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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-07-24, Page 3ri.-,..� n ,u �. .a:• ., _.. .•tn 1 R !' _ .,w,+Mn .. n -,W W R. : .. ..1 r a. ;,, r ,m �w,m, .w I..... M. N i .. .... ,r., 1 ., THE,: G'L2NTON Liv, EEA :hgtl Thus tllay, til j itrrr' 1NW.ii .te+�.�.r.. gyp. rs„�.ePW ,' '' , , 44'44 48+��F+4+++4�t�84+4+4 48+b+44,F#444th`f441t404'6.040mi10441000400t1000.N 44.+++,+++4++4+ 4+ba+++++++4it++44+4+++4+4++4+4++4++440r.,Omm+•444++++++++++++++ ++++++44444444440444400♦04 0 a ` ables4 t 4 t: 4 11 , 4 i. r i 4 ,l, 1 4 , �, ;,Lei , s,� 4 atiada . • „0 [01 .li. } 4 ®id®Omb4®m v4O444eiimmgmlevl000+v®vsva?.®6444.4 4.4m044N04+**44.0e?4•4486++++++4*4444•+++4b444]•'4Ga"Oteeseiaaaaa.e.4.0.04++4b+4+449+441.4$'11+4+444444 4++ 444+4A44444�1 ++++++4814'144490 @o©4Pmi40Qma�rt•dm9@®ye64 m --- e r, —i,� coni,t7L'a4eti forti]fs°distzlct,lthasl 0'®®®®eeesebe®®e®eTeelieme0flee Dy, -`Si l y, ..iv, eeseeee0®eeeesseeese Ire..,, aD.lhun._ r bF,e-n deckled inclose lthefarms . # F, y ®ee©e®e�e9eDQA7sI®ee®1fret ,oil \i'ednesda; 1•li �•htkl.,,1 §t� I '®^ 1 , p?1.:,; :-s�..•a°a'". F,n�{ .d ]�crlea -, d �+il.L renznin Tlturs�t ¢ge, iibbe' 'r al- nL t19 La a live t ;r 1 nblicatiort ay ��� YOUINULr{im�. t1 day, as hefome, b'ut'Eho.lzpttr walLbe f e are : especially good for F 9 a irl there 1d of •1 p.m. Adventis- IS `eYsa`� •„'tir 0 'kl children because they are pf; ors will, please note that changes ]l .sant to talc, gentle in for eoutract advertisements must • x hate the a. ' he in ,our hands ley Monday night i � �®O®2ie�®®®®®®�®t9 r+ i, action, do not tri transient ads by Wednesday night ®®Qi®f9t°�Q9e1S@®ip el¢(eOmiSr•i>••0•EiW® 6tp@S�iOOG'Petim060000033itamtiveL OVE* 00060 bowels icor develop a need your Ottr correspondents' burtgets should A:4 for continual or increased be mailed to !'each tis our \S'ednes Street School, and about a year mm x, nna �c�^ wrxlansafobuilt they were given the old Eliza- Fell. "dire noon There will be sorrow among hum National Drug and Chemical Co. •9 of Canada, Limited, 177 Big Birthday Cake For Little Bi- ble Students. AN UNUSUAL! CELEBRATION. Children Helpers of, the British 'Bible Society Meet the Lord Mayor at An= niversary Party—Things of Interest to' Small people. An unusual birthday party, attended by about/2,000 children, was held .at Guildhall, London, with the lord mayor and aldermen as guests. The celebra- tion was in honor of the one hundred and ninth anniversary' of the birth of the 13ritish and Foreign Bible socie- ties. The invitations were confined chiefly to the London children's helpers of the society, and each of them carried away a small cardboard box containing deeds of children and g'rown'up people use rn.e a.so ''' vu �� bath of St. John's Ward; Toronto's slum ago they moved' into • the new one, and foreign quarter, when at the end just south of the new General Hos- of the present school session, Miss. TO UNTO' SLUM TEACHeR GIVES pr}a1. How and Mrs. Warburton leave the - SCHOOL. Until about five years ago hot $i.n Ul? FAMOUSnets were given all' the children who needed it, and clothes were supplied them by the children of other schools. "Friday afternoon was clothing day," Miss How said reminiscently the other day, "and in those days we never saw a child withputhaving an; eye' to what clothes he would need on Friday. BLit. there is no need fo'r this in the Ward now.” The wort: of Mrs, G. C. Warburton, Elizabeth Street School. For over a quarter of a century Miss Flow has been there teaching, guiding, helping with rare sweetness, tact and strength. Through her efforts and those of her helpers, hungry little ones have, been fed, scantily dressed