HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1912-05-30, Page 6Bishop Dowling of Hamilton open-
ed two new 0mm/we for the use of
the foreign population,
J. M. Howell, a popular druggist
of Greer#burg, Ky., says, "We use
Sharnberlain's Cough ,Remedy in our
Own household and know it is. moll-
. sot." Felt sale by All Dealers,
SETTLERS'
TRAINS
—TO --
MANITOBA, ALBERTA
SASKATCHEWAN
The only through line
LOW COLONIST RATES
For wiles teivaine
with liv.issk cod
dkm
Special Trains
Will leave 'Toronto
Each TUESDAY
MARCH and APRIL
10.20 P.M.
Sam cial beaks
wins:int livesock
rhsold use
Regular Trains
Leaving Toronto
10.20 P.M. Daily
Through cokialot
and Tourice Sleepers
Colonist Cars on all Trains
No charge for berths
ihrOlIgh Trains Toronto to
Winnipeg and West
Ail soy C.P,R. Agent F., copy or " Gab"
NT, JACKSON, AGENT, CLINTON;
Zia Atutbatit
MONTREAL
THE STANDARD Is the Nations
Weekly Newspaper a Vie Do- "
'of Canada. It is national in all It
Wins. .
It uses the meAt expensive engrav
Sags, procuring the photographs fro;
all over the world.
Its articles are carefully selected an
its editorial policy is thorough!
independent.
A subscription to The Standar.
costs $2,00 per year to any address
Canada or Great Erltain.
TRY IT FOR 19121
Montreal Standard Publishing Ca
Limited, Public:bora.
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FOR 1111-12
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If what you want is not in
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In remitting please do so by
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Letter and address.
• W. J. Mitchell
NaivsaRecord - CLINTON
tomoniimmuniminammon
CITY 'DAIRYING
• Dairymen Who Carry On !noir lia$.1
• miss in a Scientific I7ny
Always Succeed. '
,Probably an hiqUirer would Ned ft
iifficult to find in the agricultural
world 14 the west a more profitable
braneh than retail dairying for the
pities. At the Smile time many and
erea t though the reforms in Ulet
ilustry are, there Is room as a rule for
More. No trade exists where more
nurnerous precantioUs to ensure the
:cleanliness Of the food produced ought
to be taken, Or where neglect or care-
lessness offers More opportunitles':for
the spread of disease and even death,
:than in :the dairy business. In tact,
one keeper of a. dalrY carried on a
11..,e and seieptific scale, declared
that the omission of even one of his
many Minor precautione (such as the-
wearingoe clean. White linen overalls
by his milkers during milking); al -
Ways resulted in an increased number
of becteela being roeha in the Milk'
when tested. •
The utmostcare taken ihi the hand-
ling of the dairy: produce they buy in
highly „ appreciated in these days by
the public, who are ;wake now to the
dangers of impure milk and cream,
and a retell dairy carried on accord-
ingly, judiciously advertised as such, ,
and open to the public, for inspection
any time during the day, is certain
of a highly prospermes careen-,
. • . •
"Whet is 'an ultimate consumer?"
"Oh, the ultimate consierer, my boy,
Is the one thiet gete the hash."
.ONTARIO
Provincial Loans of $2,-
000,000 and $210,000
THE GOVERNMENT OF d'ilE
PROVINCE. OF ONTARIO, under the
authority of Chapter 4, of the Stat-
utes of Ontario, 1911, invites Sub-
ecriptions from the public [or a loanmf
$2,000,000 .on bonds of the Paovince
of ()Mayen, or "Ontario Ciovetninent
Stock.',
The bonds will be dated 1st May,
1912, and payable on elm 1st Nov-
ember, 1041, in denominations of
$1;000 each, with coupons attached
for interest at the rate of 4 per conk
per annum, payable half -yearly, on
the 1st May end. let November in
each year, at the office of the Pro-
vincial Treasurer, Toronto, or at the
offices 'of the Bank of Montreal, in
Montreal, Canada, and in New York,
N. Ye, at the holder's' option. Bonds
will be made payable to bearer, but
on request will be registered in the
office or the Provincial Treasurer and
endorsed as payable only Co the or-
der ef certain persons or corpora-
tions, and on request, of holders will
be exchanged for "Ontario Govern-
ment Stock" at any time.
