltagOOOlUtelt tl X X 0,•.•••••••••••••••••••••• •• NOTICE TO SIR MIS• Farm aim Garden DANISH INTENSIVE FARMING U. S. Minister to Denmark Tells Farm ers About Country's Methods. By HON. MAURICE FRANCIS EGAN Agriculture, especially dairy farm ing, cannot exist to any advantage in the southern' states without a sup- ply of -intelligent and trained help- ers. They must be trained in the south or the lack of them must be Supplied through immigration. The lat- ter .has .its risks and its disappoint- ments; the former ought to be the solu- tion. In view of my impressions of the needs of the south, net only rural,, but nrban (there can be no severance' of these two), I express to the best of my ability what has been done in Den-' mark. Permit me' to emphasize the fact that Denmark is almost entirely devoted to agriculture. it has ,no mines, no po- tential water power, no great milts. It has 'existed, and it seems as if it must exist, solely by means of the R i • • The management of Shaw's ea • Business Schools, Toronto. begs • • to advice, •, all Senior Puhlic o` ' • School And all High School stu- • g, dents that it is prepared to mail • • a copy ofits curriculum to any 2 any one who desires to qualify • • in a short period of 6 or 8 months • • for a good salaried noeltion. Ad. • • dress Shaws Schools, Toron- o • to, Ont. Head office, Yonge • • and Geraard Streets. • • • • • • esommeseelom eeessomm•e• Our Annual Summer Cam, paign tor Non -Fertile New -Laid Eggs Began This Week A Severe . Cold Settled On Her Lungs. • Mrs. Geo. Murphy, Spence, Ont,, writes:--" I have had occasion to use Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, and can say it most certainly is a wonderful medicine. Last winter my little girl, just a year old, took a severe cold which settled on her lungs. I tried everything, and was almost in despair, when by. chance I read of Dr, Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, and decided to try it. I got two bottles, and as soon as I started to use it I could see it was taking effect. I gave her three bottles in all, and they completely cured her." Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is a universal remedy for sufferers from all bronchial troubles. Coughs and Colds of all kinds, Bronchitis, Sore Throat, Hoarseness, Croup,, Asthma, Whooping Cough, and Throat and Lung Troubles, disappear quickly after a few doses have been taken. It will stop that distressing, tickling sensation in the .throat which causes coughing and keeps you awake at night. ' A FEW SUGGESTIONS HOW TO GET FIRST CLASS EGGS IN HOT' WEL,Tk1biR.,- 1. Do away, with 011' cockerels. 2. Gaither eggs twice per clay. 3. Iieepl eggs in (a drycool place 4. Keep nests clean, and, .avoid lw!ashhng eggs. , 5. Market eggs before they are fidve drays old. 6. Keep all extra l'ar'ge and small eggs for home use. 7. Do snot sell bad eggs as i't• datihonest. Price, 25c; large family size, 50c. Put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark; manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co„ Limited, Toronto, Ont. Refuse substitut The Guau-1 aalois Co,, Laliaited The up-to-date' Firm, Phone 190. N. W. TREWART1 W. JENKINS MARY'S SECRET. "Mary, Mary, lovely Mary, What makes,your poultry grow? You have a dandy secret , That I. should like to know. They grow lust twice as fast as mine, And, my, they do look slick! Come now and tell a fellow Your dandy feeding triols. "Mary, Mary, darling Mary,. What makesyour bens layso? You have a card yp your short sleeve. Come, let a fellow 'know - You're making money by the ton;'. My chickens do not pay. Come, let me have the secret. Do tell me right away. "You'll tell me on our wedding daY And not a day before? You'll tell inc when the knot is tied That binds us evermore': All right, old girl, get ready,. then. .We'll get spliceddouble quick. I'm anxious to manse you my bride And.learn your poultry trick.'' I married Mary right away. 1 then asked her to tell Eow she grew chickens double quick And made hens lay so well. She wiggled and she giggled As 1 kissed her rosy cheers.' And said, "My dear, 1 always read The 'Poultry' Notes' each -week.". WOMAN IN cowls, broilers or roasters, one luun- grels, like coons, are all alike, unfit for TERRIBLE STATE dnything special, uncertain as WI the diameter. of their progeny and mostly bughouse. Finds Help in Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound. Cape Wolfe, Canada.