HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-01-09, Page 3VEM1111.11Bn
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• A Doctor's Hints For
Cancer Prevention
Some Simple And Valuable Rules
To Maintain Immunity
The following hints for the preven-
tion of cancer are given by Dr. J.
Fletcher Little, Medical Officer of
•Health. for Harrow -on -the -Hill:
When warts, moles (especially dark
colored) and other skin growths are
exposed to constant irritation they
should be imtnedially removed,
Avoid excessive smoking, as it pre-
disposes to cancer c the lips, tongue,
cheeks, etc. Inhaling cigarette smoke
tends to cause cancer of the vocal
cords.
Avoid irritation of the tongue and
cheek by broken, jagged teeth,
Take great care of the back teeth
or grinders. Money spent on the
teeth will bring a greater return than
any other investment.
Avoid excessively hot feed and
drink, which induce cancer of the
throat.
Avoid taking large quantities of
iced drinks and ices.
Masticate all food thoroughly, as
food imperfectly chewed causes
chronic irritation of the alimentary
canal.
Avoid alcoholic drinks, as they are
a predisposing cause of cancer, and
diminish the average prospects of
survival by 30 per cenc.
Do not delay when cancer is sus-
pected. 1?,irly recognition and prompt
removal deprive cancer of its terrors.
Y.01.P1-,I, RAVE TC 1.11:1131):
Tell us not in idle jingle "marriage
is an empty dream"; for the girl is dead
-Clete sing:e, things are not what, they
:seem. Life is real life is earnest, single,
blessed a lib; "Man thou art, to be re-
turneth", has. been spoken of the rib.
Not enjoyment and not sorrow is our
•destined end way, but to act that each
tomorrow finds nearer marriage day.
_ Life is good and Youth is f eeting, and
-oue hearts, theugh light and gay,
still like pleasant drums are beating
wedding mare -bee all the day. In the
workne broad -fields of battle, in the
bivouac of lite be not like dumb driven
cattle- he a heroine -a wife! Trust no
future, however pleasant; let the dead
past bury its dead: act - act in the liv-
ing present heart within and hope a-
head, Lives ofmarried folks remind us
we can live our dyes as welaand de-
parting leave behind us such examples
as shall "ten" -such examples that an-
other, wasting time idle sport, a for-
lorn, unmarried brother, seeing, shall
take heart and &amt. Let us, then, be
up, mud doing, with a heart on triumph
reef; still crintrivinmg still pursuing, and
each one a bushand get.
Sports
nt HE O. H, A , G &MIR S
Jan. 7 -Clio. on at See orbs
Jan. 10-Serdomh at Caouerich.
w. 15,--Soacorth at Clintoao
Jan. 17 -Clinton at God rich
Tan. 21-Godench aSeadorth.
Jan, 27 -Go 'erieh at Chelan,
•
1 YOUR. BOY
(By Elbert Hubbard)
I3e patient with the boys. You are
dealing with soul -stuff.
Destiny awaits just around the coni
nem • '
Boys envolve into men, and SOlin
tillleS men change the boundary tine of
provinces They wake political part-
ies; they crown kings, and they put
them to flight.
They being contention, or they make
peace. They may build or they may
destroy.
But a boy misused, abused, betrayed,.
never forgets and seldom forgives.
It is a terrible thing to plane the
germ of euspiciou and hate in the mind
of a child:
Tyranny visited on a hoy may im-
plant in -his heart dragons teeth that
string up and grow into armed men.
The breath of hate consumes and
its voice affrights.
Gluttony and greedsome times leaves
tue boy out of the equation. Gluttony•
and greed fattens and forsa,kes. It in-
vites and- it alienates. it welcornes
and then ft repels. • •
Grasping greed sometimes forgets.
It is the thing that. brings mental
and moral disease and disorder a the
state that cannot be cured.
Boys cannot be deceived.
Naturally, they are truthful. They
are elemental.
They, do not know how they judge
or why.
The word of your lip counts for lit -
They know the thing that is hidden
in your heart.
To arrest boys and fasten upon them
the strong hand of the law is a tragic
thing.
A slight, a boy will forgive; but in-
justice, never.
Boys can be led; they can't be driven
They respond to lore, hut tstanny
may set their hearts aflame.
