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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-09-18, Page 6Ver esssts em's a iCn+fe-Shar eaee and' ' 'towel Dryer combine in one-" ' both am neiess"ary in the kitchen. Nat necessary to a range, but they t indicate"the; consideration and thought that has been given to the details of Me Pandora, 'Important ' features have 'been given proper.) tionately great care and study.t4 Have the, PandoF'a's'many, fee- / -tures explained to you; before you. buy your range.•' , • i'`=Pie.".e! dim Thr accuracy of the IatcClary ther- mometer makes Good bakisg a certainty-. also adds a lot of sattslaction to. thework... ;opts `•�1(dv .•fit.• v •,:•,�, London Toronto Montreal Winnipeg Vancouver St. John Hamilton Calgary Saskatoon Edmonton erR•ej :t=iS' C Pandora Ranges J1 � are sold every. ��,+e•, where by good dealers who back cad•yt e .••. �se;•y,ti �� up our guarantee s�'•,Y-•::: on this splendid 4h Gy range-McCiarys t+'4t :I �i}y z�:�fL i07iis:0lr'•ei• t 7 �i.'�c�!'�t� is BLa55011 Av'EPIu !\1V R ' k MGR M1LE S' F:PO71 ?RJA1'x•Tf'0T2D• 0NT, .WHERE-ISODY.WA'S'7-'OUND.,, 0 tie Sold 'ft 'Wan y Harland Brothers .ti MAGIC CLUB. Tile net, wuerviitiun I ire restuntil it quickly. Curious Decoy Usod by the Native 6d Fishermen or Hawaii. { WAS TlluO IJ L^•°D W` rlTH '-Lau •melon elo•• is the name of a de coy used by the native fishermen ofINDIGESTION 'Hawaii. It is made of the hardest 'wood 10 be found ou the islands and is icart•tcl and rubbed till it assumes the Shape of a club with a little hnob at the smaller end, to which the tine is clod. The club Is from one lo three feet tong. A village sorcerer performs .2er- i1e_rites over it over t sacred fire. V.kfter this is done the club is magic, *ad the fisherman must be extremely e;lreful of it. If a woman should stop over it or enter a canoe in which it lies the club would lose all Its power and would be useless ever afterward. Atter the club tits been charmed the tisbermnu wises canrllentit and a000a- ttut meat, bakes It, and tics the mks• ture In a wrapper of cocoanut liber. t At the fishing grounds the club is covered wilb the oily julep of the stuff and is then lowered carefuto the bottom. The scent of the liked nut meat attracts certain kinds of fish, 'which soon gather and begin to nibble t the club. As soon as enough fish are around the decoy a small ,bag shaped net is lowered very gently until its mouth Is just over the club. The tatter is then pulled up carefully and cunningly till it is within the bag. The fish are so eager for the stuff with evhich the club is covered that they ,follow it into the net without fear. :As soon as all the 8511 are in it a fish- ,•.arman dives and closes the mouth of BUSINESS AND SHORTHAND Subjects taught by expert instructors 2,-Edekallakel ttthh Y, M. C. A. BLDG., LONDON, ONT. Students assisted to positions. College in session from Sept. 2nd. Catalogue free. Enter any time. LW. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr. tncipal Clustered Accountant Vice -Principal FOR TEM YEARS. "Input Despaired el E;sor Cain Weil. • BORD Ctii BLOOD BITTERS CURED liE€3, MRS. MARY IvlAc1('nv, Hunter's Moun- tain, N.S., writes:—" I was troubled with Indigestion for more .than ten years. I tried several doctors' medicine, claim- ing the power to cure, but all without suc- cess. Having heard of the many cures effected by Burdock Blood Bitters, I decided to give it a trial. After taking two bottles, I was completely cured. My appetite which was very poor, is now good, and I can eat most everything without any disagreeable feelings. I can strongly recommend B.B.B. to any- one suffering from Indigestion." BUanocx. Dixon Birreas is the best known remedy for all Stomach Troubles. It has been on the market for thirty- nine years, and is manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. The One to Pay. When she was Lady Randolph Churchill, f,irs. George Cornwallis - Nest consented to election for orMr. Asttmead•Bartlett in his first parlia- mentary campaign. Mr. Ashmead- Bartlett was married to the Baroness Burdett -Coutts, a very rich woman, who was nearly forty years his senior. Lady Itnndolph,-with.ber beauty and charms. did splendid work for the can- didate. To a group of farmers she said one day: . "Won't you promise me to vote for Dir. Ashmead-Bortlett't" "My lady." satd'a red faced farmer, with a chuckle, "we'll all vote for him if every vote '11 be paid for with a kiss." "Thank you very much." said Lady Randolph. "Your offer is accepted. I'll send for the Baroness Burdett- ! Coutes at once." THE St'l l SAL 1. it Takes Great Strength ane Flitch It ironerty. Describing the settle" in and the clay It IS p1tdo1. 