—" Last March I was a complete wreck. I had given up all hope of getting better or living any length of time, as I was such a sufferer from female troubles, But I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compouhd, and today I am in good health and have a pair of twin boys two months old and growing finely. I' surprised doctors and neighbors for they all know, what a wreck I was. ' "Now I am healthy, happy and hearty, and' owe it all to Lydia E. Pinkham's remedies. You may publish this letter if you like. I think if more women used your remedies they would have better health. Mrs. J. T. CooK, Lot No. 7, Cape Wolfe, P.E.I., Canada. Because your case is a difficult one,and doctors having done you no good, do not, continue to suffer without giving Lydia , E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. - It surely has remedied many cases of female ills, such as inflamma- tion, ulceration, displacements, tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, and it may be exactly what you need. The Pinkham record is a proud and peerless one. It is a record of constant victory over the ob stinateillsof'women ills that deal out despair. It is an es- tablished fact that Lydia E. Pinkham's VegetableCompound has restored health tv• A s •INSBA to thousands of such suffering women. Why don'tyou try it if you need such a medicine? Photo by American Press Association. HON. MIADRIOE FRANCIS EdAN, AMERICAN MINISTER ro DENMABE. brain and brawn of its .people applied to a soil that would' be considered by the 'Pennsylvanians as ungrateful and in a climate which would drive a Louisianianto madness and suicide. On the. soil and the climate it Is only necessary to say that there are only sixteen weeks in the year when the cattle are let out in the open. In May they are allowed In the fields, carefully tethered, so that they may consume only a fixed quantity of grass or clover. When this .grass or clover is high, in July, they go back to their stalls to be fed on grains that the tall grass, may not be wasted by them. In Au- gnst, after the harvest, they go out to remain In the open. still carefdlly tethered for economy, until 'Oct. 1. The scientific treatment of the cow is never !Tidied for n moment. It has become a habit with the large and the small farmer and his dependents. The cow to him is a milking' machine, whose power of production is to be ap- prunched exactly as if she were of steel or iron. The Danish farmer takes few chances. After a consideration of the present condition of this purely agricultural country, tnade, largely by comparing the soil, not very gond, and the cli- mate. for seven months of the year very,bsd. with the wonderful results, I asked myself, "Whitt is the main cause of these results?' and the first part of the answer was, ['The misfortunes of the Danes and their way of meeting these misfortunes." Their ways of meeting them were by educntfon, co- operation and the intelligent assistance of the government 1t must 1)e remem- bered that the government is a 1non• art'by, but since 1848 0 very constltu- tonal monarchy. and the government' never forgets that' Denmark, like ,Cite, sar's Gaul, Is divided into three parts —butter. bacon and egos. Denmark has nearly 200,000 farmers, practically; speaking all freeholders,' and over 9.000 young men find women ire quent the secondary schools, by which is meant the high schools and agri ed- tural schools. This means about 0 per cent of the young men attend yearly. end in that way in the course of about twenty years all the young men will have been through the schools. What they, learn there fills them with interest to learn more. Tbey are very anxious to read and to hear. and the young peo- ple go in for all the sports Nearly ev- ery village has its, village hall. I11 this hall lectures are given On all sorts of. nonpolitical questions, and they have their gytnnlistic and other sports here. I must empl!n ire the fact that the government has not charge of the,fnrm. ing industry directly. This would be quite impossible. as the Danish hor• vest represents 0 value of nI It t 'I00,. 000,000 kroner 30111Iy, and the Danish annual budget is uuly trlll.t)QUalitl 0' Her, so it can he seen that it is liuite impossible for the government to koeil it all op: But what the roeainm nthg'.. dope hila been to carry r)' 011 or:lethal ex periinents in different ways. 1 nr in stance, plant growing. dairy inilue'f and feeding of dontistir c attic •u 9 ih,. high school for the training al' 11; farmers to vend and understand the rr ports. issued by 111' exticulnient stn,. ns bttve been of Ia111191 belIala, 11 C. )1/1. BALi.N1T! tit�llhiil� ;;; • [These articles and Illustrations must not be reprinted without special permission.' The breeder of thoroughbreds can breed the size and color of carcass and color) of egg to fit his market and choose