Also balance of Algonquin Park
Loan of $210,000 on the same terms
and with the same dates, under au-
thority of Chapter 9, 1 George V.
The issue price during the month
of May, 1912, will be 102 for each
$100, and after the 31st day of flay,
1912, the issue price will be 102 and
interest secured from the let May,
1912.
ALL BONDS AND INSCRIBED
STOCK ISSUED UNDER THE AU-
THORITY OF THE SAID ACT ARE
FREE FROM ALL ONTARIO PRO-
VINCIAL TAXES. CHARGES, SUC-
CESSION DUTY AND IIVIPOSI-
I IONS WHATSOEVER.
Purchasers of Stock or Bonds will
be required to send certified cheque
wieh the application, payable to the
order of the "Provincial 'Treasurer
of Ontario,"
This loan is raised upon the credit
of the Consolidated Revenue Fund of
Ontario, and is chargeable thereup-
on.
A. J. MATHESON,
• Proviehilal Treasarpx•
'Treasury Department, Parliament
Buildings Toronto, Amil 19th, 1912.
Newspapers inserting this advertise -
anent without authority froth the De-
partment will not be paid for 4,
SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH,
WEST LAND REGULATIONS. ,
Any person who is the solo head of
a family, or any male over 18 years
old, may homestead a quartet sec-
tion of available Dominion land in
Manitoba. Saskatchewan or Alberta.
The applicant must appeal in per-
son at the Dominion Lands Agency
or Sub -agency for the distend. En-
try by proxy May be made at any
agency, on contain conditions, by fath-
er, mother, son, daughter, boothee or
sister of intenditig homesteader.
Duties. --Six months' residence up-
on and cultivation of the land in
each of three years. 'A homeeteader
may live within nine miles of his
homestead on a farm of at least 80
acres solely owned and occupied by
him or by his father, mother, son,
daughter, brother, •or ,• sister.
In certain districts a homesteader
in good standing may pre-empt a
quarter -section alongside his home-
stead. Price $3.00 Per acre.
Dutiee.--Musli reside upon the home-
stead. or pre-emption six mon-this in
each of six years 'front date of
homestead entry (Including the time
required • to earn homestead, patent!
and cultivate ftfPy acres extiette
hothestea.der who has eehattate
his homestead right and cannot ob-
tain a pre-emption may enter for
•purchased homeseoad in certain dis-
tticts: Price. $3.00 pelt ame. Dut-
les.-eMust reside siet months in each
of three yeare, cultivate fifty acre
and erect a hoesworth $300.00.
CORY.
Deptily of the Minister of the Interior.
• N. Be—Unauthorized publicatiot of
this advertisement wilt not he paid
for,
Clinton News•Re or
May 30th 1912
HEAD FIRST.
Above all things take care of your
hair, your appearance depends on the
care you Owe your hair. The heat -
thy hair you have seen and wished
for is yours if , you will use Sagelne.
There is no dressing so nice and so
inwigorateng to the scalp. Soft,
thick luxuriant hair is the result of
Sageitte treatment. Your' hair is
the first and greatest of your' beau-
ties, nothing will look half so beaut-
iful as your hair. Sageine has grown
beautiful hair for mon and women
everywnere and Sageino is guaranteed
and sold by, J. E. Hovey to give you
a cicala leal,Phy scalp, tree from, dand-
ruff. Sageine grows the hair in
thick and soft, IS not sticky or
greasy and is not a dye. Get a
large bottle today, it costs only 50c
at J. E. Hovey's or direct, all charges
prepaid , •from B. V. Marion,. Bridge -
burg, Out,.
Alfalfa of the Year's Seeding
Some growers of alfalfa have out
the stand the first fall and have Be-
mired frenn one-half to one ton and,
more an "acre aviihout 'untoward re -
suite, no -far as the future usefidnees
of the stand was concerened. n is a
decided risk, however, to out :the al-
falfa after this, since the plants
make but little growth after the coin-
ing of hard freezing nights.
