HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-02-06, Page 7nli
nary JGthf 43
NGER PERM
WOMANS" 11
FROM 45 to 50
Interes ingExperienceofTwo
Women -Their Statements
Worth Reading.
White Oak, Ont. -"At Change of Life
when doctor could do no more and I was
given up by my
friends, Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegeta-
ble Compound came
to the front and did
wonders for me. I
had been having fe-
male troubles for
years, my head trou-
bled, me severely at
Gimes, I had bearing
down painsand back-
: ,,. back
i ache and I was very
anaemic from excessive flowing. I rec-
ommend your Compound highly and do
all I can to advertise it as a genuine wo-
man's medicine." Mrs. SYLVESTER
MANNING, White Oak, Ontario
The Case of Mrs. gutta.
Circleville, Ohio. -"I can truthfully
say that I never had anything do tae so
much good during Change of Life as Ly-
dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
"Before I had taken one half a bottle
of it I began to feel better, and I have
continued taking it., My health is better
than it has been for several years. If
all women would take it they would es-
cape untold pain and misery at this time
of life."- Mrs. 'ALICE KIRLIN, 358 W.
MiI1 St., Circleville, Ohio.
The Change of Life is one of the most
critical periods of a woman's existence.
At such timeswomen mayrely upon Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
h• - earell
DON'T 'NEGLECT.
YOUR WATCH
A WATCH is a delicate piece
[ r'f machinery. It calls for
lessattention than most
machinery, but must be cleaned
and oi;ed occasignall' to keep
perfect time. k. '
With proper care a Waltham
Watch will keep perfect tune
for a lifetime. It will pay yon
e well to let us' clean your watch
• every 12 or 18. months.
W. R. COUNTER.
Jeweler and Optician.
Issuer of
Aka rriage �.lceiisc S.
tWI
MONTREAL
THE STANDARD is the Nationiil
;Weekly Newspaper bf the Dominion
of Canada. _ It is national dei all its
Aims.'
14, It uses the most expensive engrave
Ings, procuring the photographs from
all over the world.
Its articles -are carefully selected and
its editorial policy is ;thoroughly
Independent.
A subscription' to The Standard
costs $2.00 per year to any address in
ganada or Great Britain.
a TRY IT FOR X1912.!
oMpn#real Standard Publishing Cele
limited, Publishers.
CARTERt
ITTLE
PILLS.
Etch Feadache and :crave all the troubles Ind -
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, llalsoa Drowsiness, Distress attar
eating, Pain in the Side Rx. While their most
,remarkable succuss hasliuen shown in curlrig
'Li
Re.a ly valuable ab Carter's Litho ,curl and pre.
atgvallyvahrableintone tip otign;caringnndpre•.
•eorr
ventin title annoyin' complain t while they also
r cetgadldieordersol the stomach, stlmulatetho'
'
Ever and regulate the Bowels. Even lt hpcyonlq.
oPect
n
':• "dewould ' rithosowho
euar from id iseatncompl but fortu
rarely their
goodness
(lbesnotendhere,andthose
'
.who once try them will andtheeo little pills Valu•'
able in so many ways that they will' not bew:1.
to dr ithoutthem.'But'afterallatckhead
!lug ,1)v
Es
the lane of so many lives that
we make our great boast. Ourph
others do not,
tl ll
Carter's Lime t e LEvor ties
ars
sang easy to take. One or two ell
They are strictly vegetable and
purge, but by their gentle action
nee them.
OdSTIDO, MIGDICi1!ffi OD•e,NID
here ie where
Is emelt while.
very small and
t keadose.
saga
do not grape or
•
please all who
® SW 8OUZ. j
By
Rupert-
Hughes
upertHughes
Novelized from
the Comedy of
the Same Name
ILLUSTRATED
From Photographs of
the Play as P1educed
Ely Henry W. Savage
Infos
Copyright, 1911, by 11. K. lily Co.'
The trainmen take their cue from
;the behavior of theft -locomotives. The
'conductor. of 'a ,transcontinental nods
.to the conductor of..a shuttle -train
with less cordiality than to a brake-
man of his own. The engineers of
the 'limiteds^ look like senators in,
overalls. 'They are far -traveled men,
leading a •mighty life of adventure.
,They are pilots of Land -ships across
;land -oceans. They have a right tp a
'certain condescension of manner.
