HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-03-13, Page 7-4
LVED
M.OPERATION
How Mrs. Reed of Peoria, $11.,
Escaped The Sur-
geon's Knife.
Peoria, 111.—"I wish to let every one
know whatLydia E: Pinkham's V egetabl e
Compound has done
forme. Fortwoyears
I suffered. The doe -
tor said I had a tumor
and the only remedy
was the surgeon's
knife. My mother
;'; bought me Lydia E.
i..' Pinkham's Vegeta-
ble Compound, and
todayl am a well and
healthy woman. For
months I suffered
from inflammation, and your Sanative
Wash relieved me. I am glad to tell
anyone what your medicines have done
for me. You can use my testimonial in
any way you wish, and I will be glad
to answer letters."— Mrs. CBIusTINA
REED, 105 Mound St., Peoria, 111.
Mrs. Lynch Also Avoided
Operation.
Jessup, Pa.—"After the birth of my
fourth child, I had severe organic inflam-
mation. I would have such terrible pains
that it -did not seem as though I could
stand it. This kept up for three long
months, until two doctors decided that
an operation was needed.
"Then one of my friends recommended
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound and after taking it for two months
I was a well woman."—Mrs. JOSEPH A.
LYNCH, Jessup, Pa.
Women who suffer from female ills
should try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta-
ble Compound, one of the most success-
ful remedies the world has ever known,
before submitting to a surgical opera-
tion.
NEWTON ARRESTED.
Lawyer Who Defended Crippen Is Now
1 n the Courts.
LONDON, March 10.—Arthur New-
ton, the lawyer who came into so
much prominence during the trial of
Dr. Crippen for murder in connection
with which he was subsequently sus-
' pended from practice, was on Satur-
day brought up at Bow street police
'court on the charge of conspiracy to
defraud Dr. Hans Thorsch, a wealthy
I young citizen of Vienna, Austria. The
!!sum involved was $115,000. The mag-
i in remanding the accused de -
I scribed the case as "a regular swindle
I and imposed the heavy bail of $50,000.
I Alongside Arthur Newton in the
!prisoner's enclosure stood Berkeley
Bennet, a land agent for whom the
I magistrate refused to take bail, while
a warrant has been issued for a third
!party to the alleged conspiracy, who
balls himself Count Andor Pestices and
says he is an Hungarian nobleman.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
Little LivGr PillB�
Must Bear Signature ei
See Paa'Slmife Wrapper Below.
Ware small and es east
Intake ole stela)
• FOR HEADACHE.
CARTERo FOR DIZZINESS.
ITTLE FOR BILIOUSNESS.
VEII FOR TORPID LINER.
FOR CONSTIPATION
PI LLQ. FOR %ALLLaw SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
681!fi722RIi NUn,u ynnAT C, I
tela
ps �� I puratT Yegetahro ,,r+rE..���li:
CURE t!CKC Htle 'Acle e
DON'T NEGLECT
YOUR WATCH
/�
AWATCH is, a delicate piece
,,Q'1 oaf machinery.
It calls for
toss attention than most
machinery,'but must be cleaned
and oiled occasionally to kcc)p
perfect time. e
With proper care a Waltham„
Watch will keep perfect time
for a lifetime. It will 'pay von
• well to let us clean your wamb
,every 12 or Js months.
W. R. COUNTER
Jeweler and Optician`,,
issuer of
Marriage Licenses.
1EXCUSE
&y
s,<, .F1',reeeff'ttelr!eii :hall`s to
Novelized from
the 'Comedy of
the Saeio Nacre
ILLUSTRATED
R tpei't area Plrotofrapiss of
>IL1
ea
3y
fieriY
ula
ve
d
efhe Play as Produced
jg77a
1 .i1
ek i, c Is'xuir j.
OopYc1B•ht, use 55 H. X. Fly no,
Then Ashton intervened like a dog
in the Manger and dragged her off to
her seat, leaver g the young man to
exclaim:
"Some tamai"nd, that!
Another young man oehind hint
growled: "Cut out the tamarinds and
get to business. Mallory will be here
any minute."
"I hate to think What he'll do to us
when he sees what we've done to
him."
"Oh, he won't dare to fight in the
presence of his little bridey-widey. Do
you see theporter in there?"
"Yes, suppose. he objects."
"Well, we have the tickets. We'll
:]aim it's our section till Mallory and
Mrs. Mallory come."
