HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-09-04, Page 8'S 14• fr'4 vie l ,. 1TWJ
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AScrfect Remedy for Constipa-
tion., Sour Storaach,Tharrhoca,
WorIps,Ccnv;ii vion ,,rcverish-
dtcSSandLO$;-SO&' S7II'.:E5'.
l'az simile Sri tune of
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al
sPa
Oar infants and Children.
e Kind You Have
n
1 , ..Bough!
Bears the
Signature
Int]
Use
Fr Over
_Mr t Years
11 .5,0_
ee;' co Pee Oi' \t'flaSeman.
THE OSNTAVe' COMP/MY, N. l" YOrFt C1Ti.
KNEW HIS BUSINESS. }}
t
This Parisian Beggar Realized the
Value of New Shoes.
Begging Inc long been a great art in
Europe. By using subtle touches of
misery and calculated` effects of Bis-
ease and dismemberment the beggar
became a master of pathetic appeal.
A delightful story of Dupre, the sculp-
tor, is quoted by Hamiltou W. Slabie
in the Outlook.
Looking out of his window in a be-
tel one bleak wintry morning in the
good old times, Dupre saw au old beg-
gar sitting barefooted on the stone
steps below. His heart' was moved
with compassion, and he began to
•search for a pair of shoes. He found
two pairs, one of them new.
"Do not give the new pair away;
you will need them yourself," urged
'!tis prudent wife.
"No," said the sculptor, "I shall Lind
'the old pair more comfortable. More-
over, if 1 am to give anything away
111 am going to give the best I have."
So he hurried downstairs and put. the
'new shoes in the hands of the bare-
footed old man. 'I' he next morning the
beggar sat on the steps as usual, and,
as usual, his feet were bare. ' Dupre
hurried down to him. "Where are the
shoes 1 gave you? You are not wear-
ing them," he said.
No," replied the old man, "I Could
not wear them, excellency. If I did
nobody would give me anything. I
'have pawned them."
Lakes of Blood.
The name Lake of Blood or its equiv-
alent has been given to places= as far
apart as England and South America.
"Sanguelac"-i. e., the Lake of
Blood -was the name given by the vic-
torious Normaus to the battlefield at
Efastings, where the Saxons were over -
4 thrown and slain with terrible carnage.
S'or a similar reason Lake Trasimene
'has borne the name "Sanginetto" be
cause its waters were reddened during
(the second Punic war by the blood of
some 15,000 Romans who fell before
tee trnnna of Fiannih"1,
Yet another ,tate of Blood, called
also "Yaguar Ceche," is situated in
the state of Ecuador. It is one of a
series of lakes formed by the exthtet
critters of volcanoes on the towering
heights of the Andes range of moun-
tains.
The Puzzle.
Now gaze on this poor sad young man,
v'ho moves as in trance
And wonders if last year's dress suit
Will do for this year's dance.
—Montreal Herald.
Maintaining -Discipline.
"The manager discharged Jibbs"
"Wilat for?"
"Jibbs said that the boss' son, the
junior partner, was a fool and an ass."
"Well, wen!"
"The manager didn't discharge Tibbs
so much for that either as to maintain
discipline. He said Jibbs had no right
to expose the secrets of the house."-
Browning's Magazine.
Lesson In Etiquette.
"I was ashamed of you at that dinner
last night, you made so much noise
drinking your tea."
"Why, I was only sipping it. It was
hot."
"I should say you were gargling.
Why didn't you pour it out into your
saucer, the way I did?" -Atchison
Globe,
A WOMAN'S WORK
sometimes reduces her strength to the
depths of weakness—her devotion to
household cares prevents sufficient
rest and recreation. Thousands of
women in this condition find Scott's
Emulsion exactly what they need; it
is predigested body -food so medically
perfected that every drop yields direct
returns in strengthening the organs
and tissues and in making healthy,
life-sustaining blood. Scott's Emulsion
is devoid of alcohol or any harmful
drugs, and overcomes tiredness and
nervousness in a marvelous way.