The main difficulty experienced by
growers with alfalfa is to gee the
plants through the first winter. Any
top that your alfalfa has made is, in
ell probability, worth more as a pro-
tection to Your planta than it will
be for bay. It will hold the snow and
ae itself• will afford much protection
theuld the snow go off early next
spring and there be a period of al-
ternate freezing and thawing, which
Is so hard on all clovers. We would
'ot have the stand in question cut or
pastured since it is desirable to have
ell of the protection, both from the
Ilfaleit top and the grain stubble, that
ma be secured io ensure it coming
:direly through the winter.
Sick headache results front a die -
ordered conditdon of the stomach, and
can be cored by elm use of Chamber-
lain's Stomach and Liver Tablets.
Try it. For sale by, All Dealers.
Newspapers In Salonica.
In Salomea, 'turkey, there are fif-
teen newspapers and nine weekly or
monthly reviews published, with a
total cammatioic of about 40,000. The
newspapere are mostly small two
sheet minas; badly printed Cal aheap
paper. The reading of the news-
papers, however, has increased great-
ly in the last two years and will in-
crease still more wilco more Ii erty
Is given to the press. :.
Salonica is the meeting -place of
the East and W tem Nanny ail reli-
gious in the world have repre-
sentatives there, and every clay of the
week is a SlladaS to one or, other of
these religions organizations.
.Not So Particillar.
At a dance recently a young
gentleman somewhat inferior In social
position to most of those present ap-
proached an alderman's daughter —
"mightily superior" sort — and rather
diffidently asked for the favor of a
dance.
The girl looked him stonily in the
face for it moment, then turned away
NV Rh the remark:
"I'm sorry but I'M — well. raher
particular as to whom I dance with."
"Ah, indeed!" was the quiet retort,
'then we differ in that respect. I'm
not a bit particular. That Was why I
asked you!" "
Then he left her..
England, in 1300.
The British census figures show
that at the beginning of this centtuy
the .population of England and Wales
teas tinder ninemillione,, not very
much greater than that of Canada to-
day. In 110 years this popelatem 1154,
been quadrunled; a very substantial
increase when the sibeitnese of 1•Ta
area is considered, ant: 'when acceme
Is taken of the large emigratlea ho
vaster and more sparsely settlel
State of Ohio, City of Toledo,
Lucas. Countiy.
Frank LT. Cheney makes oath that
he is senior partner of the firm of
F. J. Cheney & Co., doing husihess
lit the City of Toledo, County and
Stale aforesaid, and that said firm
will pay the sum of Orie hundred
Dollars for each and every case of
Catarrh that cannot be curled bin the
use of Hall's • Catarrh Cure. 'Frank
J. Cheney.
Sworn • to before me and subscribed
in my presence, this 0th day, of Dee -
ember, A. D. 1896.
A. W. Gleason,
Notary Publia
Ranh* Catarrh Cure is taken inter-
nally, and acts directly on the blood
and 'raucous surfaces. of the, system.
Send for testeinonials free.
F. J.'Cheney 'La Co., Toledo, 0
Sold by all Druggist. 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for con-
stioation.
[1ND TRNit '1reA4a
H..ti.g.E.S*E*E*R*17.1*13.1,S*'
E*X*C*U5R*S*1$0*N*S
WESTERN CANADA •
CHICAGO AND. AND -ST PAUL
MaY A4 and. 280 ;, June 11th and 25th
• and every Second Tuesday
• thereafter until' September
, 17th.
WINNIPEG AND RETURN - $34.60
EDMONTON AND RETURN $42.00,
Tickets will also be on sale On certain
dates Oa 'Salina and Northern Nav-
igation Company. , •
Through Pullman TouriSfe Sleepers
will he operated in connection with.
above excursions, leaving Toronito,
10:30 la
NOt CIIANOZ Of CARS
Full, particulars and tickets front any
Grand 'freak Agent, or write A'. E.
nut, Dletrict Passenger Agents, Una
ien Sattotit Toronto Ont
SATED BY A PORTRAI
. T• , ,
,
, By Gracle,Gralt '
Copyright, by Publienere' Press 'Ltd.