They moved on into the car, where
the porter confronted them. When he
saw that they were loaded with bun-
dles of all shapes and sizes, he waved
them away with scorn:
"The emigrant sleepa runs only
4'oosdays and Thuzzdays."
From behind the first mass of pack-
ages came a brisk military answer:
"You black hound! About face-
forward march! Section number one."
The porter retreated down the aisle,
apologizing glibly. "'Souse me for
questioning' you, but you -all's baggage
looked kind o' eccentric at first"
The two young men dumped their
parcels on the seats and began to un-
wrap them hastily.
"If Mallory catches us, he'll kill us,"
said Lieutenant Shaw. Lieutenant
Hudson only laughed and drew out a
long streemer of white satin ribbon.
Its glimmer, and the glimmering eyes
of the young man excited Mrs. Whit-
comb so much that after a little hesi-
tance she moved forward, followed by
the jealous Ashton.,
"Oh, what's up?" she ventured, "It
looks like something bridal:"
"Talk about .womanly intuition!"
said Lieutenant Hudson, with an in-
gratiating salaam.
And then they explained to her that
their classmate at 'West Point, being
ordered suddenly to the Philippines,
had arranged to elope with his beloved
Marjorie Newton; had asked them to
get the tickets and check the baggage
while he stopped at a minister's to
"get spliced and hike for Manila be
this train."
Having recounted this plan in the
full belief that it was even at that mO
ment being carried out successfiill:',
Lieutenant :Hudson, with a ghoulish
smile, explained: •
"Being old friends of the bride and
groom, we want to fix their section up
in style and make them truly comfort-
able." '
"Delicious!" gushed Mrs. Whitcomb.
"But you ought to have some rice and
old shoes." -
"Here's the rice," said Hudson.
"Here's the old shoes," said Shaw.
"Lovely!" cried Mrs. Whitcomb, but
then she grew soberer. "I should think,
though, that they—the young couple—
would have preferred a stateroom."
"Of course," said Hudson, almost
blushing, "but it was taken. This was
the best we could do for them."
"That's wiry we want to make it
nice and bride -like," said Shawl "Per-
haps you could help us—a woman's
touch—"
Oh, I'd love to," she glowed, has-
tening into the section among the
young men and the bundles. The un-
usual stir attracted the porter's sus-
picions. He came forward with a look.
of authority:
'Souse me, but wha-what's all
this?"
"Vanish—get out," said Hudson,
poking a coin at him. As he turned
to obey, Mrs. Whitcomb checked him
with: "Oh, Porter, could you get us
a hammer and some nails?"
The porter almost blanched: "Good
Lawd, Miss, you ain't aliowin' to drive
nails, in that woodwork, is you?" That
woodwork was to him what the altar
is to the priest.
But Hudson, resorting to heroic
Measures, hypnotized him with a two -
dollar bill: "Here, take this and see
nothing, hear nothing, say nothing."
The porter caressed it and chuckled:
"I'm blind, deaf and speechless." He
turned away, only to come back at
once with a timid "'Souse me!"
"You here yet?" growled Hudson,
Anxiously the porter pleaded: "I
just want to set one question. Is you
all firm' up for a bridal couple?"
I "Foolish question, number eight
million, forty-three," said Shaw. "An -
ewer, no we are."
t ,
The porter's face glistened like
fresh stove polish as he gloated over
the prospect. "I tell you, it'll be mahty
lrefreshin' to have a bridal couple on
bode! This dog -on Reno train don't
carry nothin' much but di-vorcees. I'm
just naclially hongry for a bridal cou-
ple."
"Brile coup -sic -le?" came a voice,
dike an echo that had somehow be
come intoxicated in transit. It was
Little Jimmie Wellington looking for
more sympathy. "Whasa zis about
brile couple?"
"Why, here's Little Butteroup!
Jiang out young Hudson, looking ap
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature. of
!UMATESMNEP1
wig IN
Suffered 'Tortures Until
"Fruit -a -tines" Cured Him
AlcMrrrAN'$ CoRNZR, ONT.
