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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1902-02-28, Page 711111.011111111111.1.1111.1.1..striseenowee•orso. 26 Bo x e s Daily ought to be gilt-edged evi- dence of merit, coming, as it does, direct • from a druggist who has for years been selliug UWANTA Uwarat a G R. 1 P P E Capsule as one of the " highly re- commended " cures—and here are his words "lost winter I sold from 4 to 26 boxes of Uwanta Capsules daily. I 5nd the sales rapidly increasing. owing large. ly, I think, to the fact that those who once use them recommend them to others."—j. Musostovs, Druggist, Ottawa. Ask your druggist for a box, 25 cents, or sent direct by snail. °WAWA WIr9G co., Ltd., Ottawa, Out. Sold by All lieiTsdreas Furnishes Monthly to- all lovers of Song and Music a vast volume of New, Choice Copyright Compositions by the moat popular authors. I 64 Pages of Plage music ( i Half Vocal, Half Instrumental 21 Complete Nees for Plato glee • Month for 10 Cents. Yearly Subscription, $1.00. If bought In any music atom one-half off, would' cost $5.25'. a saving of $5.15 monthly. In one year you get nearly 800 Pagest• Music, comprising 252 Complete Piegtili for the Piano. If you cannot est a copy from your Newaleakit w'-'tous and we will mail you a sample W. PEPPER, Publisher, Lahti% Locust Si, litietahla.. P. �ICod Liver (Trade Mark.) Will GIVE YOU AN APPETITE! TONE YOUR NERVES! MAKE YOU STRONG! MAKE YOU WELLI 4 Dr, Bargee ,n Med. Supt. of the Prot. Rospital M for Insane, ontreal, preecritms It constantly 1 and gives us perrniseion to use is name. * ) Mies Clark, Supt. Grace !Respite I. Toronto, writesthor have also used it with the bestresults. 1 50e. and st.00 Bottles. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., Limited. II Fop Vie Farmer. ' Make firetscla,sa initter or none at fl, Weed out poor QOM, and sell HT give, them away. Practise economy in winter feeding. Peed only what will be eaten u clears Where practicable, feed the young stock dna old animals.separately, Water teal • Ip the moue 'way. If your horees are troubled with scratches, try this:—"Oxide of zine, 1 dram; vaseline, 1 ouuce." • Never apply water to the legs. goratutten will never occur when the mud has been allowed to dry and is then brushedoff without the application of water.—Parmer. An insect -which preys upon the San Jose scale has been discovered by Mr. C. L. Marlatt of the United States De- partment of Agriculture, who was coin- miseioned to go to Asia last spring, and ascertain, if possible,4 where the .pest came from, and what natural enemies it might have. Mr. Marlatt reports that between Tientsin and .the great wall in China he found a species of ladybird beetle which is a deadly enemy of the scale. He secured a number of the bees ties end forwarded -them to the United States Division of Entomology. Some of these will be distributed, and the rest ke t in the insectory, under the most favorable conditions. It is hoped that the multiplication of these beetles may have the effect of exterminating the scale, or of checking itto such an ex- tent that its ravages may be disre• garded. • • To Renovate a Harness. I notice an inquiry by R. F. Smith 1 about cleaning and oiling buggy har- ness. I give a method of caring for har- ness as practised by an expert horse trainer on my father's farm many years ago. „First take the harness apart. Have a tub of warm water and good hard ' soap. Wash each piece thoroughly, us- ing a cloth. Hang the several parts on nails to dry. Make all necessary re- paire Provide neatsfoot oil or some other oil equally as good, heated to a temperature that will not born the hand. Then, while the leather is a lit-, tle moist, draw the arts of the harness through it, wiping them with a piece of cloth. Hang the parts up and let them dry for a day or two. Provide a tub with warm water and good eastila soap. Make a strong suds and draw the sev- eral parts of harness through it. Wipe thein dry with a cloth. They should now be about as pliable and nice as new leather, and the sun will not draw -the oil out and make the harness diSagree- ably sticky to handle.—Milton Log,ani Warren, Ohio. Thou/rand headed Kale. It is not necessary to travel very far Into the country from any point in order to obtain reliable testimony of the val•ue of thousand-heaffed kale as a green food for sheep. Few crops have risen more rapidly in popular favor in the last de- cade or two than kale, and nowadays it Seems to be grown in some form, eather alone or in a mixture with some other crop, on every holding which carries a flock of ewes. The growing popularity of kale is not difficult to explain, for ite advantages to the sheep Owner are defin- ite and varied. In the first place, it ie less expensive and precarious than com- mon roots, and in winter it is less lia- ble to Injury by frost than roots and cabbages. Moreover, it is 'an exceed- Ingly wholesome and acceptable food for sheep, being safer than turnips for ewes before lambing, and as good in spring as in winter. A favorite method of growing it appears to be along