. "It is like her; I thiak It will do.'
Carberry stood, back from the easel,
and, not vvithoet satisfaction, scanned
the painting. .1-11s .face was earnest,
his eyes absorbed. The painting was
to him, for the' moment, the , 'sly
thing that existed. Each of his worIcs
In turn had been as much to him,
Probably the fact explained his eetra-
ordinary BlICCOSS as en artist, and
more especially as'a portrait -pat -ter.
Presently Carberry went back to
the picture, and lifted Isis brush, Just
a touch there — should he give It?
He stood hesitating. At that mo-
ment a step sounded on the stir. As
the artist gave the touch he had hesi-
tated oiler, the door of the studio
opened and anether man entered.
George Strong was older than' Car-
berry, but loolced younger.
"Well, I'm glad it is done. Imogen
will like to know that her mother
will have it as soon as she Is gone.
Carberry assented. He said medi-
tatively, "I sometimes wonder whether
it would not have been even better
had I' painted her looking up."
Strong said carelessly, "It Is a pity
we are going so far- away, .arid are
unlikely to return: Had , we been
living here, you might have painted
her again, in a hundred poses, had
you liked," •
"Yes, of course, you are not return-
ing. I had hardly realised that."
When the other man wee gone he
left his chair hastily and took one or
two turns up and down the room.
With, a horrible persistency his Mind
turned to that blank place.
Carberry said aloud, "She will not
return." There was an odd, numbed
desolation in the words.
He wondered ngain whether he
would have done better to paint her
looking', up—with that little appeal-
ing glance she had, and that quiver
of her lips.
He seated himself by the table near
the window, lifted a pencil that lay
there, and on the back of. a loose
cardboard began to sketcle "'Looking
up, her hair would' fall Hee this.—"
There was a timid tap at the door,
the artist did not hear it. There
came another, and he said impatiently.
"Come in."
Then Imogen entered.
• Carberry turned, looked at her in
a half -frightened, half -patient fashion.
Why had she come? Her coming em-
phasised the fact that she must go.
Something linrshm in his manner
reached her. The girl paused half-
way toward him. Slie looked at him'
timidly. "I believe I am disturbing
you. I—I thought I should like to
see the portrait If it were finished."
Be breathed more freely, came over
and took her hand. He said evenly,
"Yon do not disturb me. Yes, it is
finished. I hope to send it to your
I -nether — to -morrow. She will have
it when you are gone."
A deep note, something unknown,
in his voice, arrested her. She gave
him a little eager glance, then she
said, "Is anything the matter?"
He. replied laughing, as if to him-
self, "I shall feel it quite a wrench—
to part with the portrait,. So much
of oneself goes into one's work; by
the time a painting is finished it is
a part of oneself, and to lose it is like
losing a limb."
Imogen shrank back a little. She
aaid, "You will soon start upon an-
other painting, and the portrait will
be forgotten."
The girl moved close to the por-
trait, then she moved back. Carberry
returned to the table by the window,
and turning the sketch that lay there
face downwards be stood looking at
the blank Side of the cardboard, then
he turned it again. He called her,
"Come and look at this."
When she came, he said, "I won-
deted afterwards whether this pose
would have been better. What do
you think?"
The bride looked at the sketch with
a whitening face. Had sha, Indeed,
betrayed herself like that! had she
looked like that — appealing, wist-
fill, yearning, giving her secret away?
Site said shakily, "I think perhaps
the other is better, but—"
Carberry knew that she went to
the window, and without turning he
*could see her bend to lift the dropped
chrysanthemums from the floor. She
stood for a moment with them In her
hands, as if She had forgotten them:
then, instead of returning them to
the vase, put them into the heed of
her dress.
He said unthinkingly, "They must
be faded."
She coloured, end replied, "I al-
ways feel sorry for fading- things."
"I will give you some of the others,"
said Carberry.
