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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-09-11, Page 6Pandora Range will both l• cook and bake at the same time' to its full'- capacity. This , feature and Many other exclusive ones will compel your serious consideration when you select your kitchen range. 1 LONDON TORONTO iNONTREAL WINNIPEG VANCOUVER ST. JOHN i'AMILTON CALGARY L1: s'KATOON ▪ EDMONTON SoM In i`✓lanton by filar Pandora Ran- ges are sold everywhere by good dea- lets who back up our guar- antee.on this ,f, spiendid: range— si �a`�lai�r:l and Brothers iISTOCRATIC SMITHS. -Zln,c' Lead the Four Hundred In New• h^rack, Chicago and Philadelphia. '131n, new Locater of the Soeiel [leg- Eula., 1151 issued, contains an inter- oecIsg study of names as Ilrey are 'fete in the various Four hundreds of tiler Iles which have been listed. The , T,A0.LX�•which covers twenty-nine csi' ^ contains the names of 95,048 rr gsri,•scrus. Of these 60,to2 are grouped as Mr, and Mrs. and 44,806 appear as Oh B& New York's Four Hundred the ,i'SmE151e lead, there being 166 In the Lag -weer -Ade iuciosure. The. Browns v•'co 'next with 143, the Clarks third reatit ninety-one. Although less nu - 1t �m,,.a�Crt.gres, the Livingstons, with fifty eft are still typically of the me - 147, .Ivens, there befog only four Living- sf us outside New York. Three are in - • Paul, and one is in Cincinnati. In 1Tis hzin_gton the name of Davis comes Iii st. 'with twenty-three, and the Llar- ozv, Parkers and Smiths are sec - 'reed, with twenty-two. There are twen- 'Me Johnsons. In Philadelphia there atto 1.37 Smiths, ninety-two 11lorrises juori3 eighty-nine Biddies. f1. Chicago the Smiths are also in !lead. There they number asi4galust the thirty-five Adamses, the , +qty+six Walkers and the twenty t;7itr ,llIasons. Boston, however, might - AT the general average of the tis, the Locater enumerating only of that name who abide in the itifsrefr Bay region of the Huh. In the Odeon list the Coolidges lead with a s the Pe hod of^ht followedb ffF�r9 9 rod. E'utnams, thirty -flue each. Prov - reform has thirty-one Aldrlehes and l'(n ity-two: Arnolds. St. :Louis has • old family names as the Oa- 1senhes and Cabannes. Cincinnati 'Reeds with its Andersous; St. Paul with •'CSIs and Minneapolis with Wash- a1r12s. In San Francisco there are , i ty-eight Adamses, and Baltimore r- )st. tieerids in Williamses and JenL-ruses. multi TO 1 ogle 1091. It 0)118 010 twee - dee twenty year's ago to cools food for domestic animals, but exhaustive . investigations In feeding seemed to show that this is not profitable, and a great ehange of custom has resulted. The Minnesota station has accom- plished mucin in improving wheat, the corn Illinois station in improving the c o yield, the Wisconsin station in the diary and the California station in the lands. reclamation of alkali Tec The exp er[ment stations are gradu- ally correcting certain of their original mistakes. There was a tendency at first to a duplication of work. Each attempted perhaps to do too many things. Now there is better co-ordina- tion through the department of agri- culture at Washington. The stations also are specializing and devoting themselves more particularly to local interests. Each agency has its sphere, of influence. --It is well to have some men in the community set apart to make the experirnental studies for which the individual farmer could not spare the time. Millions of dollars in the aggregate may be lost by a single popular error if sufficiently widespread: To find out what is what is really the teal) stations are trying to perform.-- New erform:-New York Press. A Hollow Tree Their Home. A whole family live In an ancient olive tree nt Damuscius. The trunk, 0)1)1011 is entirely' hollow, is about sev- ehty feet in girth,' and inside it a poor family have taken up their residence. Their few articles of furniture are neatly arranged, and a lamp is sus- pended at the entrance. Although the tree is many hundreds of years old and is beginning to show signs of de- cay, It is still capable of bearing a good ,crop of fruit at the proper sea- son, thus providing for its inhabitants not only shelter, but food as well. '' STATIONS. EXPERIMENT Children' Cry Work of These Centers of Agricultural FOR FLETCHER'S Anvestigation. I C A al". O R I A r.ft. the opinion of many qualified ob- .:sees the agricultural experiment r.mil3S•ons are proving to be one of the 5pasatest agencies of helpfulness in -,Viso United States. Under a law passed. 