Si
,he I?onlSej''s' it
• among the niest extla'ordinary piel
of eymbolleal known to'ilave beell usad,#
by the early Aafatics +gas # dgnre a ;
donkey's head'used as arepreselitlelye
•of the deity, Thereis ;ne do pb''what-'
ever that the same emblem *uh ,once
used among the Hittites,' the Egyptians°
and ane or two other nations Its a gym -
bol of their red god, Stat.' 'The super-"
etitiou of the yellow 'donkey 9f India,.
the story of the swift ass oe eesteru;
Asia' and they'. ass of Dioeysius and,:
many other, marvelous 'ass stories are
all survivals, of that curious fogm of
religious wousbip the adoration of the
Os' head.
They 13 t Knew.
Abe fool • saicl one day In the king's
presence, "1 am the king!" Said the
king iatig•iled, for he ':knew that bis
fool was wrong.
A week later the king was weary be-
cause of au error he 1iad committed
and exclaimed, "I am a fool!" And
the fool !pushed, for be knew that his
king was right:
Not Much.
Howell -Mending maketb a full man.
Powell -Lit if you get arrested for
drunkenness the judge isn't inclined to
accept` as an excuse your statement
)fiat you hive beau reading. -New York
?cess.
The Only Time.
Tbomas Data. when is the freedom
of the city given to a man? Dad --
When his wife goes to the country for
the summner.-Ilarper's Bazar.
Every, nee has its problem, by WY -
Mg .whtc^h humanity is helped forward,
-I1einricb Heine.
Literary Note.
The teacher had been talking to her
pupils on Ouida's story, "The Dog of
Flanders," and she followed her talk
by an oral test.
"Now, wbat is the name of the au-
thor?" she queried.
Small and Siaugy Boy -Oh, You Ida.
-Boston Record.
DOCTORS SAS®
COULD T GET CORED
THREE VIALS OF
Willbsirn's Laza-Liver Pills
CURED HIP&
Could Hardly Eat Account of Indigestion.
Ma. DAVID BEaalaoe, Claremont,
N.S., writes: "I have had indigestion
for some years, and could hardly eat.
It then turned into a sour stomach, and
the doctors said I could not get cured.
I used a lot of medicine until at last one
of my friends told me to use MILetmRN'S
LA%A-LIvEa PILLS, and after I had used
three vials, I was completely cured, and
I always keep them in the house now."
lelILUVRN'S LASS-1,IVEIL PILI,s are a
wonderful remedy for all diseases or dis-
orders of the liver, and have. been univer-
sally used diming the twenty odd years
they have been on the market.
Price 25 cents a vial, or 5 for $1.00,
at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt
of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont.
Origin of a Song.
The grumbling of a negro groom led
;o the composition of the immortal
'Old Folks at Home." Wbile waiting
for a change of horses at a Kentucky
oostelry the composer, Stephen Foster,
author of so many beloved Barky mei-
Ales, heard a melancholy negro mur-
mur as be threw a setof harness to
the ground; "I's sick an' tired o' dis
,life. I wisht I was back wif de ole
folks at home."
"Where may that be, Sam?" asked
Foster.
"Oh," answered the darky, "way
down on de Suwannee river."
The result was the song as we have
It today.
Counter Diplomacy.
"1 think you will like this goods,
,-, -. .."`'si ri_:rpr°� u'' -z^. te=a: •a T Sr`•:.. ..+: %'`yi�,� .i« �r ...t. `' ,:4
lig
owl buildin material that has not increasled
ice is
Porti n 1,..
ad
��A C
h makes
concrete that you can depend upon for satisfactory results, whether you use it for a No
en walk.
or a High q
quality and low price are made poaslbie by ei7cicat organization and manufacturing
Seeomies due to a
• n that every ba large of ,cem nt you buy b s the "Canada "
g label ---it is your guarantee=
of satisfaction.