She asked him suddenly, "Mr. Car-
berry, do you ever make mistakes?
What would you do If you made a big
mistake?"
• He did not say, as she expected, "I
woulml try to remedy it"; but; "I
would try to bear the consequences
without whining,"
Looking at him blankly, her des-
pair giving her couraga "1—I wonder
were you ever in love----"
Carberry laid his, hand gently on
her arm, and led her ' to the mantel -
shelf • above the cavernous grate.
There was a portrait there, small.
ill -painted, faded: Ale Said, "That Is,,
the only girl I have .ever loved —
will ever love." •
All the ' colour went out of the
bride's face. She said bravely, "I
suppose she died." When lie did not
reply, she said, "I am sorry," and
stumbled over the words.
He pretended, not to see the tears
In her eyes when she went away.
She forget to shake hands and say
good-bye, and he seemed 'not to no-
ne muttered to himself as the door
closed, "Strong is 4 geed fellow, and
she will soon forget." ,
• Hp had left his pipe on the mantel-
shelf- As he searched for it his eyes
met those of the little faded painting.
He thought, "Dear tittle sister, you
got me out of, many 'a scrape in the
old daye. You have saved me iron.
dishonottr.now." •
THE' POOR OLD LADY.
She had stiffered with rheumatism
for yeare and the constant, pain bad
kepi, her ,in constant agony,. The
least damp affected her., Many an
old person hae been cured by Risen-
rno and when all else failed. Rhea -
mo strengthens and bands up the
whole .system, it purifies and enrich-
es the blood so that the meet •en-
feebled circulation is made strong.
Rheum° is so great and SO SIMI a
remedy that J. E. 'Hovey sells it
with a guarantee to give entire sat-
isfaction or money hack. A month's
treatment only costs $1.00 sold 'lly
J. E. Hovey or direct all charge pre-
paid froth B. V. Marlon, lirdcldeberg,
Ont;
eNEW -11E1t0 -
•
' BY. lt,:111ii(theW . •
(Copyright imy Publisbers Press Ltd.)
"Sold out the Deese."
Andley turned away front the box
office and went out again intothe
heat of the Annimer afternoon, waik-
ing aimlessly for a Moeit or so while
he made up his inind 'howto pul in
the four hours he still : had on his
hands before the boat left. There was
a play on at the Imperial he was
particularly anxious to see. 'Ken-
worthy had written 'him about it.
"The hero is a marker for Earl
Drayton," he had said. "Pig hearted,
but imMilsive, and his Own 'WOT$(.
eThPel"
oiloyiDrSyton! lie Ihed been And-
ley's roommate at 'Old Orange, Was
one of the most promising nninibers
ot the elites; and then, to his .junior
Year, came the ugly scrape willch
causedhis expulsion from college.
Other .men would have wormed them-
Folees out of the :evert icemen t withont
marryingthe women, but Drayton
was not of that, sort. And she had
dragged him. ,doe -n to her level. •
"1 Should Ilke to lieve aeen the
thing," AtidleY thought as he turned
into the glare of Broadway, "but I'll
be. hanged if I'll stand three hours
and pay a dollar fee the privilege.
I've two Minds to trot straight over
to the boat. •It ought to b.e cooler by
the riverside
Ile took a car downtown, and was
making' his way through the narrow
street to the wharf When the clang
of a gong startled him.
"The petrel!" aome one shouted and
the great free show of tile neigh'
hood was on view. '
Audley .was jostled. and shoved out
51 the way, for he leni no thought of
quickening his steps efor any such
entertninment. lie wae dragging
I ins -
'elf out of. the seniirying. crowd ,vhen
the wail of a chi'd mme, Min pause.
Audley was fond be ehildren, as he
Was fond of dogs and horses, Z.11(1
could' net beer to see aav of the three
suffer. The cries came from a little
fellowwho had Imen knocked down
by the resit cf the morbid.. •
"Are you hurl, young man?" AndleY
(11.111411O0O, ae he bent over the • chi d.
He was a boy of some four years of
ta..e who kept rithbing rme Of his legs
lica..tvny to suggeet that it hed • e n
trampled upon. •
"Mamma, mamma:" -was all the re-
plythat could be cbtained, howearm.