My heart goes out to the boys.
I know one newsboy who supports
a mother and severalbrothers and
sisters younger than he,
know two dewsboys, brothers,
whose scanty savings are sending an
elder sister to the State Normal
School, that she may be fit:Wed to be-
come a teacher.
Thomas A. Edisbn was a newsboy.
He sold papers on the streets of De-
troit, and on the Grand Trunk trains,'
While selling papers on the railroad
platform at Mount Clemens, he saw a
child toddle out on the teadk, in the
face of an oppioaching train. At the
risk of his life, Thomas Edison, the
newsboy, grabbed the youngeter,
sprang upon the footboard of ' the en-
WHOOPIE UGH
LEFT A NASTY,
DRY COUGH.
Doctors Could Do No Good.
Mrs. A. Mainwrigbt, St. Mary's, Ont.,
writes: -"I feel it my duty to writmand
tell you the good your Dr. Nnood's Nor-
way Pine Syrup did for my 'little boy.
He had whooping cough, which left him
with a nasty, dry hard cough, I took
him to several doctors, but they did him
no good, and I could see my little lad
failing day by day. I was advised to take
him to another doctor, which I did, and
he told me he was going into a decline,
I was telling a neighbour about it, and
she told me to get a bottle of Dr. Wood's
Norway Pine Syrup, and give it to him
regularly. She then got to tell me how
much good it did lice children, 501 got a
bottle, and gave it to my little boy, and
was so pleased with the remit that I
bought another one, and by the time he
had finished it he had no cough. He is
now fat and strong, and I would not he
without a bottle in the house on any
account."
Whooping cough generally begins as a
common cold, ,accompanied witli cough-
ing and a slight discharge from the nose.
11 18, as a rule, more of a child's trouble
but also affects adults.
Dr. Weed's Norway Pine Syrup is a
sure preventative it taken in time, and is
also a positive cure for any of the after
effects.
"Dr. Wood's" is put up in a yellow
wrapper, three pine trees the trade mark;
price 25 and 50 cents.
Manufacturen only by The T. Milburn
Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
Mr.frankkkinber
eltfle Pember Nair Store, Toronto
will be at the
HOICI Normandie,C11111011
TUESDAY, JAN. III
With the largest pisplay of Hair
Goods in the Dominion
Switches, Braids, Puffs and
Transformations
neannfactured by us, from hair
of the finest quality
SOMMINMAMIIMIIrelanni
PROF. PEMBER
Will also diagnose free of charge, all Hair and Scalp Troubles, and
his advice may he relied upon
FOR BALD MEN.
The Pember Ventilated Light
•weight Toupee' and Wig is the
finest substitute for one's own
hair that has ever been produced
Call and investigate yourself
Ladies who cannot visit the
Hotel, kindly write or phone
and the professor will cail.
iteruember -the Date,
Tue, day, JausarY 14th
Foe Mail •Orders address
127 Yotige Street, Toronto5 Ont
titkl)1113-CO
1..laXTIVES
are best for nursing
mothers because they do
not affect the rest 'of the
system. Milelleutsure. 25c.
• a box at your druggist's.
essenosise CHUG AND CHEMICAL
CO. OF CANADA, LIMITED.
163
gine andwayed its life.
For this deed the station agent re-
warded Edison by teaching hima the
telegraph key.
We know the rest, •
Paganini Was a street musician
when a boy, playing his violin and
holding up his hat for pennies,
MartimLuther was an outcast and a
street singer when a boy.
Occasionally the proud and the
strong would push him out of the way
into the gutter.
Such treatment made scars on his.
soul that time did not efface.
It is a terrible thing to killanima-
tion and joy and enthusiasm' in the
heart of a child.
Boys should be encouraged, and not
ground down to a starvation point in
all of their worthy and useful little
industries.
Give the boy a chance to vow, to
enjoy, tp work, to save his pennies and
become a man.
I used to know a nee-ne0Y who cried
his wares up and down in front of the
hotel where I stopped.
the years went by, as the years do.
Twentsetive versus paseed, and 1 stood
in 8 collet of appeal to present a 111Q -
U= IT bleb was a vital importance to
me.
