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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1914-12-03, Page 6PAGE SIX. • 44+++++++++.4N•4444N4+4. ♦•♦♦♦A♦AOAmb• e♦♦A -LIB CLINTON 'NNW 1131A - Thursday,, December 3rd, 1914; ♦ ♦ o 00000044+4++++++'+++++++++i+++++++...+++.++4++++++++44++++++ ** *0040♦♦+ooN4• ♦o ooeo• o♦o � 4. 1++444+++44+41++4+++++4+1+4•►+44444+4•+4i+++++++++41io•A♦♦•0o•'+4144+44+1+++4144+44+++++•,••••••• ♦4♦♦♦4. . GE F R THE F A R NI 4♦♦♦♦♦4♦40♦4♦♦w♦www.e.o van v3♦♦♦4+AA♦♦♦♦♦O♦♦♦♦iN♦O•Si♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦+♦♦Ott4A1�4/44i44ii44444/444�4-=�. ,. ♦ ♦•01+444+4.+1+4++11♦11444+41►0♦♦4♦♦10♦♦♦44♦♦♦t♦0N .r�„�.,►.,_ 'The Secret of Health 1S ElliYllnatl®il.. ®f Waste Every inese man knows how difficult it is to keep the pigeon holesllw fe k owswers` of his desk free from the accumulation of useless papers. Every ho howdifficult it is to keep her home free from the accumulation keep t all manner ner acuuuseless things. So it a er.h the body. thwaste is promptly eliminated the machin- ery y soon becomes matter- UP nf the body �oon.becomes clogged. This is thebeginning of most human ills. DR. PIERCE'S (� LDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY v� au Tablet or Liquid Form) Assists stomachtheR digestion of food which is turned into health- sustaining is speedily in the ropes :. disposed of through auataining blood and all poisonousand waste' matter_ to Nature's channels. heal'and strength men youth. women Now s the timge for your rejuvenation. S them the s for and etre o Send 50 cents fora trial box of this medicine. Send Si one -cent stamps P5Dr. o CornrowsNs. Adviser -1008 pages—worth 52. iwyhanndin e of fondly illnes Adds*. R. V. PIERCE, Buffalo, N. Y,. The IZ13isf'r's Drealil SID SAUNDERS, 'of Ingersoll has wriiteni g, Dream;" a bitof strong verse, nin sat "Wilhelm.the bloo dv up bed, His face was white and eyes were red, He plainly \vas alarmed. 11 "Ach Himmel," • he cried, that ful dream, It can't be true, but how true they seem; 46141.11•00.1 INSECTS' SE. 'SE CF SMELL. 'Most Acute of All the Creatures In the Animal World. The most valuable faculty possess- ed by insects is their sense of smell. Most insects hear very poorly; and ants in particular are absolutely deaf, With all their batteries cries of eyes bulging in every direction those creatures do not seem to enjoy very good eyesight. `Some of the flying insects Can't see well enough to avoid obstacles which to them chould look as big as a barn. But when It conies to the sense of smell the insect world is far ahead quartermaster, cabin boy and cook for the greater part of the time. Once while laying up near New York he was attacked and robbed by river pirates. He at once provided himself with arms, including a couple of small can- non for'ard and a single gun of great- er caliber astern, which he called .Long Tom. After getting aboard this 'armament Ile felt easier. Unless sur- prised he feltthat he could stand off any ordinary gang. But to avoid lone- liness he took into his service Cyrus Barker, a boy of fifteen,, who was at home on the water and ill at ease oh of any animal. Fabre, the g yeti here I am unharmed." Nrfrench entomologist, confined some ci them all, 'oh how they female Lutterflies in a steel cage far I saw, from the natural haunts of the in - thronged, sects. To his surprise males of the Widows and orphans of those I ' species came from miles away and lit have wronged, With faces wan and 'white. Hell has no fury that could com- pare 'With those awful things [dreamed were there, Ach, what a horrible sight. "Then on my own death bed I lay, I cursed, I had seen the light of day And ever breathed a breath. They tortured me,. cut off hands,+ Fiends of hell burned me brands. Then, agony of death my with on the screen. He then confined the females in hermetically sealed jars and placed them near places frequented by the males. Not one paid any attention though the females were visible throught the glass. To make sure that the sense of smell was the guiding force, Prof. pFabre errs some thes of pa- andtwigon whichfemales had rested. soon ared and, ignoringMthe sfemales n their glass jars, circled about the twigs and paper. If a strange ant of the same spe- cies is placed in an ant hill he is vio- lently ejected. Every insect he meets recognizes him instantly as an intru- der and helps