Canada Cement Company Limited, Montreal
Write for a free copy Vibe book " What the Farmer, can Do With Concrete."
oativo,5 r �i
tAp
aepolnp1i,5li Che1r purpose ?i
With mit iri'ttinl efirdteilcy;:-
dt c' ,m r
al 1 11, aY a A �O t
a m tr
f1
na 1 Yt )
r r :
Imu:l,. tai.,, 't.1
7,.Ca, are not' ;
2 jam, a 150'X, et yOlir
Tjkuit'',174
Natlon.imBrag aadlhemis,a1
Co, of Conada LhnIted,
Oa5";"ayf
1,001 n1 en n anile timn,t 11 Ill 11 asuer1U
iveil et. sh,!m eii' f• InSIL the: tlnilg flit'
Y. Stout, tnitltlle ,tg,ird :lady
•
Sir! squduied the eustomer in n
rage, The clot ittiir ill, fullx rag and
recovered himself' quic.11y '
"Is:Irttot me I' he tinned "1 anlstoak
you for the oug, Indy ,who was, in
tem ycsterdey loilung for eemct!tiug.
fur her grandmother. • Now (tot I took
at you again, I.sce that tarts wog An
Ades person. 'Now, If you are buying.
;Cur yourself, w'e have sometbhag over
bene abut - •
i �„
-Cievel:uxi f sin Dealer.
ares.
IRmportant etl1F nge5- iii Grnotd
I't aatalt Train Service out
Toronate
Train 'leaving Toronto 10.15 a.nl.
daily at y except Sunday for Ponetang
Wharf wilt be discontinued from.
Allendale to Penetang after Sat-
urday, September 6th, but will i'un
through to Huntsville and North
Bay via Muskoka Wharf, commen-
cing Monday,. September 8th.
M1fL EP, 'in
TorUSonto O 122.01' p.m.
RESSdaily except
Sunday for Muskoka Wharf and
Huntsville, will be discontinued af-
ter Saturday, September Gth.
BUPPALO-M1YSisOKA EXPRESS
leaving Toronto 2.20 a.m. daily for
Muskoka Wharf, Huntsville, 13urk's
Palls and North Bay, will be dins
oontiiriued• after Sunday, September
7th,
BUPPALO EXPRESS, leaving
Toronto 12.05 a.m. daily for. Niag-
ara Palls and Buffalo, wile be dis-
continued after Monday, Septem-
ber 8th.
Train leaving Toronto 1.40 p.m.
Saturdays only for Jackson's Point
will be discontinued alter Satur-
day, August 30th.
Train leaving Jackson's Phint 7.30
a.m. Mondays only for Toronto will
be run oin Tuesday, September
2nd, ilnstcadt of Monday, Septem-
ber ist, and will be disceiintinued
after that ditte,
Through , PittsburSleeper on
4,32 p.m. train from -Toronto will
be discontinued after Saturday,
September 6th,
east Pullman Sleeping Car fo,r
I<ingstoln Wharf ivili leave Toronto
10.45 p.m. Saturday, September
13th, and leave Kingston Wharf
12,20 (a.m. for Toronto after Mon-
day, September 15th,
'noes rhospho$ites"
The Cheat Eneiisa Rcmedaaml
Tones andinvigoratesthe who le.
nervous system, makes new
loodin old Veins, Cures Nerv-
ous Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, Des-
pon dens', $esuud Weakness Emissions, Sper-
matorrhan, and Erects of.Ouse or Excesses.
Price 81 per box, six for $5. One will please s
will ouro.•Sold by ell druggists or mailed d1n
plain pkg. on receipt of price. Ncw pamphlet
mailed free. Tho Wood Motllelno Co.
(formerly Windsor) Toronto.Ont.
CURIOUS PERUVIAN TREE.
It Produces a Copious and Continuous
Supply of Rain.