But no one feels or shows so much
arrogance as. the sleeping car porters.
!They cannot pronounce "supeeciil-
pus," but they can be ft. Their dis-'
;dain for the entire crew of any train'.
that carries merely day -coaches or
;half-baked :chair -cars, is expressed as
!only a darkey in a uniform can ex-
press disdain for poor white trash.
Of all the haughty porters that ever
curled a lip, the haughtiest by far
was the dusky attendant in the San
Francisco sleeper on the Trans-Amer-
Iican Limited. His was the train of
trains in that whole system. His car
the car of cars. His passengers the
surpassengers of all.
His train stoodnow waiting to set
'forth upon a voyage of two thousand
miles, a journey across seven imperial
states, a journey that should end only
,at that merge ,where the continent
,dips and vanishes under the breakers
of the Pacific ocean.
At the head of his car, with his lit-
tle box -step waiting for the foot of
'the first arrival, the porter stood, his
head swelling under his cap, his
breast swelling beneath his blue'
blouse, with its brass buttons like
inflections of his own eyes. His name
!was Ellsworth' Jefferson,' but he was
called anything from "Poarr-turr" to
"Pawtah," and he usually did not
come when he was called.
• Tonight he•was wondering perhaps
,what passengers, with what disposi-
tions, would fall to his lot. Perhaps
'ho was wondering what his Chicago
tsweetheart would be doing in tho
eight days before his return. Per -
,haps he was wondering what his San
'Francisco sweetheart had been doing
in the five days since he lett her, and
;how she would pass the three days
,that must intervene before he
;reached her again.,
He had Othello's ebon color, Did
`he have Othello's green eye?
Whatever his thoughts, he chatted
'gaily enough with his neighbor and
colleague of the Portland sleeper.
Suddenly he stopped in the midst
!of a soaring chuckle.
• "Lardy, man, looky what's a-com-
in'!"
The Portland porter turned to gaze.
"I got my fingers crossed,"
"I hope you git him." •
"I hope I don't."
"He'll work you hard and cuss you
out, and he won't give you even a
Much Obliged." •
"That's right. He ain't got a usher
to carry his things. Aud he's got
enough to. fill a van." ,
The wa oncome rplainly
� s of ne-�
E
list origin, It takes all sorts of pen,
plc to make up the British Empire,:
:and there is no sort lacking -glorious:
or pretty, or sour or sweet. But this;
was the type of English globe-trotter!
'that makes himself as unpopular
among foreigner's as he is among his`
.own people. He is almost as unen-'
'durable as the Americans' abroad who!
,twang their banjo brag through Eu-'
'rope, ,and berate France and Italy tor,
their innocence of buckwheat cakes.
The two porters regarded Mr. Har
old Wedgewood with .dread, as .het
,bore down on them. He was almost;
;lost in the plethora of his own lug -i
gage. He asked for the San'. Fran-.
'cisco sleeper, and the Portland porter,
;had to turn away to smother his gur-
;gling relief:
Ellsworth: Jefferson's. heart ,sank
;He made a feeble effort at self -pro-;
'tection. The Pullman conductor ,not(
'being present at the moment, he in-!
'mitred:
"Haye you got yo' ticket?"
"Of cawse."
"Could I see it?
"Of cawse not. Too, much tronialty
to fish it out,"
The porter was fading, "Do you:
,remember yo' numba?"
"Of cawse. Take these" He began,
to pile things on the, porter like al
mountain unloading an avalanche.
The poyter stumbled as be clambered•.
up the steps, and squeezed through:
the strait path of the corridor into,
the slender aisle. Ile turned again
and again to question the invader,
but he was motioned and bunted
!down the oar, till he was halted with
;a "This will do."
The 'lSnglishman selected section'
!three for his own. The porter ven-
itured: "Are you sho' this is yo' num-
!ba ?"
um -'ba?„
l "Of cawse 'I'm shaw. How dare you
.tquestion my-"•
t "1 rwasn't questiouin',. you, boss, 1
!was just astin' you."
He' resigned himself to the despot,
laud began to transfer hisaburdens,to
o Peat. But 'lie. did •nothing to the
ligittitsotion of the Englishman. Eveyr
•
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
'
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Signature of
I!!
•
144/
"Fruit --tires" Cured NIn-
HUQH •MOKENNA. Eae.'
ST. STEPHEN, N.13. Jan. 17th. r9II.