95sten years ago each of the states ',small territories, receives several thou- , -mud hou---essord -dollars a year from the general :gariiernment for this purpose, The elate -2 :add about half as much more. %Terse 'centers of practical investlga- ti n. •concerning the plant and animal n ttb't@'.e,of the farm in all its bearings are Atsttivg numberless the ones and cus- Grocer Ask your Druggist or G ':o show you the new plan for hung all the flies in your douse or store in one night, �s11c1 have neither flies nor fly fellers about' in the, daytime. By EDWIN D, TROUSPALE Copyright by American Press Asso- ,;. dation, .1911. This story, was told me by an Eng, lisbmnn who had grown old In. the'. cidtl service in ludia. We tvere'sitting, u the smoking room of a liner between REMEMBER! The ;ointment' you put on your child's skin gets into the system lust as surely ps food the child eats. Don't let impure fats and mineral coloring matter (such as many of the cheap ointments contain) get 1'into your child's blood I a,Zam- Bu'k is purely herbal, No pois- onous coloring. Use it always. 50c. Box a! 411 Druggists and Stores. Southampton^,and New York: The people of ludic are the most sensitive as: well as the most merciless. people of the world. An Indian will treat one he itvishes to destroy" with'' the most flattering attentionhe is planning to kill him. He always strikes in the drink—that•is, when he kills with steel. Blit it is whir poison that Indians do their most artistic mur- derous work.They` have studied the science of pefsou for ages. They have. poison rings. poison perfumes, poison flowers. But the strangest of all is a poison human being, Til 3r' will feed.a person on a certain poison till he has absorbed so much of it that his very breath Is no&ions to, one unused to. what the poison person is saturated with, I bed a narrow escape from death When I 'was in ludic. It was when 1 first went out there as 1 ;youngster and had no idea of the secret dangers to be incurred. That whieh au Indian is most jealous of is e woman. Any Eu- ropean who attempts the slightest fa - with one of them is in im- uiineut danger of his life. 11 they would give a fellow a chance it wouldn't he quite so terrible, but they_ won't. tic is either murdered, in the dark or poisoned. I was just twenty years old when t landed in Calcutta to tutee position in Il British house, dealing In opium and the goods of We country, Later l was. sent into the interior to buy curios, two of us being sent together fel' greater safety. Bob Britton, not much older than myself, way my companion. In one of the towns we heard of a rajah whose brother or some other relative hod died childless, and the rajah had inherited his effects. Not cawing to keep duplicates, he had offer- ed to sell many articles. Bob, nud 1 called on him, and he exhibited his wares, treating us at the same time royally. While we were bargaining he feasted ns In the room occupied by the women, which was a great honor. unfortunately for Bob and 010 we drank toowine. much Being permitted to roam where (1e pleased, we devoted ourselves each to ull I miss- ed Indian TITh Presently a pretty With r art. MIS tt it 3 and thegirl He e d ed Iiob.g 1111(1 strolled allay into a sort of in• closed summer garden. I invited my companion to go off 10 the same way, but she gave me a look that was all the warning 1 needed. I contented' my- self with remaining with the others Bob and the gill he was with re- mained away from the rest of us for some time. -When he returned he ap- peared- to be quite proud of himself, though the girl's face wore a fright- ened look. As soon as we were alone he told me that he bad taken the sweetest kiss he had ever tasted. i asked him if he was sure he teas un- observed, and be said be sate no one about, but while 1119• 11ps, touched the girl's she bud uttered 11, suppressed scream. It was immediately after this that the two returned. When we rejoined the rajah be ex- pressed a hope that we had enjoyed ourselves. He was very effusive in his offers of hospitality and friendship. He asked us how we were pleased with the ladies, and when we expressed ourselves delighted he said that we 'had not seen the most beautiful. He clapped his hands, a servant appeared, wedid tongue - u z gave an order he not understand, the servant withdrew, and in a few .minutes our host led us into another room where were assem- bled several of the handsomest indinn women I have ever seen. The rajah introduced .'us, then left us, saying that he•wouid take a nap. One of the women, apparently with the consent of the others, took Bob un- der her especial care, another took me, and it wasn't long before,, under pretense of showing, us some of the rajah's most valuable curios, they led us into a suit of rooms filled with enough rare articles to stock a muse- um. Bob and `I soon got into separate rooms. My companion and 1 seated ourselves on a divan and were chat- ting about the curios' when I noticed that she had been using somestrange, perfume. She gradually' drew nearer to me, and I' noticed a deathly sick- ness coming over me. An instinct of self preservation, 1 suppose, led me to •getup from the divan. Mynextidea was to find Bob. 1 staggered into an- other room. There was Bob with his. lips glued' to those of, the girl be was with. Seeing me, she unwouud her arms from about him, and he fell; to the floor. 