The judge who sat on the bench
looked to me strangely familiar. All
at once it came over me with a flash
that this judge was onee the newsbop
from whom 1 had bought newspepees
in front of the hotel.
He know held for me the ability to
wither or to bless, to destroy or to
proteet. Fortunately, 'for Inc, his
heart and brain were right.
Be patient with the boys. Bad boys
are good boys whomisdirect themener-
gies.
The hope of the race lies with the
boys. In a year. or two we wilt be go-
ing to hear them preach from pulpits;
we may go to them to borrow money;
they may operate on us for appene
dicitis-aye, they may preach our fun-
eral sermons.
Nodocly can prophesy tbe success. to
which a boy will attain.
Difficulty, trial, hardship, work -
these are the things that evolve boys
into men. Boys can be led. They
cannot be driven. Be patient with
the hoy. You are dealing with soul.
stuff. Destiny awaits around the
corner. -Health Culture.'
Little Chinese Cadet
In connection with the competitions
In military drill in the Torontd schools
the judges chose from each company
one boy who was especially noticeable
tor his neatness and his soldierly bear-
ing. In one of the schools the boy
ohosen was a Chinese boy, who
showed up the jduges thought, with
the best in the city.
Camel's Hair Belting
The belting used on machinery in
the Russian oil fields , Is made of
camel's hair, resisting grease better
than rubber, leather or cotton.
Fast Photography
Two thousand accurate photographs
a second is claimed for a new mo-
tion picture camera, with which the
flight of an insect has been pictured.
Flashlight on Pen
So that it can be used In the dark
a fountain pen has been equipped with
a tiny electric searohlight and a
storage battery by Its English inven-
tor.
Every Woman
Is interested and should hinny
about the wonderful
MARVEL Whirling Spray
The nen, Vaginal Syringe. Best
--hlost convenient. It cleanses
lustantly... ,Ask your
r
uggist
if he cannot supply the 'OP.°
ISSA ire accept no other,
sendstamp for illustrated
nhirs and directions inVoltin hie to ladies,
book—Hated, It gives full partlo
WICDSOR SUPPLY Co.,
Windsor, Oaf. General Agents for Cana
•
slit JOHN IVILLISON
Sir John Stephen Willison is the
second Canadian journalist to receive
the honor of knighthood solely on
account of his stork tn journalism, the
other being Sir Hugh Graham of the,
Montreal Star. The new recepient of
these honors is well worthy of the
honor on account of the distinction he
has attained largely through being a'
hard working newspaper man. To the
people of this district the bestowtnent
of the honor has special interest as be
is a native of the old County
of Huron, where be was born in 186
and attended the public schools. • He
afterwards engaged for a time in mer-
cantile pursuite. He commenced jour-
nalism in a humble way on the Tilver'
ton Watchman, a sonall'iocal paper in
the county of Bruce, thence he went
Ito London Advertiser in 1382, but was
only there a year until he was called
to the Toronto Globe, with which he
was connected for nineteen years, fin-
ally attaining the position of editor-in-
chief, Since 1002, he has had charge of
the reorganized Neste. He is also the
author of several works, the principal
one being "Sir Wilfred Laurier and
t le Liberal Party: a Political History '
Although hie political opinions have
changed somewhat since he wrote that
work, he is a clever writer and. also a
speaker of considerable repute, Hi$
confreres in the newspaper world anii
many others will congratulate him on
the attainment ot new honors.
WOULD ARBITRATE
President Taft Favors Settling
Panama Dispute Atnicrably.
NOT AT HAGUE, HOWEVER
In Speech at Banquet He Says He Is
For an • impartial Tribunal Repre-
senting the Two ..Nations But
Indicates That He Has No Hope
of Justice at the 1 -lands of
the European Judges. •
NEW YORK. Jan. 6. -President
Taft Saturday declared himself un-
equivocally in favor of arbitrating the
dispute between the United States and
Great Britain over the Panama Canal
tolls. provided pending negotiations
between Ithe two countries failed to
satisfactorily settle the matter.