"I wish to tell you of the great good
"Fruit -a -Lives" have done for me. For
years, I was a martyr to Chronic Consti-
pation and Stomach Trouble. I was
greatly run down and any friends feared
I had Consumption. I tried numerous
doctors and all kinds of medicines, but
received no relief until advised to' try
"Fruit-a-tives" by Mr. McCready of
St. Stephen, and am pleased to say that
I now enjoy excellent health. "Frait-
a-tives" are the best medicine made,
and I stiongly advise my friends to
use them".
HUGH MCKBNNA.
"Fruit-a-tives" is the only medicine
that will positively and completely.
cure Constipation. This wonderful
compound of fruit juices acts directly
on the liver, causing this organ, to.
extract more bile from the blood, and to
give up more bile to move the bowels
regularly and netturally.
sac a box, 6 for 11- so, trial size, zee.
At all dealers or sent on receipt of price
by Fruita-fives Limited. Ottawa.
ithing must be placed-5iherwlse; -tlf
;catch-all here, the portmanteau there,
'the Gladstone there, the golfsticke
;there, the greatcoat there, the rain -
!coat there. The porter was puffing
like a donkey -engine, and mutiny was
;growing in his heart. His last com-
mission was the hanging up of the
bowler hat,
' He stood on the arm of the seat to
;reach the high hook.' From here he
;paused to glare down with an attempt
at irony,
"Is they anything else?"
• "No. You may get down.
The magnificent patronage of this
'wilted the porter completely. He re -
!turned to the lower level, and shut -
'fled along the aisle in a trance. He
was quickly recalled by a sharp:
"Pawtah!" ,
"Yassah!
• "What time does this belly train
;start?"
"Ten-thutty, san,"
"But it's only ten now."
"Yassah. It'll be ten•thutty a lit -
tie later."
"Do you mean to tell me that I've
got to sit hyah for half an hour -just
waitin'?"
The porter essayed another bit of
irony:
"Well," he drawled, "I might ,tell
:the conducta you're ready. And ma -
,be he'd atiu't,the tram. But the time.
'table says ten-thutt:i."
' He watched the effect of his satire,
!but it fell back unheeded from the
;granite dome 'of the Englishman,
Whose only comment was:
"Oh, never mind. I'll wait," '
The porter cast bis eyes up in de -
fbPair, and turned away, once more to
e recalled.
"Oh, pawtaha"
"Yassah!"
"I thinkwe'll put on my slippahs."
"Will wel"
"You might hand me that large bag,
iNo, stupid, the othah one. You might
!open it. No, it's in the othah one: Ah,
!that's it. You may set it down."
Mr. Wedgewood brought forth a
'soft cap and a pair of red slippers.
(rhe porter made 'another effort to
escape,' his thoughts, as black as his
!face Again'the relentless recall:
"Oh pawtah,.i think we'll unbutton
hay boots," ,
He was too weak to murmur "Yas.
!sah.' He 511051y fell .on one knee
+and• got to 'work.
• 'There was a witness to his helpless
'rage -a new,colner, the. American
;counterpart of the Englishman in all
that makes travel difficult tor the fel-
ilow travelers. Ira Lathrop was zeal.
ons to resent anything short of per
fection, quick and loud of complaint,
;apparently impossible to please.
In everything else he was the' 0P
1posite of the Englishman, He was
!burly, middle-aged, rough, careless in
(attire, careless of speech -as uncouth
and save .a
ge s one can well be who is
!plainly a man of means. '
)1 It was not enough that a freeborn
!Afro-American should be caught kneel-
: ing to an Englishmen . But when he
had escaped this penance, and ad-
vanced hospitably to the newcomer,.
he must be greeted with a snarl.
"Say, are ydu the porter of this car,
!or that man's nurse?"
I"T can't tell yet. What's yo' num
ba, ;please?"
l The answer was the ticket. The
iporter screwed up his eyes ` to read
the pencilled scrawl.
Nnmba se'm. Heal she Is, boss."
"Right next to a lot of women, I'll
!bet. Couldn't you put me in the men's
Y
;end of the car?" '
"Not ve'y well, tub. I reckon the
!cal is done sold out,"
With a' growl of rage, Ira Lathrop
!slammed into the seat his entire hand
!baggage, one ancient and rusty valise.
r The porter gaeed upon him
with in -
:creased depression. The passenger
ilial had opened inauspiciously with
!two: of the worst types of travelers
!the Anglo-Saxon race' bas developed.