Audley looked up, but not •on of
the numberless female heads threat
eagerly .out ofthe windows over ',"mu
made any pretense of claiming 1't -
ship with the youngster.
• "Where is Your mamma?" .Audley
asked,
The cries ceueed for an instant and
two warm arms were stretched mit
IO the .six-footen Who had not intend-
ed doing MOTO than to lead the child
to the doorstep out of the cruah. But
there Wan evidently something wrong
with the leg, so Audley stooped,
gathered the little chap under one
arm, and repeated, "Whore is mam-
ma?"
POT reply the boy pointed to a tene-
ment doorway Mcrae at hand, and then
proceeded to Snuggle his toueled head
close to Andlei'e inunacmthte
"How far up?" ineeirml tta modern
Smnariton, after hi: had a wended the
first: II ight.
The place .was in au awful dis-
order and etifliugly hot. The boy had
henna quietly to cry again and to
Eli tell at his leg. The mazy was tans
to drop him on the ruckle of rugs .by
courtesy termed a bed and proceeded
to make an examination for damages.
He was in the middle of the proaess
when women's voiees from acroas the
hall 'reached bis ear. Two women,
who had been hanging half clad out
Of the window, avers discussing the
Situation.
"Yb, Mrs. Rafferty," one of them
was saying, "only tills day wake I
Was telling Tim it would come to
this. Took away by tee patrol! Lord
save us! who's to lock out for the
boy. The Society'll have to take him.
There's too many childer under use
/ate already — the Lord forgive me
for sayite R. Arid Earl's a purty boy,
the very Meter of his pa, God rest his
"wl !"
Thename sirnek Audley with a
Strange familiarity. Wetting the cor-
ner of a cloth—whether towel, nap-
kin or dish rag, Audley reeked not
— he proceeded to polish the grime
from the youngstees countenanee,
then stood off and gazed at the resale
POT the moment he was transported
In memory riVa years back to his room
at Old Orange. His room chum was
showing him the pletUre of a chubby
little four-year-old,
"Yes, bide," • he heardDrayton's
voice say, "that's your chum 115 a
baby, That's the 'steer out of which
this particular center rush was
evolved. Great mystery this growth,
eh, old man? 1 moan to save this pho-
tograph for my son, if ever I have
MS."
Audley, gazed at the atom of God's
handiwork, eleen now and smiling.
He never for iv moment doubted the
truth of his ails/dolt/a, but looked
around the greasy walls for the proof
Ii e knew was' there. ,
Above .the bed, in a tittle ameewood
frame, hang a faded photograph, the
photograph of Earl Drayton had
showed him In their college room
te.n 'years before: He leaned forward
and took it down, the boys' great :.hue
eyes following his every moveineat.
On the back of the picture In ttie
shaky hand of It dying man was
scrawled: "God teach my son. a better
life than I have known -- Earl Dray-
ton."
Andley slipped the phetograph into
his pocket and raised Earl, Jr., laugh-
ing and crowing, to his shoulder. In
the narrow, dirty hallway the pair
were crushed into the cornet by four
men carrying a streteher. 'rhe gong ,
had been the alarm of the antbula,nce,
not of, the patrol wagon, and little.
Earl' was a real orphan now.
No one heeded a the two as they
eassed Into the street. Such dramatic
interest as there was for the people
of the Greenwich precinct centered
in the cold, stiff thing upon the .
Stretcher upstairs.
• For Andley there was no longer
any regret over the play , he had
mlese,d. The principal actor of a
More wonderful drama lay snuggled
close 'to his breast ha the sunshine.
,
Is there anything in all this world
that is of more Importannce to you
than good digestion ? Food must be
eaten to sustain life and must be
digested and converted into blbod.
When the 'digestion fails the • whole
body • suffers. Chamberlain's Tablete
arc a Oational and reliable cure for
indigestion., They increase the :low
of bile, purify the blood, . strengtlmn
the' stomach, and tone up the whole
digestive apparatus to a natural and
healthy, • action, • For sale by, Alt
Canada's trade increased by more
than a hundred 'alien dollars dur-
ing elm past year.