1) t n I'etlerton -In the A01011...110 "Nitist.tiacn says: There cause into baseball in tilos a ball which came near revolutanl/ au the name and brought a ilia ir 1 of pitching, made great liitrhery r, tl ,il' "has beeps' nod' pout Hitters out ot urb.'o mighty sluggers. ."Che ball is pitched with two, mine-' times with three, 8ugers held on one side of the ball and with the thumb or tip of the thumb and nall being grip- ped hard against the seam at tite opposite side of the sphere. The top of the ball is made slippery at the point of contact witb the fingers, so that the! sphere slides off the angers with the minimum of friction, while the tbumh, pressed hard against tbe seem, gnt. the maximum of friction, the result being that the ball, leaving the hand, takes heavy 'English' from the thumb and starts revolving rapidly in the di- rection opposite to that in which it naturally would rotate. Therefore It whirls rapidly for a short distance un- til the natural but suspended emotion of the ball overcomes the false 'Eng- lish' applied by the thumb and a con- test between the natural and unnatural forces ensues. The ball ceases revolv- ing unnaturally and floats and wabbles until the natural twist overcomes the false one, and then the ball darts just as it would have done if it had been curved naturally, shooting in the direc- tion in which the heaviest friction was applied. A spitball if pitched direct- ly overhand darts almost straight downward, and if pitched side arm with the thniub townrd tber body it 1/2 SCOT! E.vucua 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 & Bourne. Toronto. Ont. 12-23 CANADA Portland CEMENT SOME men ask for so many bags of �' "cement -- Others, more careful, say they want "Portland Cement But the man who does the best work insists upon get- ting "Canada" Portland. Cement— And he looks to see that every -baggy beam this la Write the CanadaCement Information Bureau, Mon- trealr,� for a free copy of r "What hat the Fanner Can Do With Concrete." There is a Canada Cement dealer in your neighborhood. If you do not know bin, write for Ins name. . Gives a Quick, Brilliant Polish. That lasts No Turpentine The Gyayrd Trunk rail and water liwieswhen completed will .totai 15, - Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S °ASTORIA Outside of Quebec Canada has 550.900 French-speaking people., -fFRF MIDDLE AGED MANS. J1( Finding-Happluess In a Lite'Thatto Youth Is Irksome. "i ount:er,e.pt wile,'• said 1Iie middle aced been '"went variety They i'int) I to be iln,trs uo lis gu itoutlfle galls thetn They trate to hove to do the sit me Ili on over and aver and ever metra clay after clay. -They wale to go somewhere or do sautulitlitg different all the time. Older People are happiest 111 a life of routine, blest disturbed when variety is thrust. upon tbent. "loot' myself 1 weleome my tinily tusk., endlessly repeated- flay always the v1me. 1 should be lost without it; r 'n disturbed if it were cltmged. A life e.,,, of habit suits Inc best. 1 like the old YE i R S 50 C� L DA surroundings. •OLU TAW -TM LAD. i1URDEED :scenes-fumiti:u• friendly It1cu't want to change. BY 1 a'rES TAYLOR.THE SPAiiIARP. , "Nor do k want much outside pleas- ure In fact, l think I should be best salted with none. 1 like my groove. ft fits me, and 1 fit It. - 1 don't want change. I just want to be left alone FOR Walking and 'Risli0ig Oliver plows I, ii. C. Gasoline Engines McC mielt Machinery 'Pumps ,and Windmills. ALL ANI) N'DD"SOrT REPAIRS CALL ON Corner of Prances and Albert streets. Easier to -Use Better for the Shoes N1IN0I1 20CALS. The threshers are '.wearing the smile that wont come off. They' have not experienced' a busier or more profitable season' in many yelars the grailn, crops are ,so bountiful generally throughout the cotrnttry, Cctitrai 17. usittessCollege Stratford, Ont. Our registration again ex- ceeds that of aln.y previous years. The boy or ,girl who has not {received our free catalogue does not know the groat opportunities of Co1n- rercial Life. We have three Departments, Commercial, Shortllaked and Telegraphy, wind we offer you advantages Meet offered elsewhere inOn- tiatito. You may enter at any ibiane. Write for our free vatalogns at once. 1). A. McLachlan, reitteiptti cotarsSarmalaoalmassaiet Nm mss mler12410.mmw 1.111 Snouts uutwere auu uuwu as a fast to work .lu my accustomed W113'5• It is outcurve does, the quickness and speed In my groove Clint 'I am most comm of the break depending entirely Upon tortithle. I like a life of labor nod the amount of force with ' which it routine. of friction applied by the thumb or is thrown and in ratio to the amount -And could there come to one a :treater blessing? Nature nod the ens - lack of