' But their anger was hot their worst
trait in the norter's,eyes. He was, in
Ia limited -way, an expert in human
' ^raeterfi
When you .meet a stranger you re -
'seed Year -awn cnaractex fn what you
leak abent his. With +labme, the first
(question is, "Who arse 'his People?e
With othe
sst "What has he
achi
eved?"
With others, "How much rte he worth?"
Each, gauges his cordiality, according
to his estimate.
i The porter
wasnot
curious on any
!of these points. He showed 'a demo-
Icratio indifference to them. His one
!vital inquiry was: a
How much will he tip?"
!His inspection of his first , two
charges promised small returns. He
;buttoned up his cordiality, and -de-
atermined to waste upon them the ir-
ireducible minimum of attention,
; ; It would take at least, a bridal
couple to retsore the balance. ,But,
bridal couples in their first bloom
rarely fell to the lot of that porter, for
:what bridal couple wants to lock it -
!self in with'a crowd of passengers for
the first seventy-two hours of wedded
'blies? '
The porter banished the hope as a
!vanity. Little he knew how eagerly
;the young castaways from that
;wreaked taxicab deslred to be a bridal
;couple, and to catch this train,
I But the Pngliehman wag restive
'again:
"Pawtah! 1 say, pawtahl" ll -
'Yassahl" a .,,tftial}„t•
- "What time are we due in San Fran-
'cieco?"
San Francisco? San Francisco?
We are aloo thah the, evenin' of the
fo'th day. This bein' Monday, that
ought to bring us in abote Thuzzday
.evenine"
The Yankee felt called upon to
check the foreign usurper.
"PArrterr! ,
"Yassah!"
"Don't let that fellow monopolize
•you. He probably won't tip you at
all."
The porter grew confidential:
• "Oh, I know his kind, sah. They
'don't tip you for what you 'do do; but
they're ready letterwriters to the
ISooperintendent for what you don't
'do."
"Pawtah! I say, pawtahl"
"Here.' norrterr,"
Continued next week.
SAVE THE BAR.
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one safe medicine to make
•baby well and keep him well,
'They are guaranteed by a gov
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from all injurious drugs and
are absolutely safe to givo
even to the newborn babe.
Concerning them Mrs. Oscar
Bedard, Manseau, Que.,writes
-"I have • used 'Baby's Own
Tablets and have to thank
thein that my little one is
living to -day. I know of
nothing to equal 'them as n
Children's medicine." The
tablets are sold by medicine
dealers or by 'mail at 25 cents
a box from The Dr. Williams"
Medicine Co., Brockville, ,Ont,
SuoAr sCHOO
Lesson VI. -First Quarter, For
Feb. 9, 1913.
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.
Text of the Lesson, Gen. ix,S-1'-Mem-
ory Verses, 15, 16 -Golden Text, Gan,
ix, 13 -Commentary Prepared by Rev.
D. M. Stearns.
As to the record of the deluge and
the whole' story of Noah. these few
words'froni the Lord Jesus Christ, "As
it was in the days of Noah" (Luke
xvit, 20), establish us and cause us to.
5113' to any who question the ,record,
"You are standing against Jesus -Christ,
for [Ie indorsed the record of Adam
and Ere, Cain and. Abel, Noah and
Log, Elijah and Elisha, Daniel, Jonah
mid all else, and to doubt His word
is to doubt the living and true God,
for He only slid what the Father told
l-I11u to SAS (John xit, 48, 40). and He
Himself was. true God." Away with
all unbelief, whatever 0 may be'called.'
scholarship, new theology, theosophy
or aught else, for it is all from the
evil' oue, tine god of this world. Let
us be "most surely believers, 'K t:
knowing the certainty" of all things
written in the Scriptures. He who
sent the waters on the "earth also
caused thein to abate.. and just dive
months after the waters began to in,
crease :the ark rested (chapter viii,
0, 4; compare vii. 11).
