HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-05-22, Page 6li
i liWr ¢`t
FAD TO LAY-OFF
Lot Ha Took GIN TILLS
Buff do, N,V.
a "I have been. a Pullman ce aductor on
the C. P. R. and Michigan Lentral for
the last three years.
About four years ago, I was laid tip.
with intense pain in thc:.groin, a very
sole back, and sefrcred most severely
when X ti ictl to nrinate.
I treated with my family physician
for two months for Gravel In The
Tharider hot dill not receive any benefit,
About that time, I net another railroad .
-.man who had been similarly affected.
. and who had been aired by GIN PILLS,
after having been given up by a pro-
an
ro-
aninentph}s.eiails who treated him for
Diabetes. IIe is now running on the
road and is perfectly cured, Ile strongly
advised me to try GIN PILLS which T
diel—wine the result that the pains left
lire entirely,
P'RANIg S. IDE.
50c. a box, 6 for $2.50. Sample free
Ifou write National Drug and Chemical
Co of Canada Limited, Toronto. 137
BITTEN BY A DOG
Three Toronto Children Suffer
Severe Disfigurement.
THE ANIMAL MAY BE MAD
Wild Career.. of Savage Animal
Through Streets While Crowds Are
.on Their Way to Witness Church
Parade Result,e, In Dangerous
Injury to Three Youngsters—
Policeman's Plucky Act,
TORONTO, May 10.—Attacked by a
dog which the police at No, 4 station
think had rabies, three children were
badly bitten early Sunday afternoon.
'Two of them have been taken to the
Hospital for Sick Children for fur-
ther treatment after their wounds had
been dressed in the General Hospital.
Little Marion Volk, of 100 Sumach
street, Was playing on the lawn in
front of her home with a friend, Vio-
let Woodman. Both children ars
very young. Without a minute':
warning the dog sprang at Marion,
and, knocking her down, commenced
to bite her. It chewed her face badly,
inflicted ugly wounds across the nose
and the upper lip. Passersby fright;
erred the dog away and then ran for
safety as the beast, snapping and
frothing at the .mouth, dashed up
Sumach street.
When the ermine reached lllevin's
place, Gordon Adams, 10 13levin's-
place, aged three years, was its next
victim. His face was badly bitten
and scratched. The dog wa;s scared
off, and the child was taken to its
home.
By this time word had been sent
to Wilton avenue police station, and
Constables Pillinger and White were
sent after the dog. Before the officers
had reached Sumach street another
girl, an orphan, had been attacked,
and suffered as badly as the former
victims.
Fearing that the dog might enter
Riverdale Park, the officers hurried
after the animal, Chasing it up Su-
mach street, along Carlton street,
which was crowded with people who
were on their way to the garrison
parade, it ran with Pillinger and
White in hot pursuit. Residents saw
it coming and pulled their 'children
to safety.
Still selecting the crowded thor-
oughfares it crossed Parliament
street and continued it s load flight.
Matters were assuming serious pro-
portions, as the street were crowded,
and the officers again feared that the
dog might enter Allan Gardens,
Head it off! shouted Pillinger to
P. C. Peacock, who was on that beat.
Without the least hesitation Peacock
rushed across the road, and al-
though unarmed, jumped on the
beast. He is a very heavy man, and
by holding the dog by the weight of
his body, Pillinger was able to de-
spatch it with his club,
The dog was taken to the police
station, and the head will be sent to
Dr. Amyot, provincial analyst.
ALLIES IN DEADLOCK.
Greece and Servia Block Balkan
• Peace Prospects.
LONDON, May' 19, ---All the dele-
gates to the 13alkan Peace Conference.
are now in London and will be formal: -
1y welcomed to -day by Sir Edward
Grey, Secretary for Foreign, Affairs,
The first meeting of the conference
will be held: Tuesday.
Whether a proliniinar peace treaty
grwill he signed this week, as was ex-
eeted, is still cloubtfu . The Greek
:and Servian delegates have not re.
.'ceived authority to sign a treaty, and
;.it is supposed that Greece and Servia
,-are pursuing a poliey of delay in or-
der to keep the Bulgarian Sprees be -
..fore the Tehatalja and Bulair lines
while the territorial disputes with
Bulgaria are still unsettled.
L+ is believed, however, that the
?powers will be able to influence Greece.