The ram tree of. Peru grows very
large. is rich in leaves and is called
by the Indians tamaieaspi. It has the
power of collecting the dampness of
the atmosphere and condensing it into
a continuous and copious supply of
rain.
In the dry season, when the rivers
are low and the heat great, the tree's
power of condensing seems at the
highest. and water falls in abundance
from the leaves and oozes from the
trunk. The water spreads around in
veritable rivers, part of which' filters
into the soil and fertilizes it. Tbese
rivers are canalized so as to regulate
the course of the water.
it is estimated that one of the Peru-
vian rain trees will on the average
yield nine gallons of water per diem.
Cn
e field of an area of onekilometer
square -that is, 3,250 feet each way -
can be grown 10,000 trees separated
from each other by twenty-five meters.
Phis plantation produces daily 805,000
liters of water. If we allow for evap-
'nation and infiltration we have 135,-
000 liters or 20,531 gallons of rain for
distribution daily. The rain tree can
be cultivated with very little trouble,
for it seems indifferent as to the soil
in which it grows, The tree increases
rapidly and resists both extremes of
aimate.—Espana Moderna. •
A BRAVE TOREADOR.
One of the Most Thrilling Incidents of
the Bull. Ring.
•The famous Spanish toreador Reverte
&gored in one of the most thrilling
incidents ever witnessed in the arena.
It was at Bayonne. After disposing of
two bulls Reverte' bad twice plunged
his sword into a third of great strength
end ferocity, and as the beast contin-
aed careering wildly the spectators'be-
*an to his Reverie for bungling.
Wounded to the very quick of his
;ride, the Spaniard shouted, "The bull
Is slain!" and, throwing aside his
sword, sank on one knee witb . folded
ernes n themiddle o the - e
a i d f ring.13
was right, but he had not allowed for
the margin of accident. The wounded
beast charged' full upon him, but the
,matador, splendid to the, last, knelt
motionless as a statue, while the.spec-
tators held their breath in horrified
suspense. Reaching his victim, the
bull literally bounded at' him, and as
he sprang he sank in death, with his
last effort giving one fearful lunge of
Me head that drove a horn into the
thigh of . the kneeling man and laid
bare the bone from the knee to, the
Mint. Sti11 Reverte never flinched, but
remained' kneeling, .exultant: in victory,
but calmly pcohtemptuous .of applause.
till"the peak, carded away to heal him' of
'his grleyous..igound. '
relait
rots tp ,•FarMtimors W Are "prppb ' tc;
'Qut Up rine' Lays
Tat7ay there nit 'eo uparatively rem-
pfoneet ferth Rllieh must 1)e ':lcaretl
our of the f rbst,1but there are;'uiuuy
wbleh still passes enough drupes for
f iwi g t n ommi r
n l et t i t,, anti f a e tal uses
On *limited reale, • In the fight of re-:
cent warnings as to. the menace of 0,
scarcity of timber to the 'future,:farul-
5l's neetl' not `fie admonished to evol'
useless waste of trees. The averag
fnruler does most of ils tree citrin,
• in elle Winter, when be; hrts tilne to d '
Txrmn CUTTING ON TUE FAt10I.
the work. But perhaps the average
rage
farmer has not considered the cone
mereial value .of his trees:
The writer sliest some time at a
.smell hotel in a village in southeastern
efissouti a few years ego and Was de-
lighted with the big open fireplace in
the hotel odlce. Roaring fires were
built "therein, and it was good to sit
fu front or at the Side and watch the
flames suck upward. Only wood was
burned -no coal -and that made the
real delight al the open fire.
One day the writer saw the hotel
man bring in several huge log cuts
and dump them by the fireplace. The
landlord put on a log now and then
and achieved a fine lire. The burning
logs threw off a faint, peculiar scent
which seemed familiar -a memory of
boyhood. Investigation discovered
that the log cuts were of splendid,
perfect walnut -one of the scarcest
woods nowadays. Any big walnut
tree is worth tunny dollars more for
cabinet work thau for fuel, as it
would seem almost anybody should
]snow by this time. That man burned
up about $1200 worth of walnut.