He does not, however, favor arbi-
tration at The .Hague. A despatch
reoeived from Washington indicates
as ranch. It says that although he
hat not yet given the matter of a
tribunal much thought, the President
probably would prefer a special board
el arbitration composed of an equal
number of citizens of the United
States and Great Beitain. Such as to
be the -composition of the arbitral
-court he proposed to settle any vital
PRE8IDENT TAFT.
question arising between nations
when he spoke on behalf of the arbi-
tration treaties.
Tale Preeideut has expressed to
friends the view that at The Hague all
Europe would be against the United
States, and that the moral pressure on
the court would be enormousmbecause
all Europe is interested in Panama
tolls, just as much as is England.
Several Democratic Senators have
voiced the opinion that a special tri-
bunal be created to arbitrate this dis-
pute.
His speech on Saturday came as a
marked surprise.
This was the first public declaration
of the President of lois attitude to-
ward the question. He was speaking
at a luncheon given in his honor by
the International Peace Forum.
"I am willing, and, indeed, I would
be ashamed not to be willing," said
the President, "to arbitrate any ques-
tion with Great Britain in the con-
struction of a treaty when we reach
the exact issue which there is be-
tween the two nations. There need
not be any public doubt on that sub-
ject so far as this. administration is
concerned. When there is a conference
that cannot be reconciled by inter-
national negotiation and adjustment,
then we are entirely willing to sub-
mit to an impartial tribunal,
"I am hopeful that we may get it
either to a settlement or to submission
before the administration, in which I
have the honor to be a dissolving
view, shall cease, but it may not be,
because these negotiations move slow-
ly. But I am glad to take this op-
portunity in this presence to say that
if the time comes, there will be no
doubt about what I will do in response
te the submission of that question as
far as my power gees to all impartial
tribunal for its settlement 'if that is
necessary."
Elation in London. 4
. LONDON, Jan. 6. -The • London
morning paper axe heartily pleased
with President Taft's declaration of
his intention to submit.....the Panama
Canal controversy with Great Britain
to arbitration' if diplomatic negotia-
tions should fail. The Daaly Mail
says:
"Any other than the honorable
course which President Taft has taken
would have been almost unthinkable
on the part of a statesman who has
devoted such efforts to furthering the
cause of international peace through-
out the world. If the Senate follows
President Taft's lead the Panama
question is as good as settled."
The Telegraph regards Mr. Taft's
speech as altogether worthy of a
statesman and a friend of peace.
throughout the world, but fails to see
how any special tribunal could be
erected which would not be open to
the same abjection as The Hague
court. It remarks, in comneon with
other papers, that there oould be no
better preparation for the celebration
for the centenary of peace and earn-
eetly hopes for the speedy reference
of the question to an independent
tribunal: -
COWS COMM Rod COMp01111d,
Tho great Uterine Tonle, e,ntl.
e*esesee ,,only safe effectual MOOhillY
Eoguhtoron which women can
depend.. Sold in three,,clegreca
of strongth—No, 1, al.; No. 2,
10 degrees stronger s3; No. 3,
• for special DASDS, 00 per bog,
Sold by all druggists, or sent
- repaid on room 41 of prone
, tee pamphlet. Address: .Tse
.•.,aaltME11101111100..TURONT6.0m. Vonacraillrinasonl
Poultry Pointers 1
Give the hens plenty or good pure
Water in clean dishes.
It pays to provide plenty of green
food for the laying hena,
Learning how to prevent diseases in
poultry is worth far more than learn-
ing how to euro them,
Cleanliness, light, dry -houses, fresh.
feed and pure water count in the
poultry business.
A general cleaning up of the premi-
ses will help greatly in keeping down
rats.
•
Brooder chicks must be provided
with some kind of exercise,
Grease or insect powder should be
applied to all young chicks infested
with lice.
It is poor policy te feed inferior
grain to poultry, especially to the lay-
ing hens.
Don't keep the culls, the loafers,
the puny, weakly chicks around. Cull
them out.
Protein the hens must have, and
animal protein is better for them than
vegetable protein.
Don't feed corn alone. Give the
bens some wheat and oats if you want
plenty of eggs. •
Refuse from the family table is
relished' by the hens, and it pays bet-
ter in the hen pen than in the hog
pen.
- For hatebing purposes eggs from
two-yeapold hens give better satisl'ac-
tion than eggs from younger stock.