:.,and Servia to sign.
tuusly injures', two Or '^nrietn, r'ra.utt ('
I:'oyr chef, and, Laura Miller, waitres9, 1
etre in the Iioepital,
The "cause of the 'acci'dent .has not
.Moen determined, but an inquest' will
be heldto-day, The parents of Mise'
Junior reside at Echo Bay.
Unionist Victorious,
NEWMARI:ET, .ling., May. l0; -The
Unionist party Win a brilliant'i=tetory
'in the, Parliamentaryelectiori for the
Newmarket ket d:iVIsron of Cambridge-
shire bend Friday, and the figures for
wilioh were announced, on Saturdays
Denison Ponder ('Unionist), :5,251 ;
Ginn. Nicholls (Lib.), 1,400—maj., 15'f;
r.
The election was held to fill the seat
formerly occupied by the late Sir
Charles Day hose of !Montreal, Can-
ada, a Liberal, who died suddenly on
April 20, after making itis first flight
as -a passenger iu an aeroplane. at
Hendon,
JAPAN PEELS BURT.
Californian Discrimination ale • a Ras
• sial One They Think,
• TOI(IO, May i9.—Faith in .the Am-
erican. people to see that justice is
done the Japanese the dominating
noteinthe t e diseusron of the Califor-
nia alien land ownership legislation.
War talk'is clenouilcecl as ridiculous,
and only calculated to embarrass :the
two,. Government which ate laboring
for a • peaceful settlement by • diplo-
macy,
It is conceded, however, that failure
on the part of the Americans to re-
spond to the Japanese appeal for a
discontinuance of the alleged discrim-
ination would be liable to lead to.
some estrangement of the peoples, The
Japanese public ;generally are convine-,
ed that AU land. bill is a racial and
not an economic measure, and hence
a blow to national pride, and they feel
that the World must be taught the ne-
cessity of equal -treatment for the
whites and non -whites,
The Tokio newspapers are loud in
their praise of President Wilson's
zeal in tris endeavors to preserve the
traditional friendship, and they re-
cognize the difficulties which •confront
the President of the TJnit-'rl States in
the confusing eonflict between state
and federal rights.
The Nielii Nicht is of the opinion
that the question as to whether the
Washington Government can procure
for the Japanese equal rights depends
upon the strength of Japanese diplo-
macy, and urge; the Government to
take a firm aittitude.
The joint cetehratinil of the Japa-
nnse and American peace societies
yesterday was attended by 1.000 Jape -
hese. Speeches were t c prude by Count
Okluna, former Minister of Frn'eign
Affairs; Tia,rm Sek.itani, mayor of
Tokio, and T,unejirn Itliyturlca, who
was councillor of the Japanese em-
bassy at Washington in 1905, All of
the speakers etidearorull l" clarify the
situation and chivvied jingoism.
G.T.P. NEARLY READY.
First Passenger Train to Edmonton
Will Run In August,
WINNIPEG, May 19.--T:arly in Aug-
ust, it was learned at the Grand Trunk
Pacific offices, y a tr. r d tt , a regular
through passenger e l r"as service be-
tween Montreal and Edmonton will
be inaugurated. This train will peas
through Winnipeg card all intr?rrved-
'rate points on the traneeantineutal
will be Ititclai'cl up. Tbc- new train
will probably be a limited oxprees,
making fast time the whole way.
Details are not yet to hand as to the
time when the Grand Trunk Pacific
will take over the eastern section of
the road, but it is understood no cola -
((Wens will be placed in the way of
the new train service by the transcan-
tinental •commissioner.
Through lake and rail service will
be started June 7 and surnmer'sclre-
dules will be arranged so as to make
continued connections between the
two cities. •
Passengers will leave Montreal and
travel to Sarnia •and detraining there
will embark on a Northern Naviga-
tion steamer for Fort William. Arriv-
ing there the traveler will find the
passenger train waiting.
LEAPED FROM CAR.
Toronto Woman Broke Her Neck as
Result of Fright.
TORONTO, May 19,—Frightened by
the explosive blowinga: out of a fuse,
Mrs. Mary Glover,' wife gf George
Glover, 207 Bolton avenue; • jumped
from a .westbound Carlton car near
Sackville street at 8.30 o'clock Satur-
day night and broke •her neck when
she struck the pavement. James W.
Derbyshire of 29 Whalen avenue,' who
was sitting on the front seat in 'the
the vestibule, sprang from his place
to the street when the explosipn oc-
curred, and it is thought that A'.i.re.
