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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-09-04, Page 5• � sNoo004sooOm � eoee•Oeeeeeeeeeveyeee. gra•ro4m�OtovlO•o••otooe••0eo•4`6.► �o- r • deo®4Q4 o♦e$+ @ d¢OM6�,♦d*4++4M40eyogpdr6map6yrOdtoi ♦f4�N��i�OM*�?toN1'NO000 oust®NOo4E0 Oo@o'4e =• • • o l is: Weil r That Ends Well" l �' Trousers rs F o r t a A.��I� � SOLI " The LAtest Along with dyspepsia comes nervousness, sleeplessness and gen- eral ill health. Why 7 Because a disordered stomach does not permit the food to be. assimilated and carried to the blood. On the other hand, iti,'. �rai�s baa the bloodh- is charged with poisons which come, this disordered digestion, In turn, the nerves are not fed oa good, red blood and we iy , kas i see those symptoms of nervous _breakdown. • It is not head work that does it, but poor stomach work. With poor this blood the body is not. , tproteeted,againet ethe attack of germs of ;grip—bronchitis—consump tion. Fortify the body now with DR. 11'flER'CE Sl G®lde 'Disc 4r very en alterative extract native medicinal Plants, prescribed in ,hots:. liquid and tablet form by Dr. R. 1'. Pierce; over 40 years ago. Mote than 40 years. of experience has proven its superior worth as an in- vigorating stomach tonic and blood purifier. It invigorates and regulates the stomach, liver and bowels, and through them the whole system, It can now also be had in sugar.eonted tablet form of most dealers in medicine. If not, send 00 cents in one -cent stases for trial box to IOr. Pierce's Invalids! aeteThe l and Surgical stitute, Buffalo, N.Y. , C rm� soon Sense Medical Adviser — Is A BOOK OF 1008 PAGES HANDSOMELY BOUND IN CLOTH TREATS PHYSIOLOGY HYGIENE. ANATOMY, MEDICINE AND IS A COMPLETE HOME PHYSIta:ZAN. send 50 one -cent stamps to R. V. Pierce, Buffalo. r4, Y.. Exercise Ten Minutes a Dai To Strengthen '` :.egg saki Arms BY A PHYSICIAN ingg lavtaronvn.d on the muscles which bend it d Exercise of the muscles, gives the brain increased control over them This brief tall: on exercises is con- fined to the leg and arm muscles— 'what they are and a few simpl.s ways of making them stronger and more pliabel. The fingers hands and wrists are moved by the muscles below theel- bow in thelarm-anddin the hand. The movement of hlalnd muscles are two in kind closing and oppening the fist. The movement of the fore arm muscles consists of bending the hand backward and forward bend- ing it to the thumb side and in the opposite direction. Besides this the hand can be turn- ed salthiat the•palm faces up ane' then dot<gn. SIX EXERCISES. These groups of muscles maybe built up by six exercises. ,1 -Close the fist byttpnlling hard with the palm muscles pulling against these with the niuscles of the back of the hand and ann. '2.—Open the fist antagonizing' the same group. 3—Move the hand toward the thumb pulling all the time on the opposing muscles.; 4—fteverse by Moving thei1isni 3' toward the little finger in the same way. 5—Bend the palm up while pull - DI NOT KNOW 1T WAS TORE RID OF NU When the blood becomes impure, it is only natural that boils, pimples, or some other indication of bad blood should break out ofthe systetn. There is only one thing to do, and that is to purify the blood by using a thorough blood cleans- ing medicine such as BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. MR. ANDREW E. COLLIER, River Glade, N.B., writes:—For years I was troubled with Boils. I did not know what it was to be rid of them until I , began to use BURDOCK BLOOD BrrvgRs. I only used two bottles of it, and it is now over ten years, and I can honestly say thatI have never bad any boils since. I can always recommend B.B.B." • BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS is a remedy indicated for the purification of the blood, and has been used by thousands during the past 39 years. It is manufactured by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Ont. 6—Be _d• the palm down using the , same method of resistance. There are two grous of musrlles which bend the elbow, The first erook it and situated on !the'fro ,nt of the arm. The second straighten i•t land are, situated okthe back of ‘the arm The shoulder is lifted up bytthe neck mueles It is pulled down for ward andd'bacltward brye-thecnosr Muscles', This, exercitse should be taken regurally by forcing the one set of muscles to outpull the other The leg muscles including those of feet nudlitoes should be\jusetl as carefuly exercised and in the same general way, Ten minutes a clay is sufficient to keep these muscles in excellent con dition. Children. Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Low hates for Labor I)ay via Grand Trunk Hallway Return tickets will be issued be- tween all stations in Canada east of Port Artur, also to Detroitt and Piort Huron, Mich.; Buffalo, Black Rock, 'Niagara Palls and Suspen- sion Bridge, N.Y. SINGLE FARE—Good going Sat- urday, Sunday and Monday, Aug- ust 30th and 31st and Septem- ber 1st. Valid for return until Tuesday, September 2nd, 1913 FARE AND ,ONE=,T'HIED—Good +going ,Friday, Saturday, Sunday and d nday, August 29th, 30th, 31st and Septembeil' '1st. Valid for return until Wednesday, Sep- tember 3ed, 1913. Full particulars and tickets at all Grand Trunk Ticket Offices. John IEyakosford City Passenger and and Ticket Agent. /Phone 57 A.Q. Pattislen Statign Ticket Agent. Phone 35 To Control the Weather. In a recent lecture before the I3ritlsh institute of Electrical Engineers 51 gnor Ferranti made at startling declare tion to the effect that the weather of the island of Great Britain could by controlled by means of electricity. The entire island would have to be pit•ded with an electrical "defense" callable 01 warding off the vapors of the .sett and prevenring them from preeipitn tion on tate land. The sit nlig ht honrs could thus be increased as desired, SO' -E SWING T TiflS! She ordered some goods from the Mail Order Store, And then she sat down and she ordered some more. A week or so later they came by express, And after shea s w them she wailed in distress: "Why, I have been bunkoed, for right down the street ' These bargains I'm, sure I could easily beat. It isn't so :funny To pay out your money instead •I And get disappointment ,In„tead of a treat." At last the masculine ankle is to conte into its own, Some American cutters have invented this freakish fashion, which looks like a Mexican bandit's costume in a comic opera, and some Americans are said to be actually wearing it. Stop the Tree Waste.; There is ea demand for millions more. The national character of the aim oi;`the Canadian. Forestry Assoca tion which held its fifteenth con ventioln in Winnipeg, July 7, Sand is summoned up in the lolltwiln g striking paragraphs issued by the association. CANADA'S NEEDS. Canada's forest area is about 800 000,0000, acres, _ The experience of tree plalnters and far seeing farmers, indicates that there will be a demand 'for ten of millions more. Canada possesses some six hun- dred billion board feet of Merchant :able timber, worth perhaps ten billion dollars. Can adiens arts cutting gaff this timber at the rate of about 100 board foot per acre, or eight bill- ion hoard feet ayear• The fire loss leestiniarted to be 950 board feet per acre per annum. Weare e allowing from fifty mill- ion to two huudred million dollars worth of this timber to burn up •every year, Worse than that, we are burning young growth forest litter and soil fertility on hu)nidreds of thousande pffatcres, 'Tlhatt meant' ntnrltfmbee in the future for our children and ehildtrenls children, 'Tbrgst tire& continued make deserts. With the trees and young growth o the roots and soil cover with their undoubted powers of holding water and soli tbg otJ1ier. Floods comp from districts where the'treeshlave been removed; 0-� Fifty per cent, of Calnada is cap- able o1 growing tree crops and no- thing else. lOnlym a fraction, of itlhis absolute forest area is growing trees as it might. The rest is comparatively Unproductive. , We cannot live without wood. •Everything from the houses we live in to 'the books we 'read is made of the product of the tfiorest. We must have it. To keep us in timber, pulp an equ able water supply, fish andsgame we must have trees On the iprlairie shelter belts and woodlots are (protecting crops, stock and houses from the extre- mes of climate, and are providing the farmers with fence poste and stringers. Tho Dominion Government has supplied twenty-five million ' seed I We must have trees, in the for - I est, on the prairie, on sandy lands, in towns and cities. I It takesea s Y r to grow trees—not hours or days. If we want our trees protected we must care for them now. To- 'day is fifty years "ago" from the yeas 1963—and that is plot very Aar away. The seedlings of that day are scarcely more than tie timber now. --p—.- Fifty years is a, very short time in the life of a 'forest, Most of the timber being cut in British Columbia to -day is over two hun- dred years old—some of it is over eight hundred. There is is crisis coming -when the forests which -fon, la: century men have thought "inexhausttible" are going to be greatly depleted. We must prepare for that con - ti n gency. on-tingency. Plant the needed shelter belts. France has spent $35,000,000in plantin,g trees on watersheds. Germany spends up, to $13, perCaere per annum on some forests, and gets gross returns' .0.1p, to $24 per acre, thus yielding net profits up to $7.l per„acre every year., As awhole; d'German forests pro- uoe aboutid$0 net per, acre ann- ually.Canada spelnds much lexis than .one cent per acre annum on the forest lands lim.dt; er Management If we set the fire loss against the, timber product, Canada's for- est balance sheet Shows an enor- mous deficit. ;How Canadians, Stop the lo's'ses, arrest the 'Waste?; There. is but one aInsh4er• Public opinions public interest, public conscience are the only for- ces that will ever ,slake for pro- gress. tugs to sealers, -- { Children Cry. Millions are being sent out __ __ — i :rally by nursery companies, CASTORIA [NERVOUS CHILDREN' ‘E,,xotis Are (4rtell iii tit i; )r Stop,.