a nousitting or broody breed; the breeder of mongrels bas no choice lin these particulars, but must take what comes, and that's never much. The breeder of thoroughbreds may Sell a tet • ser u�ru Photo by C. M. Barnitz. THosoveannED ECo8. his surplus for stock and: eggs for hatching at a fancy' price in the cheap season; the mongrel breeder nit Thor- oughbreds are not harder to raise, cost no more to keep and bring, more profit than mongrels. It costs little to start in pure bred stock, and there is wonderful variety to select from. Any of the following will make you proud: Plymouth Rocks, Wyandottes. .lavas, Dominiques. Rhode Island Reds. Buck- eyes. Brahmas, Cochins, Langshans, Leghorn, Minorcas, Spanish, Andalu- stins, Anconas, Campine, Dorkings. Redcaps, Ovpingtons. Polish, Ham burgs, Boudans, Creve Coeurs. La Fleche, Games. Cornish and Orientals. THOROUGHBREDS BEST FOR MEAT AND NEST. A mongrel Hoek of hens looks as much out of date these thoroughbred days as 'n hoopsklrted female floes among the bobbled. Thoroughbreds are not only more ornamental. but more practical, and here are the reasons: Thoroughbreds lay more and always larger eggs.'und these are uniform in color and to a great extent In shape and sine. Their eggs hatch chicks that are uniform 1n color, shape and slze. Their carcass is more attractive and uniform in color and shape and size. according to age. Their carcasses and eggs command a higher price, as do Photo by C. M. Barnitt. THORO00flBBED DOTSE5. DO N'TS. Don't expect better treatment from the show authorities than the other fellow. Alt should be treated alike. Don't consider a gas engine and grinding. sawing and churning ma- chinery extravagance.' Mouey in the their feathers, which are uniform in color. Their flesh is of finer quality. they are tamer and more hardy. Thoroughbred' breeds are of such va- riety that one may choose from them to breed expert layers, dual purpose THIS 4,- isa MOVIE DYE that ANYONE can use The Guaranteed ,,ONE i3VE for All Kinds of Cloth Clean, Simple.No Chance ofMi l,i . TRY 11'1 Send tor Free Color Card end Booklet. TaeJerin,aa•Riel,ard.on Co. LImited,0lont,cal Concrete Hog Houses and Feeding Floors Enable you to raise bigger hogs and better pork without heavier feeding. A concrete feeding floor permits the ani- mals to cleanup all the feed without waste, and eliminates the possibility of your hoes contracting disease. To you they Mean. Bigger Profits Hoghouses of concrete are sanitary, easily cleaned, maintain an even temperature and give plenty of x light and air, which tend to better the quality of pork. Concrete will not rust or rot. Never needs. repairs or painting. It will outwear any other material for farm g n structures. Write for this beautifully illustrated free book a What the Farmer can do with Concrete. It shows how to build Hog Houses, Feeding Floors and many other N ,p things the farmer needs. Farmer's Information Bureau Canada Cement Company Limited 520 Huard Luiidaaa, Montan F� InSirrs • pant[ can't pay 'on the Inve:tmenc 05 does good labor and time saving ma- chinery put to a practical purpose. Don't allow filth to hecumulate any- where and contaminate the air.. Don't be balky. A balky mule may block the street, but a balky human has him bent. Don't be a poor insert be a good ,,purr. Don't fail to hind a hand when you get a eluinee. This kind of lending clays in tunny ways. 131-1 The family re n▪ edy for Coughs 1 and golds. Small dose. Small bottle. Best since 1870. When Summer Stops the Swing Most of us can remember the school lesson in the law of accumulated motion—momentum. If you exert a pound of pressure against a man in a swing, you'll start him moving slowly "to and fro." If you continue to exert a pound of pres- sure against him every time the swing makes a ' trip, you'll soon have him going so high that he almost turns the whole circle. If you stop push- ing, the momentum will die out and the swing come to rest at "dead centre." ' Winning trade follows the same natural laws. Advertisements are the force behind the swing of public favor. Each new advertisement increases the momentum. Finally, the accumulated force of, these numerous impulses swings indifference to the buying point. If you stop Advertising, you lose momentum. The moral of which is: Don't stop the business swing in summer- Keep adding the pounds of Advertising pressure. , Advice regarding your advertising problems is available through any recognized Canadian advertising agency, or the Secretary of the Can- adian Press Association,Iloom 508 Lumsden Building, Toronto. Enquiry involves no obligation on your part—so write, if interested.