Glover followed his example. Mr,
Denbyshire was injured about the
head when he fell, but was not ser-
iously hurt.
PACIFIC FLOWS IN.
Panama Canal Is Now Open at the
Western End.
PANAMA, May 1.9:—The water:, of
the Pacific Ocean' were yesterday let
into the Panama Canal. A giant blast,
composed of 32,750 pounds of dyna-
mite, wasshot demolishing, thedike
de st d l.c
to the south of Mirafiores locks and
allowing the water to flow into an
extensive section in which excavations
have practically been completed. The
blast was successful inevery way,
?�and the vibration was felt in Panaina
HU¢BAND 18 IN JAIL.
City as though there had been a slight
Discovery of Wife'•s Body In River
Leads to Arrest.
SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont., May 18.
—Joseph Larue was taken in charge.
by the police Saturday night and lodg-
ed in
odg-ed.'in the district jail, following the
discovery of the body of his wife ;n
the river some distance below tire`
Ssiult. Mrs. Larue disappeared about
three weeks ago, and her hesbanclr
said he had ft
c le her a on the: street af-
ter she` had: visited a theatre, to visit
a local hotel, witlt, the understanding
that he would rejoin her in a few
minutes. Since then; she had not been
seen,
An inquest Will be held to -day.
Lathe is . 25 years of age.
Girl Killed In Kitchen,.
SAULT STE, MARIE, May 111:•• -An
explosion in the large cooping range
at 'the International' ttyesterday
I s r nal I3o a,l
morning, Wrecked, the ki.teherr a11
caused the death of Jean Junior, head
coning -room gni, whose head was
completely 'severed. from bet body.
,Several others were, inure or less ser -
earthquake.
Would Abolish Slit` Gown:
PITTSBURG, Pa., May 19. -The
"'pantaloon gown" .and "slit gown"
will riot charm Pittsburg if Council -
Man W. A. }leveler's resolution,
which he will introduce in council,
passes: It bravely provides for a cern-
rnittee of three councilmen to confer
with modistes seti h ma ist and, thelegal stands
of .modesty, This .committee xvfll
have to decide just what is the small-
est cir'cumfer'ence allowed. a shirt,
just ]tow rnueh';liosiery it may reveal,
and just what fashions are withiir the
law, and what uithnnt.
CASTOR 1A
S
For Infants and Children.
The KindY u YoHave Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
No 'lows?
Have you a splendid stock
of goods ?
Have you just got in o a new
line of popular articles?
Are you making a special
price an leftover lots?
Who Knows About ft?
Whyeverybody not let elybo dy know
by having us print some CIR-
CULARS and POSTERS
(Or' you?
They'll Still at it.
131iNG1IAZI, Africa. Id y: 19.—ital-
ia,ns and .\rants suffered severe losses,
in a recent engegelllent et Sidi Garbo.
Gen. Gaxibrectlr, ememanding' the.
Italian forces at •Deena, stormed an
entrenched camp of Arabs and liter a
etalf fight drove them nut, The
hire had had ]riirdly established their posi-
tions when they were vigorously at-
'ttn'ltcd on both flanks. They again
repulsed the enemy. Reports of the
casualties have nut been received.
Spencer Leading.
MEDICINE HAT, Alta., May 19:—
With forty boxes counted the recount
shows .Mayor Spencer had made a big
gain .and at the close of the session
he was leading Hon. C. R. Mitchell by
five majority. There aro sorn'c 19
boxes still to be counted, the majority
of them from city polls:
%V II EN BARS' t'it1ES.
When the baby cries Continually
dol not putt it down for pure ugli-
neSs--th'at is not the baby's nti
tare—it is tot be balmy and laugh-
ing. Every baby should cry on an
average of fifteen o twenty min-
utes a day—:that is ha'av, he streng-
thens his lungs. But mothers if
your baby gives sharp piercing
cries tar low sobbing wails, he is in
Hain and needs attention. Nothing
wilt relieve the little one so quickly
as Baby's Own Tablets. They reg-
ulate the stomach and bowels, ex-
pel worms. break up colds. and will
make baby happy. The Tablets
are sold by medicine dealers or by
,nail. at 25 cents a box from The
Do. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock -
vine, Ont,
HAIR OF YAK TAILS
Brings Ten Inetters an Ounce as Com-
mercial Commodity
Among tbt' rr;a'ly animal products
imported tel r. wide varlety of pur-
poses from foreign Iambi is white hair.