-. € S of St, Vitas<I4ance. They Need a'I'onic to strengthen the Weak Nerves and-1te$tore Them to Natural Health. , Kan)” a child has been celled awl_ 'ward has been pitlntlshed lu4etihool for not keeping stilt or'for drop ping -things • When the child is not ea111y at fault, asp the br omore as really St. Vitus dance' Snits earlier` stages, So common le this nervous disease 'in childhood that .un sortie ‚s c'ho 015' one-fifth o1.titslpupils .have been found suffering from it in One form or.another, Before; the presence of tate • disease is betrayed tht're is usually a disturbances of the general health, The child shows list llessness ilnlatteratiloln. ;Then it be- comes restless and twitching of the muscles and jerking of the limbs and body follow. A remedy that cures St, Vitus dance and cures it so thor- oughly that no trace of the disease remains is Dr. William's Pink Pills will ch make the new btood necess- ary to feed the starving .nerves and gives thein the nourishment :hey d emand. Mrs. Hiram Barnhart, Scotia lane tion Ont.,, says ;`a About • two years ago my oldest .daughter, Mabel, then en years of age, was stricken with St. Vitus dlance. She could not keep still ler half a Minute, or matter how hard she tried. Her limbs would jerk ;and twitch and every tfitti e thing would start her crying. I gave her several bottels of medicine said to be good for the nerves but in- stead of helping her she was stead- ily growing worse. Pifer t eese0 would change so that 'we could hard ly understand her and her face be- came twitched until she did'not look like the same child. I had used Dr. Williams' Pink Pills myself when run downand finaily decided to g;:vo her'these. -When ,sh.e beat taken two boxes I could ,notice an improvement and by the time she had used five boxes site was fully cussds however, Iseaside termui- ed to make the cure permanent if posafibl:e andlgive her'two boxes more and I cap truthfully say that she has never had a symptom of the trouble since and is now aa' bright and active as any child of her age. I beastly recommend Dr, Williams' Pink Pills to all mothers as the re- sult of what they have done for my child and 1pyself, Sold by all medicine clearers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for 52.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A Sympathetic Oriental By EUNICE IDA BLAKE LCopyright by American Press Asso- ciation, 1911. I am the wife of a United States ar my officer and have lived a good dea of my time ou the Pacific slope, where the only servants to be bad are Chi- nese. There is no doubt but the Chi- nese make very good servants if they wish to be good, but if they prefer to be bad they can excel at that too. I married in the infantry and went out, with . my husband to a station where the Chinese were as thick aS blackberries. I had the pride natural to a bride of showing how well I could keep house and appreciated the importance of winning the confidence of my servants, or, rather, at that time my servant, for the wife of a second lieutenant—neither she nor her husband having anything but his pay-, is not supposed to keep more than one. My first Chinese servant was Tt Wang. Ti was the smoothest, softest tongued rascal I ever met. He had enough duplicity in him for an eight- eenth century European diplomat. To him words were indeed intended to conceal ideas. "You velly young wife," he said to me. "You want velly good Chinaman for cooly. Muchy Chinamen velly bad. Ti feel song for Melican lady. Ti he good cook." All this was spoken with a look of commiseration for a young thing like myself that to one familiar with the man from the Flowery Kingdom would have boded no good. I did not doubt that my servant would be a great comfort to me. It was not long be- fore efore his true inwardness showed it- self. He first made an excuseof hav- ing' a sick brother who couldn't washy- washy to provide for to wheedle me out of a month's wages in advance. Then be' surreptitiously removed un- der his capacious coat and ample:, sleeves all the staple kitchen provi. sions I had '`bought to last several:. months. Tea, coffee, sugar and spices' disappeared like magic. Then, having received an offer of better wages than I was giving him, he took himself oft without so much as saying he was going. My next servant. was Charlie Li. Why so many Chinese are called Char- lie I don't know, though Li is an ap- propriate name for them. - Charlie was recommended by the major's Wife, who had him in her kitchen for' awhile when her regular servant was' i11. She told me she would rather have Charlie than the other. I had, no fault to find with Charlie except, that he stayed with me but a day., He didn't stay long enough to ask for any wages, and since experience had taught me not to pay Chinamen in ad-' vance he didn't get any. After this servants were passing' through my kitchen, none staying with me more than a weep:'' In vain I re- 0@613ofO+t$@-p009+t444 +,,++ ++++4e 7 7 Our Serial Story --. These Scenes appear; in chapters THE HOLD-UP. ruseot to engage one unless tie would agree to stay a mouth. "Something must be scaring them away. I didn't see how they could see anything in a young woman of nineteen to frighten them, and I was the only person with whom they came in contact. One of them, who was about to depart after three days of service, I asked why he left. • "You get illeliean cook. Chinaman not velly good in this house." 