1 wentto him, bent over him and knew that he was dead. There was a door near by opening Into a garden. .1 managed to get, to it and passed out. The fresh air revived me, and, regaining the strength of my legs, i ran like a deer anywhere to get away from the horrible death 1 hod barely escaped. 1 returned to Calcutta and told my story. Nothing could he done in the matter; itis not the policy of the Brit- tsh'governmept•to punish ,Indians who take re0009.0 on Europeans for such offenses. Britton's suthleu death re- ceived no official notice whatever,. , 1 was considered to have made a tricky escape:-'.. - ' There has never been any doubt in my mind that the twagiels who affect- ed 'Bob rind `me had been fed on a peison And Were In the rajah's service es eecret executioners. The Joke on Her. "1 suppose being the wife of n hu mor'ist is as continuous joke," said her former schoolmate. - "Yes, she sadly sighed. looking at her faded and old fashioned, gown, 'crud It's on lite.' -Exchange. THE "UNIVERSAL DAY." Greenwich Time Now -.the Standard r, Almost the World Over. Nearly the 10hole of the world toda counts its longitude from Greenwich, Engiand. Now that France has con- , sented to adopt "westEuropean time" as ber standard there are few civilized. countries left that still cleave to their local ,noon and midnight. Portugal, Greece, Holland and Ireland are excep- tions,' and save for these few the "zone" system is now universal. Everywhere ''civil noon" the noon of clocks and time tables—is an exact number of hours, fast or slow, of t•`Greenwich mean time." From -Green- wich the exact time is conveyed at 1 o'clock every day by electric current to Loudon and all the chief towns of the British isles. The globe is divided into zones of fifteen degrees, or one. hour breadth, the Greenwich meridian being in the center of the sero,zone. When voyages of discovery began the peak of Tenerife was frequently used as a first:. meridian of longitude until a scientific congress assembled by Riche- lieu at Paris in 1630 selected the island of Ferro fee,the purpose, and it gradu- ally superseded the various others' in use. The Washington 'meridian con- ference of 1884 recommended the ex- clusive use of Greenwich meridian and a "univerdal dray" beginning for the whole .earth at Greenwich mid- night without, however, Interfering with local time.—New York World,. y CONQUERING THE , AIR. Progross-In the Art of. Aviation Doee. Not Halt. The art of flying continues to make steady 'progress. The Most striking feats of this kind recently have been achieved over the water. Glenn Cur- tiss after malty . experiments 1ias at last made several successful flights from the nolers of. San Diego bay, arising and alighting with perfect ease. Eugene Ely's twelve mile flight from the iI i;itiou field at Ban Fran- cisco to the warship Pennsylvania, anchored in the bay, was also 11c- complished with entire success. 1Ic- Curdy's overwrites flight of ninety-six miles from Key West—the longest yet accotupiished—was considered ,prac- tically a suvteSs, and the aviator re- ceived ovations and 1101709, although he -fell into the sea when within ten. miles of Havana. his objective point. 'These naval feats by aeroplane un- doubtedly had considerable influence 111 inducing ('an9ress to ln11110 an ap- propriation of 5125,000 for egninning the signal corps with aeroplanes. This Is not as barge a sum as Is an- nually being devoted t0 this purpose by some of the 011110 nations interest- ed in the military possibilities of avia- tam, hot it is larger than previous ap- propriationd.