EIGRSE BLANKET. CLIP
Hooks Into Breeching and Keeps
Cover From Blowing off
No matter how carefully a mato may
blanket his horse, the wind or the
animal's own restlessness may cause
the cover to be either blown oft or
thrown off. The horse then suffers
front the cold and the blanket is tram-
pled on and torn. That along coines
rr"e FAST TO BLANKET,
s, man with a simple little fastener
that prevents any such mishaps. A
niece of wire is bent into a hook that,
opens upward, At the top is a large
safety pin by which the device can
be fastened to the blanket in an in-
stant, or it can be left fastened. All
that need be done, then, to keep the
cover on is to hook the wire under
the breeching strap, and no matter
how hard the wind blows or how much
the horse stamps: and switches his
tall, there it'will stay until the owner
unhooks it.
MODERN BABEL
Winnipeg a "Melting Pot" for all
Natiens of the Earth
, Winnipeg stands unique among
Canedian cities, but the uniqueness is
not In her beauty, but in her people.
Less than one half of her population
are Canadians and a full quarter are
what are caned "foreign." In the -
number of nationalities, Winnipeg ap-
proaches New York; in the noise of
her varied tognuos, sloe rivals Babel.
A map of the city indicating the
nationalities by color would "show
more stolen than the skin of a zebra,"
Winnipeg numbers among her citizens,
English, Scotch, Welsh, Irish, Italians,
Germans, Russians, Ruthenians, Poles,
Austrians, Bohemians, French, Swiss,
Spaniards, Finns, Magyars, Chinese,
Japanese, Africans, Swedes, Norwe-
gians, Danes, Dutch, Icelanders, Turks,
Americans, ,Arablans,Hebrews, Sy -
'rains, East /iodises, AmeriCan Indians,
Egyptians, Hungarians, South Ameri-
cans, Cubans, Slovaks, Bavarians,
Greeks, Servians, Maltese, Malays,
Hindus, Roumanians, Portuguese. Dal-
matians, and perhaps a few others,
CHINA CLAY INDUSTRY
Quebec Has Valuable Deposits of This
Commodity
One of the newest industriee being
developed in the Province of -Quebec
is the mining and refining of kaolin
or china clay, which is being carried
on at St. Remi d'Amherst, „1:•-•
In a little valley in the Laurentian
hills, surrounding Lac du Sable, after
the pine timber had been cut and
floated down the Maskinonge River,
a settlement of habitants, mostly of
the family of Tasse grubbed the
stumps and settled down to win a
living from the soil lying between
the rocky ridges. Some fourteen years •
ago in digging wells near their log
cabins the settlers came en a white
substance at the rock level under
some twelve feet of overburden. The
only use they found for it was to-anix
It with water and whitewash their
homes, Later it was found to be
valuable for' other purposes,
China 'clay is 'used largely in the
manufacture of porcelain and china-
ware. The largest use in Canada Is
for coating White papers. It is also
used in the textile Industry for sizing
and bleaching calico and cotton, in the
rubber intliretry in making high ten -
ion and ordinary electric insulators,
chemical apparatus, and for refractory
ware, 01;01ias crucibles and other as
Paitng alltanitt10.
ANIMALS AS DOCTORS .1401rAL PURPLE.
Both Wild and Domestic 'Creatures
Know How to Treat Illness
• '
It is held that the etiolate reMedies
of nature generally, suilice to cure
•
'beasts of their 'ailments and that they
aro guided to them by Instinct.
A large numbet of species Wash
themselves and bathe ---- el ashen fs,
stage, birds, ants, eto. Animals rid
themselves of their parasites by using
dust, mud and clay. Those suffering
from tever restrict their diet, keep
quiet, seek 'darkness and airy' places,
drink much water, and sometimes
plunge into it from time to time.
When a dog has lost its appetite it
eats that species of grass known as
"dog's 'grass." Oats also eat grass
and catnip, when sick. Sheep and
caws in the same circumstances seek
ont certain herbs. An animal suffer-
ing from chronic rheumatism In-
variably keeps as much as possible
in the sun. The warrior ants main-
tain regularly worganized ambulances.
Latreflie cut the antennae of an ant.