STMT. ;3oth. r9So
"Your remedy, "Fruit -a -trues" is a
perfect panacea for Rheumatism. For
years, I suffered distressing pain from
Sciatica or Sciatic Rheumatism, being
laid
up several times a year for days at a
time. I went to different doctors who told
me there was no use doing anything—it
would pass away. They gave me
mustard plasters and other remedies
that did no good. Plasters took no
effect on me—except to blister me and
make raw spots. I took many advertised
remedies without benefit, but fortunate-
ly, about two years ago, I got •'Fruit-a-
tives" and they cured rae,
Since then, I take "Fruit -a -fives"
occasionally and keep free of pain. I
ani satisfied "Fruit -a -lives" cured me of
Rheumatism and they will cure anyone
who takes them as directed. If this
letter would be of value to you,
publish it" JOHN B. MCDONAL D,
Indeed, this letter is of value to us
and to the thousands of• sufferers from
Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lumbago and
Neuralgia. It points the way to a
certain cure. 5oc a box, 6 for $2.5o trial
size, see. At dealers or from Fruit -a -
tires Limited, Ottawa.
blm'in amazed amusement.
"Did I un'stan' somebody say you're
preparing for brile coupl'?"
Lieutenant Shaw grinned. "I don't
know what you understood, but that's
what we're doing."
Immediately Wellington's great face
began to churn- and work like a big
eddy in a river. Suddenly he was
weeping. "Excuse these tears, zhent-
tlemen, but T once -I was once a
b -b -bride myself."
"He looks like a whole wedding par-
ty," was Asbton's only comment on
the copious grief. It was poor Welling-
ton's fate to hunt as vainly for sym-
pathy as Diogenes for honesty. The
decorators either ignored him or
shunted him aside. They were inter-
,ested,in a strange contrivance of rib-
bons and a box that Shaw produced.
"That," Hudson explained, "is a lit-
tle rice trap. We hang that up there
and when the bridal couple sit down
=biff! a shower of rice all over them.
It's bad, eh?"
Everybody agreed that it was a
happy thought, and even Jimmie Wel-
lington, like a great baby, bounding
from tears to laughter on the instant,
was chortling: "A rishe trap? That's
abslootly, splendid—greates' invensh'
modern times. I must stick around
and see her when she flops." And
then he lurched forward like a too -
obliging elephant. "Let me help you."
Mrs. 'Whitcomb, who had now
mounted a step ladder and poised her -I
self as gracefully as possible, shrieked.
with alarm, as she saw Wellington's'
bulk rolling toward her frail support.
kIf Hudson and Shaw bad not been
'football veterans at West Point and'
had not known just what to do when
the center rush comes bucking the
line, they could never have blocked
that flying wedge. But they checked
him and impelled him backward
through his own curtains into his own
berth. •
Finding himself on his back, he de-
cided to remain there. And there he
remained, oblivious of the carnival
preparations going on just outside his
canopy.
CHAPTER VII.
The Masked Minister.
Being an angel must have this great
advantage at least, that one may sit in
he grandstand overlooking the earth
and enjoy the ludicrous blunder of
that great blind man's buff we call,
Ufe.
This night, if any angels were
hwatching Chicago, the Mallory mix-up
'anust have given them a good laugh,
br a good cry—according to their na-
tures.
Here were Mallory and Marjorie,
still merely engaged, bitterly regret-
ting their inability to get married and
to continue their journey together.
iThere in the car were the giggling
conspirators preparing a bridal mock-
ery for their sweet confusion.
Then tbe angels might have nudged
bne another and said:
"Oh, ft's all right now. There goes
ithe minister hurrying to their very
!oar. Mallory has the license in his
pocket, and here comes the parson.
!Recta .
Y
And then the angelic cheer must
!have died out as the one great hurrah,
,br a crowded ball -ground' is quenched
a air .when the home team's vitally
seeded home run swerves outside' the.
e and drops useless as a' stupid foul
ll.
In a shabby old hack, were two of
the happiest runaways that ever
'sought a train. They were not miser -
Able like the young couple 10 the taxi-
cab. They were white-haired both.
iThey had been married for thirty
]years. Yet this was their real honey-
Imoon, their real elopement.
The little woman in the timid gray
;bonnet clapped her hands and tittered
dike a schoolgirl.
"Oh, Walter, I can't believe we're
really going to leave Ypsilanti for a
Jwbile. Oh, but you've earned it after
(thirty years of being a preacher."
"Hush. Don't let me hear you say
itho awful word," said the little old
'man in the little 'black hat and the
Iclose•frt,ting black bib. "I'm so tired
hof it, Sally, I don't want anybody on
the train to know it."
"They can't help guessing it, with
(your collar buttoned behind."
And then the amazing minister act-
ually dared to Say, "Here's where I
change it around. What's more, he
actually did it. Acttaliy took off his
collar and buttoned it to the front.