It is well always to bear in mind
that the dine big tree you are cutting
down and cutting up for fuel or fence
rails possibly nmight bring you as
much as a loadof wheat or corn if
you would haul it to the nearest mar-
ket,
Homemade Feed Mixing Box.
"There's always pleuty of work on'
the farm," as the hired man said when
his city cousin asked him bow he
mauaged to pass his time in winter
when the nonfarming season was nu.
The hired man spoke gospel truth, as
every farmer knows. But there are
ways of making the work easier, win-
ter as well as summer. Some farmers
do many timings in a haphazard, slip-
shod way. just' as their ancestors used
to do them, and never tale the trouble.
sox wed STOOi FEED.
to think op more modern methods. By
this neglect they cause themselves
ranch extra work.
A certain farmer in Indiana whose
neighbors mix feed for the stock in the,
old laborious way, ` simply pouring
water from a bucket into the mixture
and stirring- it, has contrived a very
simple but Pandy arrangement for
mixing feed. Els fouud an old flat box
which had been used years before for
mixing mot•tar when the farmhouse
was rebuilt. Rains of several seasons
had washed' out all vestiges of cling-
ing time. From the wen in his 'back
yard he tern n Cuute of two inch wood
eu pipe which had 'been,nsed formerly
for draining a marshy place. With his
boy pumping at .the wen the farmer
has a cons aitt 'stream of water flow-
ing
into his mixing box while he stirs
time feedstufs, into a sack near at
hand goes the mixed and moistened
feed, ready to serve, and this Indiana
man says the cows surely do like it
put up that way.
CA STO R A
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of 't
4111 , it + i i tt
E POLISH
bior in
rt:
stn r..
bGause.thee
is•` o uPPeritirle
.Easy to Use, Good for the ShOOS
0r.1' ' COUNTRY,
PACTS All qtr l CANADA
The first Canadian, bank was the
Bank of Montreal, established 1817.
Ther averaged Canadian farmer, in.
1.912 ,spent $10 per acre an labor
On his farm: and reaped crops worth
a'r5.i0 'per acre,
Canada has Iinlestimateti water
area of 125,755 square mill's.
Customes revenue of Halifax, 1912
Percentage of growth of some Ca-
n adtaln
anadtaln cities, 11016-11; ,Ot't'awa, 44
percent; Langdon, 22; Quebec, 16.
Halifax, 12; St. John, b.
Nut be' post i of po t offices ; At confed-
eration, 3,638; 1912 13,859.
British capital placed publicly in
Canada up to March, 1913, 463,000,000
pounds sterling'.
(Canada's oyster e miocluctfon de-
creased from 64,646 barrels in 1882
to 33,102 barrels last year.
Last year's immigration included
13,346 Iluthenictlns, 3,295 Buggarians
844717,'IChinuiese, 51322
Japanese, 632 Turks, 144 Syrians
and 138n1egroes.
There are 110,415 members on the
Canadian international labor roll,
'anti 13311.1 isepu;relly Canadians
unions.
The Panama eauat will shorten
the water route between Liver-
pool and Vancouver 5,666 miles.
The family remedy for Coughsand Colds
'Shiloh costs so aittt^ and does ;o much!'
Father's lidvid'l!
To Tne Teamster
The following principles or great
truths instilled in,ayounger by his
father may be of benefit to the team
stele At anyt)i►$eltItey offer geod
food foi11N.'leeton 'to' k'n.v; a eel
who deals in horseflesh,
Give a horse a chance. Wheel:. is
time enough after to make him go.
fetosl balky 'hor:iele •alre mad ee
balky by their drivers,
Nevere whip horse because you
are angry.
A good teamster gains the con-
fidenee of his team.
9 horse should'bern>lade to•feor
the whip rather than feel ilt.
Teach a team to,puli a light load
right and they wilt plan a. he av e
load right.