in the ejection. If every Londoner could recognize on sight each stranger in town it would not be so remarkable, as out of town people micht be identified by their Clothes, cut of their hair, speech, etc. shiny ants all wear the same uniform and are deaf and dumb. If a small mouse dies is a field certain undertaker insects known as sylphs and necrophera' will journey from distances of more than a mile to lay eggs in the body. The house flys acts solely on the Settee- of smell. Ill his flying about he is perpetually trying to head in the direction of each breath of food odor he meets and dodges and turns ~with each eddy of air until he lo- cates the source of the smell, Mosquitoes find you, in the dark rather more easily than in the day. They smell their victims outside the house. Their sense of smell , leads them to windows, doors or chimneys from which •:he man oeor proceeds. In they go and soon you hear their song about your ears. The . flea and the night prowling carnivorous insect which inhabits beds also locate their rey by their olfactory sense. land. One- hot Julyday, when there was no wind, George was moving under the power of his motor engine, making to- ward Portland, Me., from the south. He .had the lighthouses on his port quarter standing out white in the sun, but be was rather interested in a yacht to the westward of him. She 'was some seventy tons burden and very trim. No one but a rich person could have afforded to run her. While MacElroy was looking at her the flag flying from her stern was lowered and raised again, union down, which is a signal of distress. It remained flying for about a minute, when it was hauled down and replaced as it had been be- fore. ' George was puzzled. The yacht was moving along at a steady rate of about eight knots and did not seem in any way crippled. There -was no likelihood of illness aboard or want of supplies, for Portland was within an hour's sail. The signal seemed to be for the Hope —George's yacht—for he was much nearer than ,any other vessel to the boat that had signaled. Something must be wrong aboard of her. George pointed the Hope to incline toward the signaling yacht. When the flag was righted it had been done in a hurry, as though some one was offend- ed that it had been put up union down. Perhaps persons were aboard who needed assistance. If so it behooved the skipper of the Hope to keep s t d b his guard at "I went to heaven. St. Peter said, Wilhelm the hl'Body, your hands are red, I cannot let you in ; You cheated God, whom you called 'I your friend, Blasphemed Him right unto the' end, ' You're deeply steeped in sin. "There's just one thing for you 'to do have for ta\ ' alt 1 place devil nn g •. The you.. In part of his domain, Whean brute orless friend, merci- less• Will find horrible things enough to (suit, Where .you'll forever remain. "I Straightway went to hell to see What the devil would do for tae. With feelings very queer. Why 'hello Bill,'he cried aloud, d Youwish ddo not want you�hee Yrne y We're bad enough, I know too Well, Your cruelties made us cringe in hell, Alas! I'm overrated, As the. devil himself I would not dare • e•.•• •O••e Y• 8e 00ra0 are •• • IN THE HOG LOT. ••• • • •. • Where the pigs are allowed to • • run with the sow and to wean • themselves it is almost lnipossi- • • ble for the mature female to • produce more than one` litter a • • 7, year. • 1 t GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY EM ALUM MAGIC OW D I BAKtHGP READ LABEL • The age of show hogs se Sept.- • r ,.-„,y,,,a.,,.., • NS h 1 r from pt, 1 � d'”'"""""""-f"� ▪ ed from arc o of the year the animals were • • farrowed. • • See that' your hog yards and • • pastures are tightly fenced. The • • roaming hog ria ms slow gains I. • and lots of trouble.. • • The water wallow in which o I • crude oil or coal tar dip isrsprin- • • tiled also spells rout to lice. e • The manner in which the ,sow • • Is fed and cared for .determines • • the size of the litter in a meas- • • • ure, at least. • e o•••••o•o•e•e•leeweo••••e• A GREAT WHEAT CROP. I. I The government's July report estimates tbe'whsat crop at 930,- 000,000 bushels. Since the spring wheat has not yet matured these figures may be revised later, but it 1s very clear that the yield ex MISSHAPED FOALS. Treatment For Youngsters Born With Weak Pasterns. Some foals come into this world so wabbly and misshaped about