The old carriage seemed almost to
rock with the earthquake of the deed.
"Why, Waiter Temple!" his wife ex-
claimed. "What would they say in
Ypsilan
' "They'll never know," he answered,
defiantly.
"Brit your bib?" she said
r,;
thumeet di' that, too," he cried,
ad he' o" and f°
�. 11114 t u Etnied:itinto . '' THE INSURANCE AGE
t 0r1q, 11 T
a handbag. "Look what •I've bought,' L. �la�.,.
w
r'
n,
,:
And dangled 'before t •
r h r� ed b fo o her sallied Companies Not Very Friendly to Mr. ;l liEs • and
eyes a long afait� whioh the sudden McKeown's BIII;.
light from a passing' lamppost re
vealed,"to be nothing less than "a dar-
ing red tie.
'- The oldlady touched it to make
Continued next week,
SUNDAY
scoeoie
' ;Life insurance companies are not
viewing with any degree of friendlis
ness the amendment to tiie Insurance
Act proposed by Mr, C. R. McKeown
(Dufi'erin), to make the company ac-
cept the age given by the applicant
at the time the insurance contract is
Issued. The object of the bill is to
protect beneficiaries who may have
difficulty after the death of the insured
In producing proof of age. Mr. Mc-
Keowii's bill puts the entire reopen•
Lesson XL—First Quarter, For siuility upon the company, and they
claim they will be made the victims
March 16, 1913. 'of unscrupulous individuals. 'They
Ifo not have to accept the policy," said
the member for Dufferia,, "and it is
their .own lookout if they agree to
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.
Text of the Lesson, Gen. xxii, 1-13.
'Memory Verses, 12,13—Golden Text,
' Hos. vi, 6—Commentary. Prepared by.
Rev. D. M. Stearns.
lir the last part of the previous chap-
ter we see Abraham dwelliug at Beer-
sheba, the well. of the oath, having
made a covenant with Abimelech.
There he called on the name of Jeho-
vah, and for the first time we have
the name of "the everlasting. God,".
which carries us on to Ps. xc, 2; Iso.
si, 28. Every new name of God. bas
some new revelation of Himself:
The everlasting God not only tells us
that He Is from everlasting to ever-
lasting, but ile loves with everlasting
love and carries us in His everlasting
arms and is always the same Jehovah.
(Jer. xxxi, 3; Deut. zxxiii, ef). Whether
He blesses us or tries us, He is the
same God of love. For years the
heart of Abraham had been made glad
by this boythis beloved son for whom
he hadawaited full twenty-five years,
and now he is commanded 'to offer him
for a burnt offering. There is nothing.
quite like this In all the Bible story.
The demand seems overwhelmingly
awful, but God is love, and God is
faithful, and Abraham knew it. The
New Testament record is that, know-
ing the promise and being certain that
God would somehow fulfill it, even if
He had to raise Isaac up from the
dead, Ile did receive him from the dead
in figure (Heb. xi, 17-19).
After some twenty years Jacob re•
ceived Joseph back as from the dead.
God spared Isaac and Joseph, but He
spared not His own Sou 'Rom. viii, 32).
and, He being literally alive from the
dead, all things are made sure to us
in Him.
1 cannot think tbat Abrabam talked
this over with Sarah; but, being sure
that he would bring the boy back again,
he started off early In the morning,
taking only two of his young men with
him. His destination was bforiah,
which is now part of Jerusalem, the
same hill that Daviel bought from Or -
non, the Jebusite, where the destroy-
ing angel stayed his hand when Jeho-
vah said, "It is enough," and where
Solomon built the temple (II Sam.
xxty, le, 24, 25; II Chiron, ill, 1).
How wonderful are the associations
of truths and places in Scripture and
how all center around the cross and
the indescribable sacrifice of the Son
of God! It was on the third day that
the place was reached and -"the great
trausuction accomplished (rose 4), and
how often a thi1'd day event calls our
attention to the greet center of all past
history and to the resurrection time,
ever drawing nearer! Consider Jonah
and the marriage in Calla and all oth-
ers that you can find in the book.
Note the confidence with which Abra-
ham says to the young men, "I and the
lad will go and worship and come
again to you" (verse 5). He was fully
persuaded. that it would be so. Now
see the lad carrying the wood and the
father with the fire and the knife. and
they went both of them together (verse
6). One cannot but seethe Son of
God bearing His cross and remember
the words, "It pleased the Lord to
bruise Him; He bath put Him to
grief" (Isa. hill, 10). It was the only
way to save us and so wondrously
foreshadowed in Abraham and Isaac.