ones clothed and wrongs righted. She has glaellf receiv- ed cast-off clothing from more prosper- ous children, and until a year or two ago the poorer children have been given a plentiful supply of hot soup, bread and sometimes cakes at the noon hour. The Hester How School is very dif- ferent from the school in the Ward thirty years ago when Miss Ilow be- gan her work the re Mr, Howland After Thirty Years of Heroic Work Among the Children of 5t. John's Ward Weinan, After Whom School Is Named, Lays Down Her Task Miss How's Lieutenant, Mrs. War- burton, Will Go With Her. ,�.��.._I`1 11_ .fit TABLE KNIVES. The Work of Cleaning These Necessary Articles Made Easy. Those who have to clean knives would find their work much lightened if they warmed the knife board before Miss How's chief assistant, and of using it. Miss Florence Sims, has been almost Stains on knives can be Instantly re - clown business throMeh equally interesting. For twenty- moved if rubbed with a piece of raw walkingclown toeight years no one but boys, first in potato dipped in brrcl.dust or knife Ward \yrd in these days used to vstood iry over the number of boys who stone- ond the industrial school and for the powderer " eighteen years the ght around the corkers, developing lard- last seventeen or ein Knives that have been used for on- ness, They Were all Canadian boyo• neweboys' class in the Ward -.,,,,'+'—" ions can be rid of the taste if the the5e ILas, then, Thera was also no truant of - not. iti Jew to her boys, and she.hgs a right to be. fie -6, and boys of fifteen or sixteen They have Ddnde themselves by hon - years, •est urla liar . wok. She has proved had never been to school. me . Mr. Holvlend and Mr,. Beverley time and again that all that the boys .Tunes offered to hive the school and want is a chance. One boy started pay for the janitor if the School 25 -cent tete and is now Board supplied' the teachers. The first school WAS in Mission Hall, on lower Centre aveline, The next more w� s t6 Oran Hall, . on, Chestnut street, theii in Mission Hall on the corner of T.aplante and College. W1 et tie, Alerted Street $ahnnl ,.•, • ilia 1Vai.d Mrs, Warburton is very proud of blades are run two or three times through a raw potato. Handles that have become loose can be refixed by half filling the hole+with Then resin and quicklime, equal parts. heat the blade and insert it in the hole. 1913, by American Press Association MAMLHOTH BIRTHDAY CAME a piece of the mammoth cake provided for the occasion. The cake was a beau- tiful sight and weighed 109 pounds -1 one pound for each year of the so- ciety's existence. The first celebration tools place in 3901, and the cake made for the children thea weighed ninety- seven pounds, but the passing of years( has added twelve pounds to the monu- ment of sweetness. The cake was cut by a granddaugh- ter of the lord mayor and then packed in boxes for distributiou to the' dill-, dren and others fortunate enough to get a piece. Things That Interest. Kissing the hands of great men was an old Grecian custom, though origi- nally of eastern origin. The smallest flower known to the botanist is said to be that of the yeast plant. It is microscopic in size. So strong is the light emitted by Ja- maica fireflies that the presence of six will enable a person to read. Daffodils, which are one of the har- bingers of spring, are so called from the old English "affodyle"—that which cometh early. Elephants can climb to a great height. Their tracks have been seen upon the very summit of mountains 7,000 feet high. The mummy of an Egyptian princess who lived 2000 13. C. shows around the waist a contrivance similar to the mode ern corset. Among the