It was over two months longer be-
fore thetops ops o f
.the mountains were
seem and, forty days more before Noah
sent fortli a raven and -a dove. The
raven, being an unclean bird, could rest,
on any dead carcass, and there were
no doubt plenty floating about. The
dove, being ,a clean bird, found no
resting place and returned to the ark,
These birds are suggestive of two
classes of people -those who can rest.
on and enjoy all dead things and those
° who find rest only iu Christ, the true
ark. The Holy Spirit In the form of
a dove found His first perfect resting
place to. Chrtst. Yet Ile comes to Such
as we are, sinners who .find refuge in
our ark,
,Jesus Christ, and He con-
descends to dwell in us andabide with
us and reveal Christ: to us and
through us. In Noah and the story of
the at'kwe see perfect obedience, tor
be did according to all that God --com-
manded him (chapters vi, 22; vii, 6).
The Lord called him in and shut him
in and although the waters wera
dire
d
up from off the earth in a little less
than elevenn hs '
mot from the time that
Noah entered the ark, be did not leave
the ark until fully twelve months and
seventeen days (chapters
s had passed y P d( ate s
vil, 10, 11, and tail, . 13, 14) and then
not until God,spake unto him, saying,
"Go forth o3 the ark" (viii; 15, 16). A
life of obedience to the word of God.'
".i. 1001 rn .,rile 50011 Or t,ou 1S''lJedStnle:
to every time child of God. ` Notice!
Nonih's niter unto ilia Lord and his
burnt •olfieridg and the Lord'saccept
ance of iti1e
wasthe IAN'S v
n of
the line of Abel, truly redeemed, 'see-
iug',his own 'sinfulness and trusting in
redemption and acceptance only by the
blood "
od of t h ` e sacrifice. Hewas an heir
s he
of the righteousness which is by faith
al)d; by his faith and obedience eon
tleipned the world (Neb. xi, 7). The
world does not like to be condemned,
In chapter ix, 1, 7, we see. as every-
where, that the blessing of the Lord
meant fruitfulness. 'multiplication and
abundance. I ant often reminded of.
Prov. x, 22, It. V., mar.. "Tbe blessing
of the Lord maketh rich, and toil, add-
eth nothing thereto." As in salvation,
so in service, all must be of the Lord,
and apart from Him all is vain, use-
less, nothing. This is the first .time
that we find an altar mentioned in the
Bible, but the first sacrifice is seen in
Gen. iii, 21. . Both altar and •sacrifice
point on to Golgotba. where by the sac-
rifice of Himself He purged our sins
(Heb. i, 3; ix, 11-14).
In this record of the deluge and in
connection with the ark we have the
first mention of a covenant (vi, 1S), and
in our lesson chapter the eovenant is
mentioned just seven times. A cove-
nant generally required two parties„
and if either failed the covenant fell
through. This, however, is an uncon-
ditional covenant In which God.assumesn
all the responsibility and says what
He will' do or will not do for His'own
sake, because 'He Is God. He calls it
"My covenant" and "the everlasting
covenant" (15,16), in which He assures
Noah that He will never again destroy
the earth witha flood of water.
Then He graciously calls Noah's at-
tention to the bow in the cloud, saying,
"1 do set My bow in the cloud," and
in condescension to our weakness He
says, "I will look upon it that I may
remember" (verses 13, 16). On the
same line of thought He says to Is-
rael, "Put me in remembrance; let its
plead together" (Iso, xifti, 26). The
rainbow is mentioned in the Bible on
just four different occasions, here and
in Itizek. i, Rev. iv and x. and four is
the great world number.
In Rev. iv it is a green rainbow,
which is very suggestive for several
reasons. one being that green is earth's
prominent color. and He is there seen
taking possession of the earth in con-
nection with a purification by judg-
ment. Peter tells os that as the world
was once destroyed by water the world
that now is is reserved unto fire, but
WO leek for new heavens and a new
earth wherein dweileth righteousness
(II Pet. iii, 5-151. He also tells us
in the salve chapter that many will
scoff at these things, ns no doubt they
scoffed :'at Non h'5 predletton of a del-
uge, but the floe of the Lt•md will come
as a thief 111 the night.
FAVOR 6 -YEAR TERM.
U. S. Senate Approves Change In
Presidential Laws.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.-A consti-
tutional amendment which would re-
strict the President of the United
States to a term of six years and
would bar Woodrow Wilson, Theodore
Roosevelt and War. H. Taft from
again seeking election, was approved
by the Senate yesterday by the oar•
rot, majority of one vote, After a
three-day fight, in which the Progres-
sives joined with many Republicans
10 opposing the restricted Presiden-
tial tern, the Senate adopted the
original Works' resolution by a vote
of 47 to 23.