—American Review of Re- views. TERRIBLE ACS{ SADA or 1 A. Became Very Weak. Diarrhoea, especially if allowed to run any length of time, causes great weak- ness, and the only thing to do is to check it on its first appearance. You will find FW'ood's rhosp7�odiael aisle Renaed. . ToneToe s ureal ig0 l neAvou8 system, Blood.In s1(tom, makes Nerv- e/CS in old voiirs. Cun•ea lUerv- oris Debility/ Mental and Brain Worry, Des- pondency, Debility, d Weakness, Emissions, Sper- nraterrYarea, and Erects 0/ Abuse or .Paccesses. Price $1 per box, six£or$5. One: will please, cix. will o,,,'n Sold by all, druggists . or a ai ted Z t that a few doses of DR. rOwLgR'S EX. TRACT Ob' WILD $TRAWI)ERRY wilt do this quickly and effectively. MRs. JACOB SMITH, Manor, Sask., writes:—"I am pleased to express my gratitude for your remedy. In nay case, I had a terrible attack of diarrhoea. Just about every three minutes, I would have a passage, and it would keep this up for a week at a time, causing the, passing of bloody water. I was so pained and weak, I could not do anything. `Sting your IDR. rowLr:R's' EXTRACT 08 WILD STRAWBERRY recommended, I tried it and it thoroughly cured me. It is the only medicine for this complaint I will now have. "DR. rowL9R'S has been on the mar- ket for over sixty-five years, and is, with- out a doubt, the best remedy known for the cure of Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Crarnps, Pain in the Stomach, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum, and all Bowel Complaints. When you ask for "Da. rOWLER's" see that you are not handed one of the reliable old man substitutes for this Y remedy. Get the yellow wrapper on which ap- pears -the name—of The T. Milburn Co., Limited, 'Toronto, Ont. Price, 35 cents. CHEERED THE HERO.' - arm an . �rde' POWER FRONT BROOK DAM. Expert Urges Farmers to Store Up Water For Various Uses, t`^^ By- EDWARD TAYLOR. lir, Farmer, what are y00 doing with the brook on your farm? Let- - ting It have its own sweet way hi a harry (cudsometiumes in a'•gre1)1 hili'• ry) to get its waters into yoteler riper? Why not curb it and metre goad use of It as it passes? John T. Mcl)onahl of Delius N, Y, some ten years ago began making good 1150 or his brook—lights his house and build - 111;'s, rally Saws mad 'variousmachines to it little -shop in .winter and on veiny clays and .has enough power, in addl.- tion to heat his house it he tilled up for it. Why: don't you do likewise" The clam is made from stones and earth from the nearby fields, costs brit little; seeming a pond of :about three acres which abounds inbeautiful trout 1)1101 other fish, and from the pond 'Mr. Ale - Donald cuts 600 tons of lee per goer far himself anti neighbors. It is really B10,,01001 valuable laud he bas. aid you know if you have the only pond on your streau', all the lar gest fish will make it theirhahrtali:.u. 11 110 if you malcc 11 spillway 1n con- ies -110n with your dem large fist) front below tri11 come up and settle in your pond; and you and your boys loin ,:;:1'; will go fishing there for the 000111 it well as for the fun of it? Make a sale place and leach the children 1:^ stv1111, 'Besides, it ie stimulating and grateful in summer tveatl100,.. f almost think yoigi are really inter• este[. anti perll0ps are thinking now. where you have the best site fur Iht dant. Begin the work by !eying down, sewer pipe two o1• more feet 10 dim titer and twenty. thirty or more ro;•a Jong, according' to }lt size of embark meat' you must build. This eau be in the bed of the stream, diverting Ili water for the time by a IiiUe dam above. On the upstream end of this pipe build a square box of plant, es high as you 111911111e Bator 1.0 be i0 the pond. It will lake away lots of water safely in floods. Near its hot i, loin on the upstreaua side fix a al. rf plant: which you eat) open tt. drain the pond in summer for repah^a ll you put n greeting made, say, of old strips of wagon tire in front o the gate It will keep bask all the fill that are too large to go through, This all done in good shape, you can let the water run through the pipe while you are building your clam proper. At the right of the spillway of Charles M. Call's Ilam near my home is a square box connecting with the plain pkg,,ron receipt of rice. New. 7)an p e e "with a life 6eptenCe.-1.\'ew York: Cur3; anaiaed jroe. - Tho Woo Mot)lolnet 00. t/'ot7nerltj tieindede) ti; ` • •.. Toronto, On6 • • - Thrilling Exploit of a Fire Fighter In Mexico City. Fires are few and far between in the City of Mexico, as most of the buildings are built either of stone or adobe, with walls two feet or more in thickness. .