friction by the fingers. Great strength and speed are essential to the best pitching of this kind of ball." TOMBS OF THE PHARAOHS. The Precautions Taken to Guard Against Grave Robbers. The ingenuity displayed by the an - dent Egyptians to prevent robbers from breaking into the pbarao-.lc graves merits admiration from present day engineers, writes Dr. ltlolscber, chief architect in the Prussian govei'n- ment, in a work on the sarcophagus of Iihafra, the builder of the second Gizeh pyramid, who reigned in Egypt some 5,000 years ago. The ]id of the red granite sarcoph- D agus was dovetailed with minute r precision into the receptacle. To pre- • vent the cover frons being drawn back • the Egyptian builders bored two holes • in the lid at the edge, not showing ill above. These corresponded exactly • with two similar holes, less deep. than • the other two, sunkin the front of the receptacle. Two copper bolts were then placed in the lid holes, and at the mo ment the sareaphagus was fully closed the holes met and the bolts dropped in position from the upper holes partly into the lower, thus melting it impos- sible to move the lid. It must have struck the Egyptian engineers that grave robbers might get at the body by turning the sarcoph- agus upside down, in which case the bolts would glide back into their orig• runt position and permit the lid being drawn out. To prevent this they filled the lower boles with wax and made the bolts hot. Upon the lids being placed in position the bolts melted their way into the wax and upon cool- ing became so firmly fixed thatnoth- ing short of complete destruction could open the royal tomb. i 'It must have been a herculean labor to hew the whole edge away, but that is what grave desecrators did, and the wax can still be seen in the bore boles. -New York Sun. louts or' q' ilei tier this irks In 11 11fe enjuvnnv lied 14111 men 5111005 routine upon us we like It or not. In youth its. but in oar maturer yearsof routine, in t he undisturbed 11 ut belittler labor. we mei' grim est 111lI) 1 ness."-New i', it: San ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • SHAW'S •• • • 0 0 SCHOOLS • oe Give Courses' in all business S subjects leadiing to positions • as Bookkeepers oe Stenogra- • pliers, 'aind for Civil Service • and Commercial Specialists' s ex•am'Inatlons. These Schools • ynclude the Central Busines's • College of Toronto, with four • City Erainch Schools. Stu- • dents may enter any time for • nn these courses. No vacation. : IV -Jae forcatalogue, • TELEPHONE 30. I V.H. SHAW, President, 393 • - • 305, Yomge' St., Toronto. • tlL 111111111•••••••••••••••11011000111)111111111•••••••••••••••11011000111)••111111111•••••••••••••••11011000111)R �1 �i �� ��_� Women and Advertisements OMR statements are so saturated with their no con-tment. "Rid- ing moral as to require the 'ewe ntvv or.J � ing on a car during the excitement 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- ments, and then turned to the woman's page, This Iride 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 Iyour business in a readable shape to be in the fight rr s the e days." . is your Stock Moving? If not. Then we can Help You, New Era Ads pay —They get right at the people. THE NEW ERA, CLINTO Protection From Lightning. Sir Oliver Lodge stilted that the problem of seeming protection froth lightning,coiiisted in finding the hest method of dissipating the enormous. energy of the dash. lint that it 00115 not' wise 10 get rid of the energy ten quickly. A thin Iron WIPP 1s runsid• et•ed Ibe best lig Inntng Nimbi •tor from the eleetrieal •poiet of view, but it is almost Impnssi 1)15' ti protect a- Smelling from lightning unh'$s it is completely enveloped, itrn I0t1111 cage. 11' is by no" means true tbat .'n' building is safe when proylded wit a conductor ren5h- Ing op to the highest Siert of the building. Wood's Phosp'hodinsi The Great Eegtisrs*Remedy Tones and invigoratesthe wool Bloodis system, ll& Yoffie. Cures Norm otss Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, Des- pendeney, Sexual Wectkness, Emissions, Sper- rnatorr heea, and Effects of ;Abuse or Excesses. Price $1 per box, stator $5, One will please six V111 oure.• Sold by all drrugglstsomallet% in 5&ep1cp.pheC : maircTheWeedMedtiv+eCo (formerly Windsor) TOrOntee Ont 47 4? ? ? Q If you are not already reading The Clinton New Era, it will be to your advantage to do so. Not only on front page, but every page contains - newsy items each week. Regular subscription price $1,00 a year, and 50c for six months. We will send it from now to the end of 1913 to any address in Canada, for 35c-5 months for 35 cents -55 cents will Fend the paper to the United States ti9 The Ciniofl New Era I