Hear the lad as he says to his father,
"Behold the fire and the wood, but
where is tbe iamb for a burnt offer-
ing?" (Verse 7.) Oh, the anguish of the
father's heart! But do we ever con-
sider the anguish of the heart of God
the Father?
'.Vhat did he know of "the Lamb slain
from the foundation of the world?"
(Rev. xiii, 8.) Was it just then or when
he placed the ram on the altar in
Isaac's stead' or through the whole in-
cident that be saw Christ's day and
was lad? Notice the
s (Johnviii, 56. )
repeated saying, "They went both of
them together" (verses 5, 6, 8), remind-
ing us of the "they two went on" of Il
Kings it, 6, 7, 8, 11, and suggesting per.
feet oneness and accord. We do not
imagine any resistance on the part of
Isaac as his father placed him on the
altar upon the wood and bound him
and took the knife to slay his son. We
think of such words ns "of his own
voluntary will;" "I lay down my life of
myself;" "I delight to do Thy will, 0
my God" (Lev. i, 3; John x, 17, 18; Ps.
zl, 8; Bab. x, 7, 9), and we remember
ho thegave Himself into
w Lord Jesus sav II im s
the bands of His enemies and suffered
them to take Him and bind Him and
lead Him and mock Him and scourge
Hen and crucify Him, and He took it
all as a cup :which His Fattier gave
Him to drink. It was enough. The child
of promise was given back to God.
Abraham saw God and not the cbild,
and now the Lord speaks, the uplifted
hand is stayed, and the ram is placed
on tee altar in lsnac's stead.
Isaac was spared and given back
from the dead in a figure. God spared
nut His own Son, and its truly as the
rain died in is,aac's stead so did Jesus
Christ die In my stead: "His own self
bare my sins in His own body on the
tree; "the Son of Godloved me and.
gore himself for me." By His being
made a curse for as all who truly re,.
ce!ve Elim are delivered from the curse
or the law (1 Pet. Ii, 24; (,al. II, 20: 111
13t. The ford did see and provide—
Jehovah-limb (attest.) 14 and nrarfiin°.
What ' He has provided in Min see
Flph. 1. 11.7: Rom. viii, 32: 1 Pet i. 3, 4,
and remember that all is freer' by
grace (kite 111, Y4►. .
tle tit
For those ills peculiar to women Dr. Pierce,
in recommends his "Favorite Prescription" as
''THE ON
99
ma A medicine spared by regular graduated physician of anus-
rese experience in treating woman's diseases—carefully adapted
toork in
w harmony with the most (elicate'iemini econstitution,
All medicine dealers have sold it with satisfaction to cuss
P.31 tourers for the past 40 years. It is now obtainable in liquid or
sugar-coated tablet form at the drug store—or send 50orle-cent
stamps for atrial box, to Buffalo.
Every woman may write fully tad'ccntd nti 1
1
to Dr. Pierce,
Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, fuFalo; N. Y., and may be
sure that ber case will receive careful conscientious, confidential
consideration, and that experienced medical advice will be given
.. to her absolatoly :Voce.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liv.
the age of an applicant without being ° g'
er and bowcls. Sugar coated, tiny grannies • easy to take ao candy. I� 1
satisfied as to the proofs.' j
Dr. Forbes Godfrey has introduced
his amendment to the Marriage Act
Iwhich seeks to compel the securing
of a medical certificate as to mental
and moral soundness before mar-
riage. The intention of: the bill is to
prevent the marriage of degenerates,
the mentally unsound and those with
Inherited criminal tendencies, A
Similar bill was .introduced last year,
but although it received some support,
It was not adopted.
THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE
SUFFER UNTOLD AGONY
FROAf1
yspe
It is one of the most prevalent troubles
of civilized life, and the noor dyspeptic
cannot even enjoy a mea l;without distress-
ing aftereffects, for nearly everything that
enters a weak dyspeptic stomach acts as
an irritant. Burdock Blood 13itters will
regulate the stomach, stimulate secre-
tion of the saliva, and gastric juice to
facilitate digestion, remove acidity, and
tone up the entire system.