It is of various sorts and has a wide
range in vellus. White hair of the
Syrian goal, l:Sown as Asiatic white
hair, Comes 1ro111 Syria, .Persia aIld
Tibet, The br:dy hair of the Syrian
buck grows to sixteen inches in length,
the board to twelve inches; but in
a Iot of 15,0110 or 20,000 pounds there
might be found less than 25 pounds
of 16 -inch hair. All the lengths are
utilized.
The long white hair of. the Syrian
goat is as fine as Truman hair, in
place of which it is used for some
special purposes, principally for the
making of theatrical wigs and beards.
To prepare it for these uses it is put
through Various washing processes
and is combed to free it of all foreign
eubstanced and to straigthen and
smooth it. In this first finished state
It is put up for market in little
straight rolls or bundles. It is also
sold in partly manufactured form,
made up into curls and weaves of
Various shapes and sires.
STRENGTIi FOR
WEAR STOMAeo
ty:t11 Only Re Had Tiltou;h
" • Rich Red Blood.
Whenthe blood is poor' and thin
and the stomach is consequence is
imperfectly supplied wall oxidized
:brood and 'nerve force, the digestive
peoce,ss becomes story and f: men-
ttaiions off the blood goes on, with
the formation of gas an'd' certain
acids. The peessu,reef the gas
causes pain in lite gen-014h ; some-
times it affects the 115 nt. When
the gas is belched out through LI e
mouth the patient is tempo[ t:'ily
relieved, the snout risings in the
throat! and. stomach are caused by
the acid fermentations. There are
plenty of 'things to neutr!al.ize these
acids, os to "sweeten the stomach'
as it is called, but they do, not euro
the trouble. Pure, 11chblood. which
will tion up the stomlaoh and en-
able it to clo the work nature in-
tended it to do, is the only road to
a 'cure. Dr. 'A'Villialsu' Pinsk Pills
male new, rich, aged blood—that is
why they cure even the roost ob-
stinate cases of digestion. T1a
following is a bit of ' proof. Miss
Minnie Greene, of Hall's Bridge,
Ontt., slays: "Abouita year agoI was
greatly troubled with my stomach.
Everything 1 ' ate caused me p5111
and distress. I would feel, as
through( I" was starved, bait When
meal time calve hie sight of food
caused a feelingo�f`loath,in ,. There
were days' wlreI sound not even
hold) 1n:i)Jt on my stomach, and my
head would ache so thait I could
hardly kee? frorn screamvv g Only
those who 111500 suffered from stom-
ach trouble' know the for tures I surf
seed. I ivied almost 'every rem-
edy recommended, but found not
the least benefit unci; I began ta-
king. Dv. 'Cr llranra' Fink Pills.
These I resod for 11 couple of mnri—
the and they worked a perfect cure
and I am enjoying good .health and
able Sol eat- frooly all kinds of food.
10 p00 are, suffering' from' indiges-
tionor anyother trouble cite to
poor Watery blood, he tft
o cure.
yourself to -day by :the, use of Dr,
WiIIlams' Pink 1?rias Sold . by all
medicine dctallees or by • mail at 50
Cents la' box or six boxes for $2.50
fro.nr The Dr. Wil Pains' Medicine
0o,; Brockville, Oat,
Lawn and Boulevard Jirea
- :
Aids in beautifying Tow
Nothing tende more, to improve the
general apaeat'auce of a towu0r City
0& to fne0Paee tho vhtlne of 1pronerty
holders, o c , tilanr}eat and fitly surround
loge such as svoil kept lawns bonne
yards and neatly pruned trees Time
and '1he general ohservetinn of these
essentials has made Paris, 100511ce, the:
most beautiful} city in the world.
Of course Paris, like the mejority of
the o'd world cities, has the (Lea antage
over this Ciontinent of several years,
When this country was but rs virgin
forest, and under Feenrih dominion
and ti ray; France was n
t.1re snrilight of -the brightestbaskicultuxgine
and refinement; while the Frame of
to day i$ a glorious republic, eduoa,lo'r
of the world in many of rho aa'ts and
sciences
To any 000 whose privilege it never
bas been to visit that charming ray,
can form 1.01 the faintest c:olfception
011 what he oe sl,e may read, regard-
ing inthe artistic planner it '• which r llch the
Parisians delight in beautifying not
only that city but all of their cities;
while treir architecture and land
eeapegardeniugis notsurpassed by
nation in tine known world. Long be-
fore Louis XVI. had the ,t,arden of the
fuerilles—the most beautiful spot fu
Irrance—nrepared for Itis unfortunate
Queen, Maria Antoniette, If ranee was
in possession of some of the most mag-
nificent floral gardens, royal and pl'eb-
iau, in the world,
Canadian Opportunities.