The language which it is proposed
to insert in the -constitution fn place
of the first paragraph of article 2, is
as follows:
"The executive power shall be in-
vested in a President ent of the United
Stats of America. The term of the
office of President shall be .six years;
and no person who has held the office
by election, or disoharged its powers
or duties, or acted a:r President under
the constitution and laws made in
pursuance thereof, shall be eligible to
hold again the office by election."
The resolution now goes to the
Flouse for its approval. If ratified
there by a two-thirds' vote, it will'be
submitted to' the Legislatures of the
states and will become effective when
three-fourths of the 48 states of the
Union have officially approved, it.
The adoption of the resolution came
at the close of a three -clay fight, in
which repeated attempts were made
to eD change it that it world not
affect past Presidents or the President
fri office ,when it may finally be rati-
fied by the states. All these efforts
failed. The votes taken Saturday
again demonstrated the fact that, the
Senate did not care to exempt any
person from the operation of: the sin•
gle term provision. . . -
An amendment by Senaitor• Hitch-
cock that would have exempted' past
Presidents and made the new provi-
sion take effect March 4, 1917, was
voted (Dawn 48 0, 27, and an amend-
l!1,
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But if stomach is deranged -the balance of health is destroyed and the
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ment by Senator Sutherland, to ex-
empt the President in office when the
conetttutional amendment may final-
ly be ratified, was defeated 38 to 29.
WILL SELECT STATUE.
Committee to Award Contract For
King Edward Memorial.
OTTAWA, Feb. 3. -An award will
shortly be made by the committee,
headed by Sir Edmund Walker of To-
ronto, appointed by the Government
last year to choose the best design for
the proposed Hing Edward memorial
on Parliament Hill. Some forty-two
designs were submitted to the com-
mittee by Canadian and European
sculptors. `
The committee, at its first examina-
tion of the designs some weeks ago,
oould not agree on its choice,. A se -
mond meeting was held in Ottawa on
Saturday, and it is understood an
agreement was reached, but the result
will first be communicated to the
Government. The amount voted for
the statue is $20,000.
Hold -Up Near Hespeler.
GALT, Feb. 3. --Oh istian R'ubech,
who resides at Pin Bush, was held
up by a man wearing a mask who
demanded and got his money, halfway
between Pine Bush and Hespeler,
about 6.45 p.m. on Saturday. Rubech
was employed in Hespeler, and had
just received a week's pay. It ap-
pears the robber knew this. Chief
McMaster has a clue to the highway-
man.
PEOPLE WILL RESENT IT.
British Official Have Closed Palaces
Because of Suffragettes.
LONDON, Feb. 3. -Owing to the
threats of the militant suffragettes to
wreck and ruin public property until
their demands have been granted, the
royal palaces of Kensington, Hampton'
Cuurt, Petr and Ilolyrood have been
closed to the public until further
notice. The official notification pub-
lr,,le.l Saturday. however, is silent as
to the cane of this action by the pub..
lit iilUthf,ri Lie".
All the calices arc favorite resorts,
of the people, whose wrath it is
thought writ be visited un tlie suffra-
gettes whenever an opportunity utters..
The public museums and public in-
stitutions are also aspected to be
closed.
The precautions taken by the auth-
raties 111 11111 varloua public barildings,
were full} juntiiie.l a: Saturday after-
noon a sutha_r-ttc entered the Tower
ut London and smashed a glass vaso
in the jewel house with a piece of
iron, Bidden ni the sleeve of her coat.
She We' arrested.
DOESN'T BLAME HER.
Judge Decides That Woman Had a
' Right to 1(111 Husband,•
LYNN, M.S., Feb. 3: -Mrs \Vilii.em'
Power, who k,clad her husband, e
navy yard employe, by a blow with a
wooden vice :crew when he came
home intoxicated and threw a pail of
dirty water upon her, was freed yes-
terday. She had beer! dliargecl' with
murder, but after hearing Judge-Lun-
nus declared that probable cause for
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ONEIIYE'a'All KINDSori000s
Ida the CLEANEST, SIMPLEST, and BEST HOME
DYE, one can buy --Why you don't even have to
know what KIND of Cloth your Coeds aro made
of. --So Mistakes ore Impossible.