Paniyans, a laboring class in Malabar, when a man wishes to marry a girl he must carry a bundle of firewood to her house daily for six months. ' j1 \i t , i` 1\it 1 eere KISS IIESTCT 110W. New Masonic Officers Warm Contests for the District Honors at the Meeting of the Grand Lodge at Ottawa. Gll tea. July 1.7—A.S. Luke e of 01- i a ea vv e c , by' a--ccl-Nation aleer' 'tl o first ballot was taken to th telt merit office of depute grand n a itr1' lit tt.4 Ora ncl Lodge of Can - ad On!t trio A.,F.tt: 'M. CioIonel elf 1 onion of l ell e- i'l , and Abrah m ':hav1 of i ings- t ni ohpo, d hon hut vin lthu e'v of ts,e ties! 1. allot. 1131 Luke got ?) "J11 Sete 101t 1 1 lot ng. iestf 1l Pel t',n s 2552..ai 1 Altrah int r,hav s 21h. nts is tb Idgi.eSt r!eeti et office, in 1.1-e c art. 51n0e it is the cus'boin for the deliuty grand m t t 1 t`.:I e, -d ct l ,a 111 plaster alt emetic- 1 -,v. 'SI e:) gra eel n1'1, t r is \L D. 'Sic t e ..Y] M1i. L. „ p1 Toronto, Ot:a. L .. wen-It-try.1I. W. a ss( 1..e 1i grant", len c,i' 1.a.ci:n ,itt,e- 501nd ,xl;;r' inan- ;ma n- ad '1 t 1 is 1,1 ty. of J ,: , ae.t: t:1c;i e.11 •.:'meth, OHawn o]ii c ei! n ,00hs ioyd. of 1 lro^te, 15 the re 3., ,, 1n+eri 511'11;01' a. d.•11 a1�1)) eJ lX L.'e1' b ,of elm' t115 k .0 i t11 I ,ef v gr,aiti lei ,style r,` ',cite 1 to the le d of goer r1I .lt") f e S. le' a'r 1'.s( "• t 1)r. D r: <i et, hit. 11. t 01" 7 Drop r m b, ; 11 e Ca wii(L 1 1 "e; W. II, \Vveci- r ep t. Ilia el !Son. li'iv.e more mein - hers ego cl:+dl'Icl 10,aa boiled • by tn,• *) tttd, 511a`11ef', are: nett large enough to ,tread • Th - IL stn to a Merry contestIIID to il`ae,Lcli the. hoot citi self tn( .z. f ;'l. u-:tr.., r'elluIt icctcd. 'a•on, T'J'.Dobetty 15 looking in- Da'ft' 1 't e) '1 I e nt t I;; • ciecict. teethe whole ,e gncstion and itis D ,et,M s eve,os 0 -{?arts: pt of tbl, that al the next res'on I.—Frio, W. aI us(:Li'e d Win sol', of Peer Cam nil )v. b,11 will 1:,e intro- 2,—et. Chair, Thomas 1 aul, Wy em- emceed eft con eree,eahle increase of Ln 2h. alar Ie'i 1Gw •paic1 to ICotin ty 3,•—L„ndtln,. A,Itobefts, Dutton. Caulk Ju:dgcs, • 4.—eemet.h • l3,oron, elev. J. \V. • :ivory (11 anbton. l £ Huron—George G vin ••t e Po — U t ..117'Ult—.XC 01 I. e r e 1,� ,• How Do You Like Your Neighbors? The company must be seated in a ring, with one person left standing in the center. This person may ask any one he' chooses, "How do you like your neighbors.” Only one of two answers is allowed, "Very mach" or "Not at all." I11 the person questioned answers "Not at all" he is asked whom he would prefer, when be must name two other members of the circle. The old neighbors and the new must then change places, and while they are out. of their seats the player in the center hem, secure one of t tryto 5eC . must must , The person who loses his seat then take his place in the center. Should the person :questioned answer "Very much" every one of the players must change- seats, so it is not very difficult in this case for the questioner to find a seat. s. The' Lambs Protector The shaggy wolf dog was set to watch a'1amb, Another dog, also near a wolf in shape' and color, saw him and fell upon him at once. "Wolf, wolf, what are you doing with this lamb?" cried he. "'Wolf yourself! Be off or you'll' find out to your sorrow," was the answer. The oue tried to carry off the lamb, the other to keep it by force, and between the two it was torn to pieces After any Sickness or Operation doctors prescribe SCOTT'S EMULSION—it contains the vital elements nature craves to repair waste, create pure blood and build physical strength. No Alcohol or Opiate Scott C Bowne, Toronto, Ont. 12-23 County Court lodges to Get Larger Salaries Ottawa, July 17.