Mr. John Karn, one of the best
known residents of Woodetock, died
at the age of 70 years. .
Daniel Zelu succumbed to iniarice
received in a conferee at Tavistock
on Wednesday.
Murray and Eric Sfenmonds, lads
ol eight and twelve years, were
drowned at tfamilton, Beach.
Di. John M. Stewart, a highly re-
specaed phyeiciart of Ctheeley, died af-
ter a lone and trying, illness.
Mrs. E. C. Sunderland or Amherst -
burg flied as Ithe result cif a street
car accident in Detroit on Friday af-
ternoon. •
London strikms paraded through the
metropolis and held a meeting in
Trafalgar Square.
The United States despatched war-
ships to Fey West tip provide against
contingencies in the Cuban revolt.
WE HAVE THE AGENC.3Y. FOR
Sageine Hair Torde, Anei-Uric
Pills, Rheum° for Rheuma,tisin, ill
genuine. 13. V. Marin preparations
WASTED TIME
AND MONET
BEFORE THEY FOUND BIN PILLS
GATATTA, ONT.
/ "My husband used Gin Pills for
Backache and Kidney Disease. The
pain in Ins back was dreadful and
the kidneys failed to do their work
properly. As be became worse, we
found it necessary to begin treatment
and unfortunately wasted time and
money on remedies that were little or
no good. After taking one dose of
GIN PILLS, he found them to be
exactly what he needed, and • after
taking two boxes of GIN PI1.0145, was
comptetely oared. We heartily re-
commend GIN PILLS, at every
opportunity to our friends and re-
latives". MRS. )AXES B, MILFORD.,
Weite tie, mentioning this paper and
we will send you a sataplebox free. Thee,
If you cannot get the regular size boxes
at your dealer's we will supply you at
the regular retail price -500. a box, 6 for
$.o—ancl money promptly refunded if
GIN PILLS do net give satisfaction.
National Drug 84 Chemical Co. of
Canada, Limited, Dept. A Toronto. 07
bear that name and we can .elally .
recommend and guarantee ehem.—.1, Harold - Legg was drowned
E. Hovey, Druggist. canoeing at London, Ont.
while
•V. sr, AN NN,“, \`‘N`NVANA \NV\ NA NN N•N NVN
Think this over!
Is there an.0 beverage that
costs gou less per cup than
'GOES FARTHEST FOR THE rib
5
5
OR the rarebit, use Then,
as an accompanying beverage,;:s.some.r.
. Your friends will know that
you are offering them the purest, most
wholesome Ale or Lager that can be produc.
ed. Order today.
a OH N LABATT, LIMITED
LONDON. CANADA.
......01111.0.11011•MMONW
45
oarrimmie
This Company is chartered by
law to accept the management of
the estate of a person dying with-
out a will.
It is a carefully -managed, Roan-
clally-reseonsible Company, with
years of experience in such
matters.
If appointad to act as adminis-
trator it wie astritae the manage -
meet of the estate, collet and pay
debts, distribute legacies and pro.
perty among the heirs.
11
,
It will prove an honest, able
administrator of the estate. Every
interested person will be alloted
his or her lawful stare.
The charges, in every case fixed
by a judge, will be no greater,
more likely less, than the re-
muneration allowed the individual
administrator.
Services of Family Solicitor
always retained by Company.
Correspondence invited and
answered promptly.
saehAl
*e;
LONDON, 'CANADA.
SPRING TIME
With house cleaning time is at hand, every woman
knows all about dust but some don't know. that
DUSTBA NE
Will make sweeping a Joke, just a few handsful at
beginning point is all that's'required. Dustbane is the
Sanitary Method of eliminating the dust nuisance.
It kills germs, makes carpets look like new,
Don't take Our word for this but order a tin from
your grocer.
Try ic out for one week and return the tin lf not
satisfactory,
DUSTE3ANE IS MADE IN
OTTAWA
PROTECTED BY
CANADIAN PATENTS