Other ants covered the wounded part
with a transparent- fluid from their
months. If a chimpanzee is wounded
It stops tbe flow of blood by placing
Int hand on the wound or dressing it
with leaves and grass.
A terrier had an injured eye. It
remained lying under a counter, avoid-
ing heat end light, although it had
been its habit to keep close to the fire.
It adopted a general treatment -rest
and abstinence from food. The local
treatment consisted 10 licking tine up -
Per surface of its paw, which it then
applied to the wounded eye, again
licking the paw when It became dry.
Cats also when hurt treat them -
seines by this simple method.
WHY CHiNESE ARE HARDY
Bad Sanitary Conditions There Cause
Only Fittest to Surviva
Peculiar power to resist disease is
a obaracteristic of the Chineee, ac-
cording to Professor E. A. Ross. For
instance, out of ten children ,born in
western homes three, normally tiro
weakest three, will fail to grow up;
out of ten children horn in China
about eight aro doomed to die in
infancy. The difference is due to the
hardships that infant life meets with
among the Chinese, and with such
rigorous eelection there results a
stock displaying a peculiar hardiness.
Living in the supersaturated, man -
stifled land, profoundly ignorant of
the principles of hygiene, the masses
have developed an immunity to nox-
Mus microbes which excites the
wonder and envy of the foreigner.
"They are not affected by a mos-
quito bite that will raise a large
lump on the lately come foreigner,"
says Professor Ross, "They can use
contaminated water from canals
without incurring dysentery. There
Is very little typhoid, and what there
is is so attenuated it was long doubt.
ed to be typhoid, The physicians
agreo that among the Chinese *small-
pox is a mild disease. The chief of
the army medical staff points out that
during the autumn manoeuvres the
soldiers sleep on damp ground with
a little straw under them without
any 111 effects.
"Coolies, after two hours of burden -
bearing at a clog trot, will shovel
themselves full of hot rice, with
scarcely any mastication, and hurry
on for another two hours, A white
man would writhe with indigestion.
The Chinese seem able to sleep in
any position. I have seen them
sleeping on piles of bricks, or stones,
or poles, with a block or a brick for
a pillow and with the hot sort shining
full in their face. tniien steed a
cramped position longer than we can
and can keep on longer at monoton-
ous toil unrelieved by change or
break."
Newspapers and Children
Some one has asked the question; -
"Shall we allow our boys and girls
to read the newspapers?" Of course,
. we all know why such a question id
asked. There Is much le our daily
paper we wish might be eliminated;
the murder trials, divorce proceedings,
crimes without number in all ther re-
volting aspects, and what Lowell calla
the "stagnant goose ponds of village
gossip." But, Blau fathers and
mothers read the daily paper, they
cannot consistently prohibit their chit
'dren from doing the same, In its
way, the newspaper is a great educator.
It brings us each any in touch with
the Whole world. Ito recapitulation
of current events is timely and help-
ful. The newspaper is a necessity.
We could not spare it from our table,
in spite of its faults. There are news-
papers and newspapers. It is for each
parent to bring into his home as clean
a sheet as he can, knowing that the
innocent eyes of his little children
will span its pages. -Suburban Life.
New idea In Shoes
Appearing externally like any
other shoe, one invented In England
has a separate compartment for the
big toe.
• Paraguay Coffee
That coffee can be produced com-
mercially in Paraguay is being demon.
strated on a few plantations in that
country,
Trans-Atlantle Wireless
Norway plans to erect one of the
largest wireless stations in the world
for direct service with the United
States.
Leather Auto Tires
That tithe of compressed leather
will we* Well, even on rough roads,
thee been demonstrated by a French
automobile builder.
118oftenIng,, GI assware
Boiling a, piece of glassware in a
weak so tido* of salt water and al.
-lowing 11 to -cool gradually will mate 11
less brittle. , •
latock es PoultrySpeeifles
FREEW•thee 7asiknin.:,ndr:zucit:ioynefreoef, rfouroga,-
itarge 64 -page books (With in-
i3ert,), On the common diseases of stock and.,
poultry. Tells how to feed all kinds of heavy,
and light horses, colts and mares, Tacit cows,
calves and fattening steers, 'also how to keep
and feed poultry so that they will lay as well
in winter as in summer. It contains $00
recommends from all over Canada, from people.