Mrs. Dennis Hebert, St. Boniface,
Mao., writes:—'tI have used Burdock
Blood Bitters, with great success, for
dyspepsia, indigestion and sour stomach.
i was terribly troubled with my stomach
for months, and spent a lot of money
without getting any relief, until 1 hap-
pened to see about a woman using it,
and her trouble seemed the seine as
mine. I tried one bottle, and was so
'ouch relieved, I bought live more, and
Mem taken them, and I now can eat any-
teinri 1 wish."
M;.nufactured only by The T. Milburn
Co.. Limited, Toronto, Ont.
TUBERCULOSIS TEST
Or. McCullough Interviewed the Fa-
mous German Scientist
Persons afflicted with tuberculosis
in Ontario may receive some benefit
groin the discovery of Dr. Friedmann.
Dr. J. S. W. McCullough, Secretary
of the Provincial Board of Health,
went to New York to interview the
celebrated German. scientist with re-
gard to his cure for consumption. ,IIe
was granted an interview with Dr.
Friedmann and witnessed a demon-
stration of his treatment on Saturday.
When DrMcCullough returnsthe
en-
tire
matter will be taken up with
Sion. W. 7. Manna, the Provincial
'Secretary.
THE COMBINES
Hon, Mr, Foy Explains 'Nhy a Prose
cation Was • Dropped
Papers in
conneetimi With the drop
•
Ping of the piosecutfou against the.
Stamped Ware Association were sub'
witted to the Legislature. These dia-
closed that the four prominent Com -
I pairies concerned were: the McClary
IManufacturing Company, London; the
E, T: Wright & Co., Hamilton;, the
Kemp Manufacturing' Compar Tor-
onto, and the Thomas Davieson &
Co., of Montreal. Mr. J C Eliot;,
I Who had asked for the correspoudenc
said that action, was instituted mmies
! thein for the restriction of trade as
i the unduly enhancing o1 prices rain
, than six years ago, that it halts
awaiting the decision in the Grover`
Guild case, and from that point al.
activity ceased. It was six years ago
1 Mr. Elliott pointed out, since the pre
secutions were dropped, yet in tug:
time the price of lanterns ha$ risi1:
from fifty to seventy -flee cents. Dhi
that indicate that the combine sti..
existed? At any rate, it ivas up tt
the Government to explain, Hon 1.
J. Foy declared that the Opposition
spoke in an objectionable manner by
hinting that he had been approaeled
by the supposed combine people tvitl,
a view to obtaining a speedy settle-
ment. Much misapprehension, he ad
ded, existed throughout the eouutr•)
as to what a combine was. "'fire la.i
Is not always gainst combines," Hon
Mr. Foy explained. "lit fact, the la:'
permits some combines. The la.
says that before an agreement aon,n;
companies becomes a cotnbi;.e sue!
agreement must unduly restrict sir, en
reasonably enhance the price of goads
A gombination of traders or jobber..
to keep up their business does nail
necessarily mean that thsy,liave hick-
. en the criminal code; it is in deter-
' mining the border line of unduly which
occasions all the trouble. It has been
recognized by the courts: over and
over again that it ie proper to make'
agreements to increase business, and1
no general rules can be laid down."
He cited the Grocers' Guild, its huge
expense of prosecution, its acquittal
after eleven d).vs of hearing, and the
abuse which hail been heaped on him-
self for lncuvfing emelt expenditure.
In this Stamped Ware Wase, his author-
ity for checking proceedings was G. T.
Blackstock, Crown counsel, who, he
said, took several months to look into
the case, found it very difficult to
obtain willing witnesses, and who
finally reported that it was quite ob-
vious that the alleged combine had
not contravened any c4 the statutes.
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Ifs he CLEANEST. SIMPLEST, and BEST HOME
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Send for Prce Color Curd, Story Booklet,, and
Booklet-givineresults of Dyeing over other colors.
al The JOHNSON-RICHARDSON CO., Limited,
Montreal. Canada.
A "Feed" that adds 25% to the value of Stock in a very short period
Caldwell's Molasses Meal
It does more than that—it also insures the
health of your cattle beside/ reducing general
feeding costs by a substantial margg n. It is
84% pure Cane Molasses and 16% edible moss
selected for its unique digestive action. You
know the feeding value of pure Cane Molasses.
Caldwell's Meal is the milt wastelesx torm in
which it can be fed. It's always palatable and
dry to the touch. Takes the place of an equal
amount of other cereal, making it more
palatable and digestible. Most likely your
feedman handles it, but write to us at any
rate for the facts.
THE CALDWELL FEED CO., Limited,
DUNDAS, ONTARIO. 92
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