the lege that it would seem almost impbssible for them ever to straighten up, Most come to of them do, however, manage right, though it takes sodic of them far longer than others to do so, writes John Mason in the National Stockman. As a general rule, thele is uo cause for alarm, even -if a foal is so crooked to his legs as to promise deformity, but when the paste'•+' joints are so long and weak that the youngster breaks back onto the ground with the bottom of the ankle joint. it is well' to give some support. This may be done by fitting a piece of moderately stiff leather around the leg and lacing it .up so as to give the required support to the joint too weak to beta the strain. In such case line the boot with wash or chamois leather and observe sharp lookout and be carefully that it does not gall or the same time. ' abrade the leg anywhere. Hoe It is quite a trick to fit one of these In the course tl an hour the P leg properly, and hence boots to the. [ p was sailingodirectly astern of the yacht when a foal fails to straighten up, off and about a mire distant.tica Cy ngBaoutoer the ground it is best to seek the aid was on the forecastle woman's and sang de of the veterinarian. Sometimes all that there was a woman's sunshage that is required is to feed the foal a putt the the Hope on a line with it, and.on floating on the water ahead, Gedronge little warm new cow's milk two or reaching it Cy picked it up. It had been used to buoy a bottle containing a note writteu in a woman's hand: Heipl I am kidnaped by my guardian. who is taking me to'MMAinsane BORLAND. "Here's an adventure and no mis- take," Bald George to Cy. "rve count- ed three men on the yacht, and we don't know how many more there are, but we've got guns'. and ammuni- tion enough to sink her, and we must effect a rescue. She's evidently not loing into herself n elf a ongthetands to the losebly the e' trying if she's in y g to eastward—that is, throw any one off the track. We must efo• dark or lose her. 'Get S ceeds all previous records. For - 1 tunately for American producers,' the needs of the world are large. Europe must buy a great deal of wheat during the current crop year. How much is unknown and will be until next summer. France, for instance is not a large importer when its crop is normal, but this year its needs are estimated at 00,000,000 bush- els. With such a surplus as we y have and such a deficiency as ex- it ists abroad the price will depend ito an unusual degree on the for- ; eIgn market. The greatest dan- heat, hi w • v to S • 'ger now is, a rush hp While no good is likely to come T t'rom a movement to hold for a allay or any other fixed price, it is wise to be. in no hurry to get all of, the crop to the eleva- tor. If each man with a surplus can keep part of it until It is re- quired all producers are likely to fare best. — National Stockman and Farmer. 0 1 Poorly Paid Police. The Paris police are poorly paid, Pretend or attempt to you corn- The maximum salary attainable by a pare,' "sergent de ville" is $360 a year. In So curse you; unabated, view of the high cost of living ill So get you, gone and go your way And /be it till the last great day, As you have failed the test. .. from dell May youtt spirit wander f to dell, Too bad for heaven too bad for Sdme of them earn. a few francs by hell,, working as market porters during And find no Placa, to, rest." their time off duty. Others do boot- , Paris this amount is inadequate to mantain a family in any degree of comfort, and the married members of the force have frequently to supple- ment their income as best they can. catch her b up the ammunition for the two fore - ward barkers and load them." George put on all his 'power and gained rapidly on• the yacht, whose. name—the Swallow: -now appeared on her stern. She' did not seem to .Pear the Hope till George sent a shot after her, which he aimed to go a cable's length, to the starboard, and then so great was the surprise, of her crew that they didn't seem to know what to do. But presently another shot, repairing, and there is one who Cies odd tailoring jobs. Still, in spite of ® ® COLD these hardships, there are 'always 11AD A Aplenty of men er ;er to join the force, about ten candidates being available -WITH PROLONGED for every vacancy that occurs. COUGHING. TRIED NEARLY EVERYTHING j. E FINALLY Curious Old, Cure. Tablets of the .Babylonians