'who have used our sooda. No farmer should 10
Yon can fatten cattle and hogs in a month's
lees time by using our Royal -Purple stock
Specific than you could, possibly do without it,
thereby. saving a zoonth's Seed and labor and
the cost to you will not be more than $1.50 for
six pigs or moo for one steer. It will keep
your horses in show condition with ordinary
feed. If you have a pooe miserable-190k-
ing animal on your place try it on this one
first and see the marvellous result which will,
be obtained. Our Stock Specific will increase,.
the milk flow three to five lbs. per cow Dec.?
day, while being fed in the stable. A 60e'
package will last a cow or horse 70 days.
ROYAL PURPLE POULTRY spnctna
will make your hens lay just as well in the
winter as In the sunnner, and will keep there
free from disease. These goods am pure and
unadulterated. We do not use any cheap filler '
to make a large package, entirely different
from any on the mar' -et at the present time,
Royal Purple Stock Specific, 500 pckgs.; four
50c pekes., in an, air -tight tin, for $1.50.,
Royal Purple Poultry Spec'
ific 26c and 60c
fOoeukras 6..ocaptlg$2...50 air -tight tins that hold
Royal Purple Lice Killer, 25e and 60c tis; '
Ro8y(laci blur'p'llneilball Cure,. 25c and 50c tins; 30e
RoyalbbyY:Pua.l
iiliiple Sweat Liniment, Ole bottle; 60c
RomyeallPurple Cough Cure, 60c tin; 60c by
Royal Purple Disinfectant, 26e and 60e tins.
Royal Ptrrple Rom) Cure, 26c tins; 30c ay
m:11.
noyPurple Worm Powder, Ole tins; 30c by
mail.
Manufactured only by
TheW.A. Jenkins Mfg. Co,,
London, Canada
Royal Purple Supplies and
Booklets may be had from'
Ford & McLeod, Flour and
Peed: W.S.R. Holmes, Drugs
CLINTON
Gettemee•001MeenV3641904.9000111
as)
SHAW'S
▪ SCHOOLS:
a
fe▪ Toronto Ca•Acia, include the
O
• Central Business College, the•
• Central Telegraph mid ;
Lail-
• road Sehool, and noun City •Branch Busmess SchoMe, All 2
• Provide eit,:ellent cry.. sea
• leading to good saler:ed p81-. o
• tions. Free catalogue on te
S request. Write for it, W H.
O Shaw, Presteedit. Head office a
S. onge and cterrard fAreets•
O Toronto, Ont.
0
maosessam000memeamosactoes
Business Change
Having pueelmeerl 'no genereal
store and stock of Mr. Robt,Clark
et Constance, we nre in a rasit:on
as supply the people of the mar-
s oueodieg court -my with ere ods at
close cut prieaS in all linen
We have bought largely tz pre-
aration of the C.hristmas trade. If •
yoe will cal! and sees nir stock, we
think it W, 11 Letore.st you;
nne ate 1,n a position to 1, y 1.11.1.`
ustomers the highest narket price
tor all kin "e o, produce. Live and
nre,sseti fowl ught to be deliver-
ed at our store every Thursday
morning.
Our DIoLto-ntA Square Deed -for
Everyone. brisling you. all A
Merry Chrisraids and a 'Happy nd
Prosperous New Year.
HALL & CO
CO1NSTANCE
Illeadquariers
FOR
Walking and Riling oliv er
plows
I. H. C. Gasoline Engines
McCormick Machinery Pumps
and
Windmill.
ALL KINDS OP REPAIRS
AND EXPERTING.
CALL ON
Miller a Lillie
Corner of Princes and Albert
streets.
WINTER TERM
FROM JAN. 6th
CentralBosinessCollege
Stratford. Out.
Does more f sr its et teleints
and graduates than des oth-
er similar .schools. CcureS are
up-to-daee and ins t rucnore
are experienced. Gred kici tes,
are pleased in good' positions
Me three applicanope re-
ceived to -clay offer average
salayy of $11?3 per enneno,
nhepaitm, ee+ e3?Yrr-
eiarsorth;adle41aiy.
Write for flee catalogue at
0110e
D.Al McLachlan, Principal.