—The Mut ter of Ju: -t e I:T,on, �4'. J. Dol erty, 1 'ts uri- ti_i c.:nsic,e ation the question of a. g,rl aI roodjutltmcnt end :ncreesc inlLh a.lar l01 pf County Court. ',judges (throughout ti e :Dominion. i1;itit:,ons 0, ere presented' to the ciov rrnme.^t 1001e months agosign- ,11 gll- , 11 b, 1•n�actic.tl ly all tee t u010 [;Jul t Jucig i in C':anad:a asking tk e 513\ e nn•,e.at to take into consider tit 111 the large Inere1150111 the cost 0; I \in•r d line; r 11051 years vtlich 1.:a 0r.{t 1), etl accompanied by rn5. corresponding inciensc in judicial ilio:,eover in cousequenee '.111 korllui to:lents of court work in )mist l-rovinces the lursdiction of t:olln10 Court Judges l-'as1,osi eon- sid t 11y JnceeIsed in order ice re - eye She work .of the higher courts 1 t i) 51111t1co out that 55.a1ies t a yi11g from t$2.500 to $3,100 we1,e; 11' 1 now sufficient to leld'h le a J1 dg 151111 of 0•ly nlaiint in the (L f 1 t'4- C11115 Dtlsltloil or eduea. e his ,am.ly »S5 0/111113 's't.h0 law ie- ernired tem r; a pia tieally fineeeo n1c (, h:r r::elms ori1creasing • 1t:s Irl .,illi , - Fettle, le .more, the legal profes- sion b.,l eves that the ,pec e nt Fri all 5 i1), Cnn1ty Court . Judges with. one pi ,worth thousands of dollars,. some of A knife board on which the original it mace through real estate, He is leather has worn off can be renewed still 'selluig ' by, Liking a piece of plain good linoleum "Those news merchants, said Mrs. in the place of the leather. 'Warburton, "who own boxes at the Ivory bandied knives, if discolored, corners of the streets are thorough,' should be cleaned with lemon juice manly gentleman, earning their living and salt. To repolish the ivory scour grandly, and becoming some of To= rento's best citizens." The regret at the loss of Mis How and Mrs. Warburton, who have just• resigned their positions' may easily be imagined. And anyone who has had the opportunity of meeting them will readily understand how much of their; success has been due to their sweet- ness of manner, the directness of their' sympathy, their gentleness and• tact. Hester How School will alway-1 stand as a monument to one"of the greatest -hearted, loving and self- sacrificing women Toronto has known. Dr. W. J, and Mrs. Milne heft ,on an mete, trip to Detroit, Mice. 147r•, John Gibson, of Alaska, is spending to few days (the guest of Mr, Jahn A1citT1l an, 'They were • both into e3ted to•amining claim in A,asl.a a few seats aglo. Miss • A.E.M:Manlius, of Godo - rich, Was ,the. guest Df her cousins, Misses DO11 and i\nn',e' Coevarn, dur- ing (th,er wee h. Jdr. and Mrs. John Cowan. of Lo.ceta are visiting relatives in hewn and vicinity, Miss McKcnz:e of Galt, is visiting her uncle;, •tllessts, A. B.anidFree k f a'rSe n, Mrs, :le T al, r err is visiting under ,the 1 a-ont..,. hoof in London. oeoeo�9;1080e®eooeeeeoeeoeeee Men and Events. ooeoecessoommeeeepososeeo It with the finest sandpaper, make a paste of whitening and oil and apply with a piece of flannel, rubbing it well and polishing with a lightly oiled linen rag., Bone handles should be sandpapered and polished and pearl handles clean- ed by rubbing with a soft cloth dipped in fine salt. Polish with a chamois leather. Reserve knives can either be oiled and wrapped in brown paper before being put away or dusted with finely powdered quicklime and wrapped in flannel. This latter is the better plan, as there would be no suspicion of an oily taste if the knives were suddenly needed. r Special knives should always be kept for onions, bread and for hot fat The two latter will make the sharpest knife dull in a very short time. Everybody nova admits Zara -Bak' best