and Assyrians of the seventh century be - ore Christ` disclose a peculiar treat- ment for headaches. Certain drugs DR. WOOD'S NORWAY :PINE SYRUP P CURED HIM., Mr. Wallace H. Grange, Vancouver, B.C., writes: "During a cold spell here about the middle of last October (1913), I caught a cold which got worse despite all treatments` I could oa bftain, ssaid, until about November 22nd, • Why not try Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup?' Really, I had no faith in itnearly Y everY time as I had t ' at the tm wail mod xh had heard to no er remedy th, o of, but X thought I would give this last remedy a trial. I purchased a 50 cent B ottle, and in three days I was feeling \ different man. My cold was so. hard, Ind the coughing so prolonged, that hard spell of ed after ✓ oughing occur" -oughing. I` carried the bottle in my ocket, and every time I was seized with coughing spell I would take a small dose. can most heartily recommend Dr, pod's Norway Pine Syrup to anyone 11 a severe cold, as its powers arc most rvelous, and I never intend being (bout it at all times:"' When you ask for "Dr. W'ood's" see hat you get what you ask for. It is nt up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark; the price, 25c and 50; manufactured > only by 2 eT. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont..' were administered, and then the play - sicians were directed to "strike' the patient several times on the cheek, roll him' on the ground and at the same time tell the stomach to be good." still nearer, caused them to shut off their power. George when he came within hailing distance did the same. "What do you want?" was called from the Swallow. "The person 01 Emma Borland." "On what authority?" "On the authority of myself. Send her to me in a boat or. I'll rake you three fore and aft. I'vebig g guns aboard." There was evidently a prolonged con sultation on the Sivallow. What was • . said, whatever their reasons foras- senting' to his demand, George did not know, but presently a boat put out and was milled for the Hope. George and Cy kept it .covered with rifles. When it came alongside there sat a very pretty girl and her maid. George helped them aboard, the boat pulled back to • the Swallow, and she sailed away. Miss, Borland had got one of the crew, who was at the wbeel, on her side, and he permitted her to hoist a distress signal. • George took the women to Portland and engaged a lawyer' for Miss Bor- land, who bad no difficulty In estab- tishing her sanity.. Her guardian lett for parts unknown and has not been since heard 'from. George now runs a much finer yacht than the dope. but' if required the fortune of Emma Borland to buy and run' it. She gave -1t to trim with her- self for the ,inestimtlble,iseryice • he had done tier. A WATER RESCUE'. By LOUISE B. CUMMINGS summers eat IIIc , George MacDaro Y spent on the Atlantic coast and always own- ed some sort of boat. The first he owned was a skiff with a leg' -o' -mutton sail; the second was a dory, rigged in twenty r a foot third way;the the same single sticker, and when he reached the age of twenty his father gave lalth a yacht, capable of sleeping half a dozen persons comfortably. George found it all he could do to run his yacht on his limited income, Indeed, he could not have done so at all hod. he% not been his Own Captain. i x �syll Zvi L L Founder Let the horse '1e pasture and twice hoof head (after• r o mixture P with a 1 and • ed can the•rides a 0'i'e the horse up sh s acting. Wash tt says; then apply a A massive shoulder Illce the one on this Belgian. stallion is a pleas- ant thing to look at. This-bigfel- low was good enough to place at four state fairs and car les his ton and a quarter gracefully. In his head and the blending of the neck with his shoulder are shown the quality that is needed to build the right kind of horses. Men who raisingare stock ave nothingto i ear fromke his of the tractor or the motor truck. • some mo0CY COMM; In Iron Uwe 'td time as a result of sales of surplus. The great losses from the horse die ease which prevailed through the,state so extensively -two years ago has Calla. ed many to hold back from engaging In the raising of horses for fear of'an- other'epidemic of this kind. It is true there are risks • involved, but these Tieka are :no greater than those of many' other lines 'of production. They are not as great ,as the risks which the ezeiu• sive wheat grower must take;, A For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30Years Always b the Signature of ears ,t'KCIFhJ. 