In this country the all )too rigorous
climate prevents to a certain extent
theclncOr tion of anything iu this lino
to whatReance has attained, yes given
any kind of a 'chance, our Poral dis-
Plays for the chance, they Have, com-
pare favorably with any country.
And then again the idea of artistic
surroundinge, whether on bonne"ra,rds
on well Kept lawns, has only begun to
germincoe in the minds of m st people
in this ernnntry. Of course there are
always a few in the advance of others
in ti's, like everything else, who real
ize t he t+rrrt11 of aesthetic eurr•ourldings
from a financial point of view, and
who appreciate even the siic'iltest e -l'
fora along 11rese lines, While only
those: who have bad Bowe exnericnce
with the general patine, elle 4wale of
the runny ohstrtcles to he surmounted.
ill Pntleavnt ing -to stake evert the
thinking portion of the same—which
One: not eat. it.s peas 11(th e ludas-aile-
d 1'strultl the eien,entary principles un -
delaying and governing the beautifas'
1'(1
nature and in tire,
Lawns and Boulevards.
Tit this age particularly—svbich has
witiressed 01010, changes rend irnprove-
men1S in science, art and liteiratuee Por
tile
bt'tteC'ment -0t men than any in
tits cvorlds history—there 811011ld not
ha trwn opinions by property owners,
or tenants, in the matter of having, 05
insisting on having, alt that is coaling
to theta in the platter of ideal surround
ings, on htin(ev<ards and Lawn,
London's ''Example.
In Lendpn, Ontario, the Park. Com-
missioners are preparing a by-law to
compel those of its atizepa; 21130
11/11 I offend in 1110 matter' of peg•
lecling even to cut the ,grass on the
boulevard i❑ front of their residences
to do so. AstheLondon Com mitston-
er'e point out, ( and the stone thing is
a 1 t 1.;
pp asst rte to Cahoon •, for many
suns t � have t
y bore lr t kee r corn 'plain ts tbatt.
one Lazy Haan in block call spoil the
sweetie:mee of a street by refusing to
cut his g141Ss or hi any way improve
the frontage of his property,"
Clinton's Needs.
Here in Clinton, and more especially
on some of the side streets, grass,
sweet clover, and certain other vege-
table outlaws, have attained such 'a
height that it is difficult to tell just
where the bonlevard is and where the
sidewalk begins, While some of
these streets do not look- unlike a
young; forest. It is not in a spirit of
fault finding this is written either,
but, to point out our deficiences, and
suggesting changes and improvements
that will have a tendeucy to snake all
the residential sections of the town
Inok presentable. While all the
streets cannot expect to have flower-
beds, they can at least he made to
look its if eivilzed people resided there
on, if the boulevards in all cases are
properly looked after and the grass
out occasionally.
A good move was made on the
streets that have been paved, when :an
opening was !eft between the curb
and the whit: for grass pints. These
certainly add very materially to the
appearance of the street, as the grass
is invariably eat as often as that on
the lawn. And while we know that
all streets cannot be made to look as
well as paved ones, they can all he
abide p't»sal,1? looking whlelt many of
them are fir horn being now,
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTOR 1 A
STEAM BATH FOR TUB
Hoods Fits Over One End and Forma
Enclosed Chamber
From Germany, where the number
of medicinal baths Is legion, comes
an Invention that enables the average
man to take a steam or hot air bath
at home. A hood, with a hole at the
top of the head to come through fits
over one end of the tub and forms an
inclosed chamber to hold the steam
in. The user sits on a seat which
HOW WATER MAKES THE STEAM.
bangs over that end of the tub and
a tube connected with the hot water
spigot leads under him. This tube.
Ilea along the bottom of the tub and
has a wide, flat nozzle, turned upward.'
As the hot water flows out the steam
that arises envelops the body of the
person in the hood and has the same
tweet as the steam room of a Turkish
bath.' The discharge pipe of the tub
is left open, so the water can run out
without filling the receptacle.