• The fire department '1s therefore elementary in character, and when it ,turns out ou parade it resem- bled a dog and pony circus. The en= gine is about' the size of a teakettle and is spiritedly dragged around by a little long eared burro. - There was a fire in a photograph gal- lery not long ago, and the department was 'called out. The gallery was situ- ated on the third floor, and the totally inadequate engine was unable to get a stream that high When the fire company arrived at the scene' the jefe all hismen u along in charge lined P s carefully called the the sidewalk and a s e0) 9 roll before they were permitted to get busy; with the Bre., The fire, of course, took every advantage of •this oppor- tunity, and by the time the firemen got on the job it was beyond control Among the fire lighting equipment • was a small extension ladder, and ft required fifteen minutes to erect it, and then no one: seemed to care to ascend it, and they cannot be blamed in view of what happened afterward. Finally, some five minutes after the, ladder baa been set in- place, one brave soul es- sayed the ascent, and just as he reach- ed the top of the ladder it, collapsed and slid together. This landed the daring fireman opposite the second story bal- cony. He stopped' off on the balcony into safety and was rewarded with a thun- der of `ibravos" from the spectators- below.. Tipping This hat in apprecia- tion of .the applause, he'stood there, 1110 admired: of all beholders, while liis. companions in arms below cheered' as wildly as the rest. having faithfully performed their "duty, they watched Om fire burn itself out and then called a poli.eeman.end arrested it, also the proprietor, because in, Mexico if a fire. occurs to your estitblishment you must tell' the authorbtlo5 all about it, give your' real name and be glad to, escape, ARE THE FOUNDATION -OF GOQD APPEARA1' CE II IIIII�i'I,I(iI IIII . IW11 'ELL SHINED SHOE I ���Illlo P'llq►p ' f i Ian I IIII II _ II , ,ndl u 1 ,dlII Illlllliuuh � .. SHOE POLISH GiVES A QUICK, BRILLIANT POLISH THAT LASTS EASY TO USE, GOOD FOR THE SHOES PROGRESS' OF A 'PRODIGY Mirth15.the. best Harmless mirth .('ordinl. Upward Trendandbottom Stop of a against the consumption of the Spirit. Brainy Youth. iWhefetore'jesting .iS net (11)11itvl'ul, i1; Norbert Postletbwalte was a wonder- it trespasseth not in quantity, quality fol boy. 'When but eleven months old or season.—huller. he could repeat the alphabet clear through from either end of it tend at ignorance when it 18 six years old had memorized the Dec criminal,-Johusou. laration of independence. At the un- ' timely age of -fourteen he was fitted for college to 1.111.1 hem hies, philosophy, ancient and Modern languages and the Most and in less than three years after entering he completed the regu lar four years' course and received the degree Of bachelor of arts at the ripe age of se.elitere0. Thus this brninv youth proceeded up the bill of learning until, when he was twenty-one years old., he was truly •an' appalling example. lie was as Tamil - Mr with the late Aristotle, Plato, De- mosthenes and all such as you and 1 are with William J. Bryan, and had he chanced to meet in the highroad a gentleman- who addressed; him. Jn ei- ther of seven different languages and dialects he would have had a working notion as to whether the stranger opined it looked like rain or merely wished to pick a fight. But, although thus armed, equipped and overloaded, he found when he went forth to battle with the- world • that some one hard stolen the ladder to success and that his neck ivas too thin to permit him to hold a job as a street car conductor. Our learned hero was nothing daunted, however, but straightway mounted tete lyceum plat- form and, displaying his matchless eruditeness to people who had very lit- tle idea what he was talking about, was for a time a notable success. Presently, however, untoward fate again assailed our hero, Moving plc - tore shoe's and ten cent vaudeville sprung up like noxious weeds and speedily put the intellectual treat on the hummer.. But Norbert, again equal I an appro- priate c procured mer en bee tot emergency, costume, converted his lecture into burlesque, and with his spindle brews and ke neck, overhanging bl_ Shan d hewasveritable a ash eek chuckle squeaky scream as a silly boy monologist. He Is 0010 diligently practicing a song and dance, and as soon as he fully masters a funny fall of his own invention and a new and exceedingly humorous way of spitting, which he has already thought out, he expects to climb into polite vaudeville on the big circuits, where he can doubtless soon dictate his own price. Because of the manner in which he overcame every obstacle in his path- way we should feel warranted in giv- ing three hearty cheers for Norbert Postlethwaite. — Tom P. Morgan in Puck, voluntary' is Teasels. ea Most of the world's' supply of tea- sels is grown in Europe. The hest quality of teasels, however. is grown in central New York in the loll nsi)ips of Skaneateles and Mer ellus of Onob dare county, Something about the sail tunkes the quality of these te:as01S 09,- 11001011y good, but ell'oth.lo introduce the culture into neighboring roginns have been nosh) r i ":;fu1. There are, however, 11 row grown' In Clackamas county, Ori:., by a former 91alie1teles tnmi.