0 TORONTO UItN AND IfI'1T (Fare and One•Third From Stations in.Oanada. Kingston. Renfrew and, west thereof. Trains Dec. 10 Good going P. M. T and all trains Dec. 11 and 12 Fat Stock Show Account "Toronto All tickets valid to,return Up to' and including. Dec, 14, 1014. Full particulars and tickets at G. T. R. ticket offices.. John Ransford &Son, city passen- ger and Ticket Agents, phone 57 A. 0. 'Pattison, station' agent C. E. HORNING, D. P. A. Union Station, Toronto, Out Living Without Braln Before the ,Academy of Sciences, Prof. Edmond Perrier cited the case of a man who lived a year with prac- tically no brain. He was 02 years old and had slight visual trouble, but no alarming symptom, neither paraly- sis convulsions,all his senses re- maining nor • maiming normal. After he had died from a sudden attack of epilepsy an autopsy was held, .and the doctors found that his brain was simply a thin shell. Dr. Perrier stated that the case seemed to disprove the theory that special parts of the brain control all the functions of the body. If You Wish to Be Well You Must Keep the Bowels Regular. If the bowels do not move regularly they will, sooner or later, become con- stipated, and constipation is productive of more ill health than almost any other trouble. The sole cause of constipation is an inactive liver, and unless the liver is kept active you may rest assured that headaches, jaundice, heartburn, piles, floating specks before the eyes, a feeling as if you were going to faint, or catarrh of the stomach will kollow the wrong action of this, one of the Most important organs of the body. Keep the .liver active and working properly by the use of Milburn's Laxa- Liver Pills. Mrs. Elijah A, Ayer, 'Fawcett Hill, N, wnes: B' 't "I was troubled with Huge Canadian Park Canada's new park of ninety-five square miles in British Columbia Is big to our ideas, but is really small compared with other American "play- grounds." Until recently the Yellow- stone reservation, Wyoming, compris- ing nearly 4,000 square miles, was the largest park in the world, but its glory has been eclipsed during the last five years by the reservation of Jasper Park, Saskatchewan, which boasts 6,000 square miles almost as large an area as Yorkshire.—Pall Mall Gazette. in full. The scholarships were lawarded to this County to -1 Jas. Gillespie Seaforth; 2; ,Iltvgaret Knight, Seaforth;, 3, George W. Geddes, Wingham. Eggs For Hatching Eggs that are washed do not al - constipation for many years, and about ways hatch as well as those whip are three years ago my husband wanted me 1 "lean when taken from the nest, which to try Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills, as they p shows that it pays to keep clean henhouses and clean nests. t00 had cured him. I got a ural and them, and by the time I had taken three vials I was cured. T always keep them on hand, and when I need a mild laxative I take one." Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25c a or mai;5 v cal for 51.00, at all dealers, mailed direct on receipt of price by The '1' Milburn Co Limited. Toronto. Ont. HORSES FOR THE FARM. Kansas Farmers Are Advised to Raise Horses and Sell the Surplus. Maintaining a big bunch of horses to carry on the work of the farm is quite an item of expense, says the Kansas Farmer. Many farmers do not realize three times a day so as to increase how much 0 amounts to until they Its strength more quickly'. That Is ,begin to, make some effort to steep usually preferable to boots or any oth- a record of the cast of maintaining er similar contrivance, but there are. horses through the year. It is almost times and cases where artificial aid isincumbent ilpou the roan requiring a required. A: little Phosphate of calcium great deal of horsepower in his farm - added to the milk or drinking water Ing operations to follow the practice, is also beneficial to fouls, as It is to, toe some extent at least, of raising children.nteshucksusievedvoats bruised s and selling the surplus on the and the out are also horse great helps as soon as fonts, are able ..market. In this way the horsepower [ower to eat, and lime water never comes amiss. When feeding cows' milk to weak foals never forget to add lime water at