GIGANTIC RUDDER
So Huge That It Hae a Door For Men
to Get Inside it
A rudder with a doorwayinto it
o s
Interior is a feature of the mammoth
Cunard liner Aquitenie. The pin
which Connects the rudder to the ship
R 4 feet in. length and bigger than
the heaviest projectile made for
Modern artillery. A special appliance
was constructed 'fn the ghip to 11±1. it
'Into position. When delivered at the
builder's yard the rudder wane in three
Parts. After, they had been connected
and laid upon the ground, the distance
that had to be walked round the com-
plete rudder was over 100 feet.
MYSTERIOUS 0 S
AIRCRAFT
The People ,of Cardiff` Have an Un-
usual Sight
Cardiff was startled by the appear-
ance over the city of an aircraft, It
was exactly 8.40 when the craft ;was
noticed, and a crowd assembled' out-
side the Glamorgan County Poli.ce',
Station watchi
n3 its quick progress.
Coming from the direction of White-
church and the Rhondda, it flew at
between seventy' and eighty miles an
hour and disappeared in' the gloom in
the direction of the Bristol Channel
over Penarth, The altitude was be-
tween 1,000 and 1,500 feet, and the
t craft carried a strong light, Among
those who saw it was Captain Lionel
ILindsay, Clltef Constable of the county,
and his deputy, Superintendent Thomas
and other police officers. It was sig-
' gested that from its great speed the
object was an aeroplane.
Dismissed for Smoking
James Doig, ironmonger's assistant,
was awarded $30 damages at Newark
County Court for wrongful dismissal.
He had been discharged on the ground
that he smoked on the premises during
business hours. They said that petro-
leum was stored in the premises. The
judge said that the defendants had
exhibited no notice forbidding it as
dangerous.
I
Sunday Coif Caddies
At a monthly meeting of the Angle-
sey Calvinistic Methodists in Holy-
head a resolution was adopted calling
......a.................,.
Summer •School i
•
For courses in all Business
• subjects leading to positions
a as Bookkeepers or Steno-
* graphers and for Civil Service
• and Commercial Specialists'
• exanii nations will be eon-
• ducted in Shaw's Schools, To-
• ronto, (Tire Central 13usiness
• College with four pity Branch
•
• Schools) from July 3rd to
• August this year. Students
e may enter any time for
• general courses. No vacations.
• Ayrite W, H. Shaw, President,
• for catalogue. 391 Young St.,
• Toronto.
•
•
•
•
•
•
3
•
•
O
•
•
0
•
a
4
O 00941•0000000000900•••••••
,,.,�,..,a...ar.,,.._.�.ra�r...�..„beea,ar-,--,:._•a,
Ieadgaawrers
EOM
Walking and Riling Oliver'
plows
I. H. C, Gasoline Engines
McCormick Machinery Pumps.
land 'pitintlmille.
ALL KINDS OP REPAIRS
AND E;i
l'ERTIN
G.
CALL ON
Miller time
Corner of Prances and Albert
streets.
Centrii,IQi1siIressCollehc
Stratford, Ont.
T ;
The a >Rest Practical
ortit�al
. School
Ontario
Three Departments
COMMERCIAL' SHORTHAND.
TELEGRAPHY.
All courses are thorough and.
practicagl. Teachers are ex-
perienced and graduates are
placed in poeftions. We give
individual dt t
v al •ttte nt �i
onand stn-
duents may enter at
any time
Write for floe catalogue at
Once.
Al.A.hlcLacittau,Principal �
qtt
3t
1
a rcJ:,,a,
0
Ds�m.
Ho.i'l..r"1.: e0
v<�
.t.r
You will have e no fur-
,
ar
e dust I your home
if you have aSunshine
Fi' r
�...aace. Y' eeial
dust flue prevents'
this
en-
tirely
-tirely
by carrying
all - dust up the.
smokee. 1
l� .]J
The' Sunshine has advantages which
make it by far the best furnace to in-
stall. Our went will he pleased to ex-
plain them, or write for booklet.
r
'd
A Furnace
London Toronto Montreal Winnipeg Vancouver St. John, N.B.
Hamilton Calgary Saskatoon Edmonton Stat
Sold by RYAN Ai SLITTER
Ai(
'•N'!•.,:. Aa'e6.t�A+?i.:PYai4.,. M1;l,,n.C4fa,St,.'<,
sttuction of some of the artticles, $60
on the Churches 1n the country to try and to $20 for the loss of lettings.
to secure an arrangement whereby .
the employment of children as caddies
on golf courses on Sundays would bo
rendered impossible.