for these.' Let.. it, give YOU ease and comfort. ,Druggists and Stone everywhere The family roi5edY for Coughs and Colds "Shiloh costs so 1ittY1 and does so. much(" t'i+''.itl t.'14 ,% til h±Ili i tl"•wt ti g1,'1 10 Che p500,oe - W aS snurJpeu toy The FOR YOUNG FOLKS photographer as she wns reaching for 1 h hand es ii throw You can see that s e I, her glove like a real ball player. There were several girls 0n the field fully as skillful, but she was the only one Girls Can Play Baseball When caught by the eaners. Exercise in the open is necessary to robust health, and the young people of both sexes should take advantage of the slimmer season to strengthen tbeir muscles and inflate their lungs. , "F They Wish to Learn. AN EXPERT WITH PADDED MIL Healthfulness of Exercise In the Opetii Girls at Van Cortlandt Park, New York—The Boy With a Queer Name. Riddles and Games. Girls, as a dile, do not care much to play baseball, although most of them like to watch a game in which their brothers and acquaintances are taking part. Perhaps girls do not cam to play, because they lack the knack of throw- ing the ball. When they do acquire this art, however, and can throw over- hand with precision girls do about as well as boys. 1 In Van Oortlandt park, New York city, on Saturdays and holidays num hers of girls and young women can be SUMMER PILLOWS. They Are Attractive When Matching the Cretonne Furniture Slips. Spring and summer call for a dis- carding of velvet, damask and tapestry pillow covers and the replacing with light, fresh looking covers that can be laundered and that fit appropriately with summer hangings and furniture. If you have planned to have cre- tonne decorations allow for two or three yards extra when you order, so that pillows to 'match will complete the attractive idea. These need not bo made entirely of cretonne, They can be combinations of this material and any other fabric, preferably plain. One of the simplest summer slips is of white or unbleached muslin, edged with a four inch band of flowered cre- tonne or poplin. Long pillows can have six inch borders at each short end. The heavier fabric gives a firm- ness at the ends, where most wear is. Cut out patterns, stitched in borders or muslin or plain poplins make effec- tive covers. Arrange the stems and the flowers at the tops, in straight rows, so that a conventional, old fash coned border effect will be the result. The flowers should not reach any high- er than igh•er'than two-thirds up, and they should be about on the same line. Machine stitching serves to bold down. the ir- regular edges with success. Sunbonnet For 1913 Baby. After all, there is nothing like a sun- bonnet. for shade and comfort when baby plays on the beach or in the gar- den. The fetching bonnet pictured is 3011,,11 IillPATIT DOUCS.ALL. F( r' ninny Scars redi(t!or incl proprietor "Witness," tic �iln�ss, ] 14I( mtleaL 4 of tl e a, f. • 1l spar or organ U c eavt rotor. 1sting fol p 01 b t1':J1i1I, r :f0im cin'khis COnitute 1.' 15.011. li Henry -l4TCQL1e.it, 4uicicly stops coug'7is, cures colds, 'tnd. heels 3'o' parer has been in financial rha throat and lungs. .. .. �6 cents Slt'r,aits et tate! years anal has pose ,ed nut • of existence, and its plant Wins f11l:un ov,ei• by a company welch row publiSnes IS a,ew journ-• Lal a1lLt;eld . "•1 he (Evening Tele- graph," lr is:onbulg. 7.—Wellington, Prof. W. Day, Blyth. rh Gut li . 1 S:—TTanl,ition 0,S, I 1lg n , m`1 - A ,cry pi eftty wecitling vas ,lion. • sol mnree,l all Itlgb noon when 'Miss 9 ---tr,nrg'an 11.3. ry p1•otl:, nary. 0. Mary} c11e atl daughter of Mr. 9s(,—Cr ,o1•g'f'an, ,C)pr;5top1;erTaylor and 1111s. AiIt11ur Steinhoff, 1.'eeame J�rcn hlpund. IL wilel,or \bil•l:tam C. Johnston, of err PA p ��, I almoral Main, '.Che bride entered �y yj' i ii { Eed�81 u 70.