the rate of three or four des- sertspoonfuls to the pint. it helps to keep the stomach right. After foals born with crooked legs, have straightened up and their hoofs have hardened they should be watched most carefully and any tendency of the feet to grow uneven' prevented. A touch or two with the rasp on the feet of a foal will often keep him from go- ing unsound and make a valuable t h,t. horse of one. that, unattended -d ar g might readily have degenerated tato a valueless nuisance around the farm. Corn and Alfalfa. The sheet anchor of real economic feeding for milk or meat is the corn;. plant in the form of the succulent en- silage and the cap cured alfalfa bay. Let the farmer get, settled down square on that idea; let him put up ,his silos; perfect himself in taxa" knowledge of. growing airs its; tmly 11 ,ci 1 ' 1114,0 UCe a good dairy ewe "' shall take t1tnt 1 bestteSults 1,•,.. - y the .Mull a•,; . mast event folly to uhtdertee the other tthetI 11,11,,. knife ate 1 0501111 " Irioard':, 1.L • ,rate (.1 I momrasimmomooll A SPECIAL OFFER' to New Subscribers $1.00 will pay for The New Era UNTIL Jan. lst 1916 A SPLENDID CHANCE To get the Old Home Paper that gives all the news of Clinton and District that's worth printing. v' r AB OT L. CH . M.P. DR. of the farm becomes in a measure self j for Ottawa, who volunteered for ser. supporting. There is no place in Kan- f vice abroad. gas more favorable to the raising of . good horses than the central and west- portions. There are numerous ro us in- stn pests Students Who Win stances all through this territory where Carter Awards One that 1 the dee the tis nd of to 'Mee of 1 I a > � •li i easb)1' oll !u' iiia It e.tepuuur tall dare; of i1 11;111111y ' 1' 1 ilti0l parts bicarbonate of 9111n.. nluntrllte u!' bis— muth and.int ewe ',of :,alai, washed. down with m1111 or water. 'lis each pint of milk feel Inlx wee teaspoonful of e. nilxtture of hall an • ince of for- maldehyde and fifteen eeti cne-half '' ounces of freshly boiled wetor. , 1 ' GROUP 05 PARM nouns. farmers have to some extent special - zed in the growing of horsesjna nd mules and made 'good money Really good horses, are bringing good prices on the market, and the farmer who willpay serioesoattantentiion ttothe e th f a few .g in o oronuc g yearh will not only keep himself et 9llp- aed•i with good horses, but will have. WOMAN R VEY is interested and should know about the wonderful pray Marvel W..h oIng ISO Ask your druggist for ;. 3t. If he cannot supply 1 the MARVEL, accept no other, but send stamp for Ilius', 'rated book—sealed, .It gives full 1d par ciculcrs and directions invalnablo windeor wINDSORSUPPLY' GO.,, to a cps.. rl, -General Agento for Canads._ FIrst in Everything. The first award of the scholar- 1 �J ships provided for by the tvill of the late J. J. Carter.: of Sarnia is announced by the Minister ofd uenp �A�A�VI�A�Ua•a�1�1V1i11� a , cation. These scholarships go to 44 ./, � the three can highest gg the • school ex- � the recent June ,apps' Pianos • 4 ed t atr didates who ob aggregate of marks on amtnattons in the city of Toronto and in each! of the twenty-foar counties' or groups of "counties . named below, To the competitor obtaini,;g ibr highest aggregate merits the value! of the scholar- ship is $100, to the one who ranks t next, $00, and to the third PO. In the cased of Brant county two 4 4 or the competitors were e- 1. third scholarship, "c sided between th It is pointed 1 ' competitors that award clisqualifi peting; for .these subsequent exai '1 i .' for the �tmotltlts 1 issued eho'tly to those low and will be sent in care 0 f e principal ofthe school fromwhrce '4 they were candidates. The ministee announces ;`.hat, while in subsequent years the in- terest available from the bequest will: be sufficient to, pay in full all the scholarships provided for, for the present year the interest ac- crued front the bequest amounts only to approximately 25 per cent total I•ec1 uir;e;cl, In ,order of the se not to disappoint the successful competitors the Government has decided to provide the additional ,i t deet u, amount required to make payment 4 4 See and''here our finest 'e New Stylish designs of a , 'Doherty Pia,nos and F, Organs, E ,Special values in Art Cases b 0' Pianos and Organs rent r. d, choice new Edison r hs Music hono a p g P nt, variety goods. � Ill 16Music�' Emporium' ail stmv nvvvvvrik