Send for Free Color Card, Story Booklet, nd
Booklet giving results of Dyeing over other colors.
)Tho JOHNSON-RICHARDSON CO., Limited,
Montreal. Canada,
auOiurll♦; uer ler *ne grime jury nag
not been found.
Heavy Bills Against Uranium.
HALIFAX, Feb. 3 --Furness, Withy
& Co:, owners of the steamship Rap-
pahannock on Friday billed the steam-
ship Uranium for $50,000 for services
in hauling the steamer oft the rocks
at Ohebucto Head. George Brister,
owner of the steamship Bridgewater,
who had previously been engaged in
similar work on the Uranium, has
also billed her for $30,000. The case
will cone up in the Admiralty Court.
Another Banker Sentenced.
NEW YORK, Feb. 3. -For 'mis-
applying $7(,000 of the funds of the
Audobon National Bank in a deal to
obtain control of the institution, D. S.
Mills, the bank's former president,
was sentenced Yesterday to serve sev-
en years in the federal prison at
At:aitia, Mill; was found guilty by
the grand jury before which he was
tried in the U. S. District Court.
HA
J.
OILS ,.
Off'! FACE HD . , i'DY
WAS TROUaLEU FOR 8 YEARS.
Boils in themselves are not a dangerous
trouble, but still, at the same time are
very painful.
They are caused entirely by bad blood,
and to get rid of them it is absolutely
necessary to put the blood into good con-
dition.
For this purpose there is nothing to
equal that old and well known blood
medicine, Burdock Blood Bitters.
Mrs. James Mageean,• Floral, Sask,,
writes: -"I was troubled for eight years
with boils on .niy face and body, and 1
tried everything I could think of. My
neighbors told me to drink water off of
sour corn meal, brit I kept getting worse
until one day.a woman in town asked me
whyI didn't tryBurdock BloodBitters.
Mhusbnd gotBme two bottles, and
before one was gone my boils had all dis-
appeared, arid I feel like a different
woman. I can't tell you how thankful I
am for your medicine. I will recommend
it to all suffering women."
Manufactured only by The T. Milburn
Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
emxxma.•wawas.e
CALDWELL'S MOLASSES MEAL
' is a decided Economy and an excellent Investment- >,
''• ' 1.' u•- �e li 1N� r 0 - w••'?.FrrV rix r.. -+-s •5xi'.
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•
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Thousands of stockmen and farmers are consistent
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THE CALDWELL FEED CO., LIMITED,
DTJNDAS, ONTARIO. ss
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FUN- TO "; `ASH Washing Powder
$200.00 IN CASH AND PRIZES
First Prize $10. in Cash. Second Prize $5. in Cash.
Third Prize' $3. in Cash. Next Five Prizes each $2. in Cash.
Next Twenty Five Prizes each $1. in Cash and
ONE THOUSAND PRIZES IN NiEW AND USEFUL
KITCHEN UTENSILS
To be given es follows: -
100 PRIZES to the 7qt ,00 correct answers rceeived by us on Wed., Feb. 6th,
100 PRIZES to the st ,so corregb answers received by us on Wed., Feb. lath.
100 PRIZES to the 1st too correct answers received by us on Wed., Feb. loth.
Send in as many replies as you like, but all answers must reach
us by three o'clock 00 Saturday, March 1st. All
y, the replies will
be thoroughly shaken together and the first thirty three correct
replies Will receive the cash prizes/ in Che order, drawn and the
next Seven Hundred will each receive a useful 3litchen Utensil.
1033 Prizes. Answer' Toda °...
You know hogood Fun -To -Wash is? The prices are a awarded..
on, the same strictly honorably employed to ed in the manu-
A Y
facture of Fun -To -Wash.
N.
�as
""The,
Only Conditions.
With each reply uuqtt enclosed ,
one "1rlmn o It more ant from n 5e. r or roc,
package of Fun,�'q-'Wash Washing r'on'iier, and not more than one answer to he
enclosed in each Imvelolie. -Each contestant receivinga utensil )rise during the
month must lend in another answer
c t
tcompete 111 me February
cash prir' dr1 n on \TaretI,ht, Be careful to
address Contest Department.
STANDISH MANUFACTURING CO., LiMITED.
11 Colborne Street s Toronto.
The
;winner!@ pf the January contest , `sill
appear, iii next \V;eek's tosue,
1