Never 'train a team otn'a heaverload,
Never scold a team for breaking
an evener.
Load light at first. and heavier af-
fterwattds,
Never pull a team when they are
out of breath.
Do notlallow a'tleam to stop at
will but stop thean'soon afterward.
Short stops and, of ten islfi:'good
rule for resting horses.
A horse thalttwill stop vvitiehm ee!
is told to will seldom runrlaw,ay.
It is all right for your horse to
have speed' if you never find it out.
:Move 'a little y'otrrself 'to'g.e,rs
started instead of asking your team
to make up lost time.
ILO.
Killing' the I3s.1 P e
"11m he i wt,n mmedi-
1 u litettin. faun v e r if. 1 du - burr: to
oke it tiinylle tits (Junur n i l uit'uti'ribo
vt auiblu iol v,lxlnre, lin:,if 1 lbould
it+ eondt ,nit d 1'o1 u l si!t to "wallolr
.11' doti's 1 6r,'ia butt ('ll 'mite teem.
1 0117' sit It it'fm tstltnitc>Htrd.. "4:tn011
who woo doetoting himself In the drug
eto'i0.showed mr ilu
1'h!' dla-„'int
lied ;taxed ,t 3)1111 -len -
1t ly ehnaxio00 hl e, '1'h, 111„1a lielore
axing it for ci ,• <i it 0 'The
.t n,1 but'' brunt ht it 01011 1iluon-
'n!s wady 14111vin.iiorl. i1., •i>i: anon
1,111 11:1 in bl' n „urti it tt ! t limited.
act r- O hirh this nu dl! 1.t t . art -•It as
tm1
1:
1110 t01
1 ;t u mac I,u 1 n,} , nth that
Nay Ll',N a clisii m ,t!itln.11
nen said, uf 1�l1 Ir.„il
s,
rl tut n „!rdue 1(er. ''110nllt
vi,t< ,mt n.;ia, u.,,:9.! hx1.
eesieOeec oteeecsUemfateeeeascee
ts This Ad. is a511ul)ortarll; as •
2 any news item and. we hope 2
this notice will interest you 3
• eee®Qq'i,Q8iO r,�i8t$4$'seeeseeeas a
ea • �tp
rd
O In Shaw's Schools, Toronto,
3 young people are tanned to
o earn good salaries. We con-
vn duct five Business Schools in
this city Wewould like to
a send you are latest cata-
o ogue.
® Pall Term Prom Sept. 2nd.
W. H. SHAW, Pres,
eesee1f sseseesecescie®®®G3slesee
5
0
e
51
w
At
s9
so
+e
40,
lle'C.'idq'uit115M icily
FOR
Walking and Ridiing Oliver
plows
I. H. C, Gasoline Engines
McCormick Machinery Pumps
and Windmills.
ALL KINDS ARP REPAIRS
AND EXPERTING.
CALL ON
Mille lihi6
le
Corner of Princes and Albert
streets.
Centra1RusinessCollege
Stratford, Ont.
Canada's Best
Business College
Fall Term From Sept 2fid
We have three departmcdnts
Commercial, Shorthand, aaid Teleg-
raphy, ICloursss are thorough and
'practical. We have a strong staff
of experienced instructors and our
graduates tweet with success. Write
:for our catailogue and. learn what
wit are doing.
quickly stops coughs cures colds and beams 1
the throat and lunge. •• .. 25 cents. D. A. McLachlan, Principal
Women and Advertisements
OME statements are so saturated with their
own moral as to require no comment. "Rid-
ing on a car during the excitement over the
naval battles between Russia and japan, said Mr.
Thomas Martindale, 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 every line of the advertise-
Iments, and then turned to the woman's page, T 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 to read, and you must present
I your business in a readable shape to be in the fight'
these days.”
is your Stock Moving? if not.
Then we can Help You,
New Era Ads pay—They
get right at the people.
,
HE, NEW ERA. CLINTON
TELEPHONE 30: I
i
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