-14 O are, Lo... mown, Chip-, to parker leaning on the arms of penia. her fallile €1nd tool up her position 1.l ;—Tloronito West. J, S. Stephens, under an arch of ferns. She "vas 7 o- on(to. ur,,alttenc((e1 and was attired en a 3.1a,—T,pi'onitre ` A. E. Crosby, TO Yat atilt ifiil dress of satin tle cheep, rent ,J, and cas'ried a bouquet of roses. Her 12r. Jobe Moore, ,_„tr, Miss.,Eu']L,eenia, 'altered the Constipation is one of the most 9 Ire- Brook - 12, -01 -Stavin, one P,rookli'n. R drlfni,;; mhlrcl,and`111ev.�rJ.D.',<duent,and ',attl] same time, 3 „Edward, Dr. 3.1111. C. '1urnar, et -Hibor et St. An�drleee s most serious of the ^minor ailments to it l rtlicen Fdtvat , 1. , ,1 ich menleiitd is scbiect, and should' 1%ni5ts, 4O11ing. rrrsh,ylllemliti Church,' tical Ito 111 allowed to continue. Dew, �: '1 lsi 1,t;cJttft=n1^—Dr Be .T, CXatden- : nupft'a,L knot. 7.1 rr,e ]were, over never be sunlight and D ei,,Kin1 ektiei. 5) 5u:tiros piesent rent'. after the A free motion of the 1Sowels'daily' One night I went right out to pray wrence, 'u. 11. Putnam, ccan,en]iony all liaictaoic of a. splendid- should be the rule of 'every one who When I had bad rig tea, to - d.J , .ns( !'',lt;rl,cl.vi:i'�e; `I ly p1`cpia.'te�d dinner.'The ne)vly .;.aspires to perfect hnnlUi. And on the grass Bright teardrops lay ft , 1Va Dr.1i1. 3 . Strele. we'cic.jed' coup Ie petit on the 2.35 Seca the bowels properly regulated' J ri I could sae. 4'. , 7 rn I rvi. far.as a s n Asr.tv , home el Bu moultie thea) n of N . C 1 11 anon e e , e us 'c 1� th Ca''I hen }?h le. lay t , 'o tit ever bes 1 y s TWith nil e^1 "The grass to c•.e,.•ing, mother dear. 1.7 � Iga,ml't John' r Ffalling ,. 1`t Balmoral, Man., carrying. 1 h P1I:L5, and you w J y What can the matter bel' I helact, 1,onit 9rthur: I' Itbem lthle best !wishes ;of therm of health. I cried and stooped to catch a tear dg—Nipissing. \,.v J, Thompson frie•nda:hle!ro. Mr.. O. J. Pixla?x, Medicine Hat,,,Alta., From off a -bramble tree. , , ,atnlit Ste. The, r lawn social under the �' S writes:—"I have been troubled with not tell me shy. 19.—Musitok,a-Major Donald, 11 . auspices 'of the McLean Mission Constipation for the last couple of ,years Mymother couldC)r,ltn;lt, 'STttinitsville•. inland of Se. Andrew's Church, was She oely shook her head. writes:—"I just lately. I tried a, great maty the ass should':cry '. 20.-0tioirob;te. - 1 . W.' Squires, a ,a 110511. ,plelasing affair.: 7,']tlere;',was remedies without any success, but at I Till 3 ed that gr ver. Till T was. g*/tuckedrain bed. 30, vroatll: a gAoa(, {turnout, and the c11)Ldrien last I heard of \'Ii'rns s success, Lt L 27.. Ela it ern, Gleinrgo A, r1aelley+l:I itbo,ioughly enjoyed theatselves in Plinks, so I gave ihanzi'a trial, and began Next d t e putt ran out with tsars., \.I,a:,all,dria. games and' i t.h,v, :o,nausemeirtsi getting better right': away, , an now I But, to my great surprise, Dr. nd ,1VAs.' ,pordule/ lof Clifford,and can T Lound the pun h dried the terra ' reallyg believe 1 arri cured,. Wei visilt'ed the acxerner's brotherlucre. any one." When he began fa tree[ heartily. believe a them to a. Electric Restorer for 1YIen P �iev. S. \V, J,ewlltt, for E,dly?s ..,Mills, , restores everynerve in the body, , is( visilting his a Mrz Buxiv's T,nxA-1 rvr 1t PILLS are ' It then 1Vain sin the reason why— j�{lO3p;--el to its; roper tension ; restores ll: lee•nts 'ltie,re. a cents per vial, recommend vial's for a dollar, It was se - 1aln"au day- • vitality. Premature decay and all sexual Mi 5 '-.s Mlary, and J,ea.n i13.l,ack are , at all dealers, 0r mailed direct on reo are The Brasses all begin to cry vim and vi y weakness avert:d'at once. Yhosphonel will vietitm:g frlal3'1 s rat $I,ylevale: r re Te elPi Wheh`iYndi(4lit goes; away! make youanewman. !rice Sea boa or two for 14isses Pi,oe(tot and Miss lBul.l, of ' ''o£ price Uy, the ed, l' root The .phUadelphia IL Mil - _6. Ma��ed to any address. `ghe gleo'beU iltses C h burn Co„r kirnrted, 1oronto, Ont. _., ss %At,. atuArines.Ont. Touonito, werle! !P Lyth visitors, Seen FGi1DW1 Re The Liver Rs Not Active .1': OF MACHINE LIMBRO1IIERISD LINSili. of white machine embroidered linen, and the crown may be removed by un- buttoning it on washdays. With a good pattern any mother- who needle withthe n `� a amrh r is the least f of can make a similar pieced headgear gear with little trouble. Pique buttonholed in white wash.cottou makes a practical enabonnet or the ba -by. - • - Photo by American Press Association, GIRD PLAYING BASIL. seen handling it hail with as ,groat skill as their male coatginli0u5, They t•tln send a bail on a line with the real mas- culiue threw, long supposed to beet) im- possibility for the gentler ens. Tee The Boy With a Queer Name. Little "1 will” was a very small boy with tee sweetest face any one could wish to see, and under his white blouse) beat its big sailor collar, the sweetest little heart that ever grew. Of course "1 will” had another name. Ills "really truly" name he would have told you was Louis, but those who knew hint thought that "I will" suited him better. "Dear," mother would shy, "will you run upstairs and get my scissors? You will find them on the sewing machine." "I will, I 'will!" would sing out the pleasant little voice, and in a twinkling the scissors would be put in mother's hand. Or father would say: "Louis, gather up your toys. It is almost supper time." I will!" would come the smiling an- swer. Dear little "I will!" ]:1e is a big boy now, big enough to study Latin curl alt sorts of other hard things, Lint the sun- shine of his merry baby ways has nev- er fn,ded from bismother's heart. What a pity there is not a little "1 will" in every home!—Sunbeam. Game of Portrait. In the game called portrait one per- son leaves the room, while the nth- ers choose the name of some one they all know. The person on entering the room has to h less the name shleeted by asking queetinns to be answered by "yes" or "no." For instenco: "is she married?" "No." "Have I seen her today?" "S.'eS.' "rias she fail' haler" "No." Sooietimes the company choose the one Who went .outside for the "por- trait" and the guessing is more dill-. cult :U��S•IN t-�S7�Sq',PpA�TTNA SHQR .11. HAl`tf- 11 Subjects taught by expert instructors at the Ziopeahl Y, M. C. A. BLDG,. LONDON, ONT. Students assisted to positions. College in session from Sept. 2nd. Catalogue free. Enter any time. J.W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr. Principal Chartered Accountant 17 Vice -Principal X02,, Ri:RSV:0,90art,.%ranr+JIKCC,,1,I.^C.t':,1x-10,. = ..C.10T_0...SK� Notice Advertisers s ers andArras a u nts To make it possibliel to ` mail, The New Era or; the, day of issue ant the rural routes now Iessltabtished and 4v q p: LOOK UP YOURIS'T"ATIONER i f% y r , , 6s( Arnd see. if require Bill Heads, (ar:iy �. youq size) Statements, Letterheads, Noteheads, Envelopes, Business Cards, Etc. .If you require any of the above send your order to The New Era, or telephone No. 3o e+ for our rept Pse nta:tive to call on you. ,11 Estimates Cheerfully YC Given ,,rig tE,The New Era , job Plant is one of the Huron Count u 'Y best equipped in q Good Printing1 (t,Remember" that is essential to Successful Business. or tat ot3 1