'Why not?" 'Donuts. Chinaman won't stay sere." "Why do you go so soon after com- ing?" "I am velly well." He did not seem to care whether I believed hint or not. Indeed, he knew he was lying, and I knew it too. How- ever, I had had such bad luck with Chinese servants—and there were no others to be had—that I made up my mind to do my own cooking for awhile. Meanwhile my husband, who bad been making Inquiries for me as to servants from brother officers' wives, began to be considerably vexed that I could not keep any of them. There was no such loss of servants among those who sent me mine, and it ap- peared that I must either be too ex- acting or have a frightful temper or some other blemish that prevented a servant from working for me, where- as the truth was that after the earlier ones left 1 simply gave up everything to those who came later, granting all requests and opposing them in noth- ing. I didn't even dare criticise the cooking of a single dish. The first tiff I had with my husband was when he ventured to remark that perhaps I didn't give them quite free rein enough. I resented the imputation with a fervor that sent him off to the officers' club and prevented his ever making any such suggestion in future. One day I put the tin bread box out in the sun, turning it up on its side and exposing the bottom. I was sur- prised to see Chinese characters on it. I wondered what they meant. When a woman begins to wonder what is the meaning of anything it is preparatory to makingplans to find out. I called the servant of my next door neighbor, who was beating a rug, to come over and translate the characters. He did so as follows: "This is a very bad woman. She doesn't pay the servants' wages and gives no extras." That smooth tongued villain Ti Wang, who had pitied my youth and inexperienceand had robbed me be- side, bad chalked a notice on the bread box warning all other servants against me. I wafted patiently till my, husband came in from his duties and, showing him the characters on the bot- tom of the box, handed him a transla tdon. Rapid Art Work, The Japanese are not only noted for their quickness on tate battlefield. They also are rapid artists with the brush. It is told of the Japanese artist Pulcui Hotel that three years ago on a hot summer day in Tokyo he painted one picture for Cees of his 1.224 guests. it took bin from 5 It. m, to 7:30 p. m. to complete his task, working with two brushes. This would allow less than forty-three seeonde to a p1 1111e 11' be worlcc'd ae;alil}•, with nit interruption. Tile I'arnous picttire Fujleto Tama,'• by the saute artist, he drew for the Duke of Connaught in one evening_ when the duke was spending a night witb hits. No Matter. I "Go out," the beautiful actress said when her press agent arrived, "and tell the reporters that I am engaged to the crown prince of Switzerland." "But there Is no crown prince of Switzerland." "Oh, well, no matter. That'll give me a chance to deny it before be does anyhow."—Chicago Record -Herald. Anchored In One Spot. "There's another advantage in bny- ing a house on the installment plan." "What is it?" "Although you may never get it paid for, your wife won't suggest moving in the spring."—Detroit Free Press. Down Below. Satan—What do you think of des place? New Arrival—Is anybody ever fatal- ly burned here?—New York Press. 1 Had Leaking Valves Of The Heart. Thought Nothing But Death Would End Her Misery. Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills Cured Her. MRs. J. D. TALBvr, 1776 3rd Ave., East, Owen Sound, writes:—"I have been a great sufferer from heart disease and leaking valves. I have had re- source to every kind of treatment I could think might help me, including the skill of several doctors. I suffered so . for years that at times I have felt that noth- ing but death could end my misery. I was advised by a friend, who had suffered untold pain and misery, just as I had, and had been cured by MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS. to give them a trial, so I decided to do so. I am de- lighted with the result, as I ani now com- pletely cured, and can eat and sleep as I have not done for years, You are at liberty to use my name at any time I am convinced theybest are the b st pills on the market for any form of heart disease." Price 50 cents per'box or 3 boxes for 01.25 at all dealers, or will be mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. reAAA, WnMTnn e.niarten nAAAA/SA srtscYVVSOVVVVtens,VVVVVOIVVVVVOlittl THE WESTERN FAIR LONDON. CANADA Trio; OREA`I' LIVE STOCK EXHIBITION` $27,000 IN. PRIZES AND ATTRACTIONS a.grif cent Programme of WESTERN ONTARIO' S POPULAR EXHIBITION Attractions SEPT. r TO 13 Twice Daily Two Speed Events Daily • Fireworks Every Night $2000 Added to the Prize List This . Year Take a Holiday and Visit London's Exhibition Single Fare on all Railroads in Western Onttario. SPECIAL EXCURSION DATES—Sept. 9th, lith and 12th Prize List and all Information front the Secretary W. J. REID, President A. lit. IIJNT, Secretary, VVYVVVVVVVVWVVVYVVVVVVVVYAAAAAAAAANNAWAAAAAAAAAMi Ir.