ACCIDENTALLY HANGED
Suspended From a Rope Used For
Beating Carpets
A tragic occurrence took place In
cork involving the death of John
Lawrence, aged fc,arteen. The boy
was Paralia1 in the garden of Miss
:Hayne, on i'Mrlsiees IMI, having gone
there on a visit with his mother. A.
rope used foe the le.ating of ca,pets
was 501131111116 10 the garden, with a
loop a f 1 t. to rr c r1, His hotror-
stricken me ,,rr reeeeVered 1111,1
peudocl f r.m this: be the neck, pre-
sumabh. whilst pl- y ing, and though
at onoo medically attended life was
found to be extinct.
CONSUMN11VE AS LODGER
The Housekeeper Was Awarded Dam-
ages by the Court
Judgment for the plaintiff' was 511"0a
at Monaghan Quarter Sessions iu a
case in which I01cculor Gwy'nne, a
boarding-house keeper, sued lair,
Thomas Clarke, merchant, Monaghan,
executor of the will of the late Ben-
jamin Clarke, to recover damages for
injuries to her premises caused by
Benjamin Clarke, when residing as 0
lodger in the house of the plaintiff,
in that Ile infected the house and fur-
niture with a contagious disease—
pulntonary consumption. Judge John-
son quoted a number of decided oases,
showing that a person who, knowing
that he is suffering from an infectious
disease, succeeds in gaining adlnis-
ston as a lodger, either by falsely
representing that be is not suffering
from an infectious disease, or by war-
ranting that he is not suffering from
some particular infectious disease,
renders himself liable in damages.
The plaintiff was entitled to the full
amount of her loss through the dis-
infection of the room and the de -
Tombstones In Garden
Digging in his garden at Cardiff, a
local resident, Mr. D. Evans, unearthed
a series of tombstones bearing the
date 1876. Mr. Evans was not in oc-
t cupation of the house, and apparently
the garden had not been thoroughly
dug up for year's. It is believed that
the stones are simply memorials, and
i that the bodies repose in one of the
Cardiff cemeteries.
Hatched in a Top -boot
Thrushes on the Lilford estate,
Northamptonshire --a famous bird
sanctuary—built their nest in a top -
boot in a railway hovel between Barn-
well and Wigsthorpe. Now there are
three young thrushes hi the nest, al-
though the platelayers use the hovel
at meal times,
Voted at 103
Mr. John Durrant, of Weybridge,
aged one hundred. and three, was prob-
ably the oldest voter in the local
elections. throughout England, Mr.
Durrant accepted a lift by Motor car
l to the p0111115 booth, hut he marked
his paper without resorting to the aid'
of ftiiteses'_ ._
.3tcr.linrt Horse Hair
,••nail, fes. ,,, l,ciaev' manes }cavo been
00nrvlab,a ,l or, s:l'rl a r•afl'vey deeep-
t.ive .t 1: 'etiee-'i'bnnus,
4121.151.1.11.0.011141
fr"E"..li �/e.y
,A
Ayea
leavadose
DYO-LA
ONC III'Ero1Atl. NI NDSor coons
It's the CLEANEST. SIMPLEST, and BEST HOME
DYE, one can buy..why you don't even have to
know what KIND of Cloth your Coods ere made
of..So Mistakes are Impossible. •
Send for Free Color Card, Story Bookletand
Booklet giving resells of Dyeing over other colors,
*The JOHNSON-RICHARDSON CO., Limited,
Montreal, Canada.
Women and Advertisements
OME statements are so saturated with their
ownel
moral.as
to require 110 c ..r ie
n nt. id-
S
n
"Rid-
ing on a car during the excitement over the
naval battles between Russia and Japan," said Mr.
Thomas IVIartindale, before the Retail Merchants'
IAssociation of Pennsylvania, "I observed that the
men were reading the war news and the women
were reading advertisements, Those women, I
watched 'keenly, read e.ery line of the advertise-
ri`lents, and then turned to the woman's page, agea 1 his
ride was a distance of eighty miles, yet at the
journey's end the women had nor yet had time to
turn to the actual news of the day. The women
want advertisements ertisements to read, andyou must present
your business in a readable shape to be in the fight
„ fightthese days.,"
1s your Stock Moving? if not.
Then we can Help You,
New Era Ads pay—They
get right at the people.
y
CLINTON
r
NEW ERA
r
1'dl 30.
TELEPl-1®
1