—.1crnrnnl i)I' lett• York llotuntcal 0111-410)); 00000000000000000000000000 m 'Phis Ad 1:!ia its important as e • :any news item and we hope O • this notice will interest you CO zm+ea rd leE In Shaw's Schools, Toronto, 3 young people are tattled to 5 sh earn good salaries. We con- e duct five Business Schools in €1 this city. Wo would like to a send on are latest cata- ogue. ea Fall Term From Sept. 2nd. 8 W. PCsSHAW.,SHAW.,Pres. ea BROOK I:WI 00 A BASIN, sewer pipe just described. This spill way 1s thirty-two' feet wide, and the piers each side stand about four feet above, haling 'been raised about two feet for safety after 81r. Call land seen the water almost get over has bank the previous spring. Too much etre cannot be taken in having ample and safe spillway to take all the hetet that can possibly come down. With such adequate spillways dirt dams are about the best and cheapest a fanner sou construct, as almost all the work can be done by his own teams and scraper: Below the spillway on the lower side of the dale is a good place' to dump stones, 1f you have thein on the form; 11 not and the bottom is not of hard material youmust finish' with cement grout so it cannot under mine.' There is a little power -house contain- ing the water wheel and the little dy- namo of about six horsepower which furnishes light for Mr. Call's house and buildings. The machinery requires lit- tle attention, being oiled 01100 11 week and stopped andstarted from the house by a wire connected with ra sim- ple attachment to the gate of the wa- ter wheel, here are city comforts right in the home of the farmer. With such 0 ; power 'Ile can churn. run a washing machine, saw wood, run a feed cutler. Lots of farmers during the dry soon • - nlels craw water some (listened for. steel: who need not have done so. they heel made a pond and retained the flood R•)ittl 'Such a pond would be rahnah- oven t1' not used for power. I have today a letter from a friend 10(10 -made 1 Ilam in. a brook passing through his back yard :which, is dry' for 9rceral creeks 00e03' summer, thus making pond which stored flood 0)n, 013, 1110 bail) of which he set up. a gasoline nomping engine, by means of wlticli he irrigated his orchard 01) land slioi•e. CASTOR IA n and CLINTON For, Infants a Children. d C r�e•1 pL�'p F NEW .. , ERA, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the i nature of , T� �: H _. :'!+ � fly 96111.0 Quickly stops coughs, cures colds, Ind heals the throat and fangs. .•tr 20 cents. A Railroad Collision as a Test. What is regarded as an excellent means of comparing the sturdiness of the American built railroad rolling stock with the lighter types of British construction p t loop ince recently in the shape of an accident on the London and Rrirhlou railroad Whitt) al troll) ran or the track olid rra1heQ int ' 'tai' 91110110. Thr l'111110,, 0110 was rt^n. nerd v0ry r-Ii;;'utic, 111io' Ino x111^• 1:ngtlish hill,/) were 1,:11,1' -0,n0lnn 0 ("A 0 4 G d'A a O An 'a096t0'$,l te000(09000000®®(G80O fiCadqUOPIC PS FOR R alA1g and Riflingun g er plows I. H. C. Gasoline Engines Met Valick Machinery Pumps and Windmills. ALL KINDS A7F REPAIRS AND EXPERTING. CALL ON weir a Civic Corner of Princes and Albert streets. CentraiRusiuesseol!ege Stratford, Ont.. Canada's Best Business Colit„e Fat! Terni From Sept 2nd We have three clepar•tmcauts Commercial, Shorthand, anti Teleg- raphy. 3• Cou and i rs-s are thorough h • practical. We. have a strong staff of experienced imstructors and our graduates meet with success. Write for our catallogue and learn what 1v3 are dloing. D. A. McLachlan, Principal v Ad. ertisenments Women and OME statements are sosaturated with their d own moral as - . . torequire no comment. "Rid- ing on a car during the exciten;ent over the naval battles between Russia and Japan," said Mr. Thomas Martindale, before the Retail Merchants' Association 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- menta and then turned to the woman's page, 1 his ride was a distance of eighty miles, , yet at the journey's end the women had nor yet had time to J Y turn to the actual news of the day. The women Want advertisements to read, and you must present Your business in a readable shape to be in the fight these days.,,. Is your k Moving? . Then -weStoccan Help Yo, New Fra Ads Ipay-IfnotThey get right at the people. TELEPHONE ,3o. 1 1 1 E