With turnips, the two crops, merely hisrae- hoed and not singled at all, constituting an extremely useful autumn, winter or spring feed for ewes or other sheep.. -- London Morning Post. • • and ranehes have been on the decrease, and the decline in numbers has not been yet checked. There is at the present tine leas stock in proportion to popula- tion Ehan for any time in the last forty years. The demand for 'beef and'all cat- tle products was never so great as now. Under any j�ssf1le conditions • it • will take years 6f time to 'overcome this shrinkage n nowhere of cattle. Then after the shrinkage has been checked it. will require many other years of time to • increase in any considerable measure,the proportion of cattle to the .population. It cannot therefore be otherwise than that cattle vetoes will continue ata profitable range for an indefinite 'nufri- b)r of years to come. The young farm- er,. or the old one, is now on the .right track who is building up a herd of good cattle. It is good cattle that will be wanted. Set the ideals high and breed to that mark. It is easy for the man with money to burn tci`go out and buy model animals. The man on the farm should so. master the business that he caii mul- tiply -these models in his own herd. It is always the good cattle that make the money for the breeder and fe,oder. Th9 golden opportunity is now at hand. Many of our farmers have already caught on The cattle outlook. It can't be otherwise than that the cat- ili4 N\g'" " ,1141 (.le industry will continue to be good for •'4°.••• • \ NS* N• • • 40, •1 • cat- -1 k 6 t 1116years to come. In 1892 there was the • \ 44 o1 largest 'number of cattle in proportion to 4 - 0 t fl population ever known in -the country. Since that thne the animals on the farms. s s > ) dinner time. any (bps isa good er Mae to WS Jr,, COV,00V CAKDIES •r Thor sire a light that's rich and bru- net:I t. odor, may, Am evotywnere. • '...."- ntrEnTAL OIL Co. Kidney Troubles of Children. There are any mothers 'ng Dr. Dreadful Kidney Paine. Could Not Rest or Sleep. Q. P. 11. Conduit'. Nottertnge-- Ile le Now Well nod. Gives Dr. Chase% Kidney -Liver Pine creole for the Cure, Mr. W. E. Berryman, Conductor on the c.P.R.. St. 'Stephen, N.B., writes:— "I have been tailroading for 23 years, I and for ten Years suffered from a severe case of Kidney Disease and 43gclute1ie, a trouble common. to railroad Men. It used me all up to walk, and. after walking up hill I would have to- - lie. i down to get relief, any back Was So had. I. could not deep more than half 1 the night and then didn't seem to get', any rest. I had used all sorts of cines and was pretty badly disecniraged when 1 heard Of Dr. Chase's Kidney - Liver .P1118, After using two 1.10XeS of this treatment -I found it was helping me and Ave' boxes have made a com- plete cure, I now rest and sleep well, any back is strong and the old trouble has entirely disappeared, Many peo- ple to whom I have recommended these pills have been cured. Anyone wish- ing further particulars write me," • The sale of Dr, Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills far exceeds that of any similar remedy. One trial' is enough to con- vince anyone that tPis as the gfeateet family medicine that money War IsOS".- One pill a dose, 25 cents a box, at all - dealers or Xidmanson, Bates & qo., To. ' ronto, GROW1110 STRAWPERFUEO. ['roper Drainage and runty of Fertilize* ItequIrud!. . When the sun shines sufficiently SO that bees can fly it will also warm the Rater through the glass, and we are al. ways able to give them what ,thek most desire; pure warm water, and. rit one until he has this' a trial wil% fullyliz much water a single colony Will use during -the height of brood -rearing.. In order to draw theta from the Old watering place it may ha necessary to • slightly sweeten the was ter for a- day of two. The culture of strawberries is the Name both 'for. home and the market. -Thestrawberry -does well whereever: given- good- cultivation, •proper drains age and plenty of fertilizer in. avall4 • . Able form. , •. • . • Well rotted 'manure, bone meal and • !Wood ashes (or • • .some of he potaeb. , .-.• • . • THE OLINTO NEW MA Russia*i Red Tape. WE. CURTIS had a Inrstrange -experience not long ago when lag called at a hank' • in Russia to make. a draft against his letter of (Testa. "I was,met at the door by a man in gorgeous liv- ery, with a long staff M ban4," he writes. "He led me into a reception - room which was'sumptuously furnished. Upon the center -table were several vol- umes of photograPils, a city directory; a railway gulp, the last report' og the bank, two or three gulde-books, and several morning papers. Over In one of the corners Was handsothely carved writing -desk furnished with all sorts of stationery, While I was won- dering what I was there for, a gentle- man. of irreproachable attire and mans ners entered, and asked how lie could serve explained that would like two hundred and fifty dollars on my letter of credit, and wondered. haw he knew 1 'was an Aziserican,-but he had doubtless learned from long- ex- perience to distinguish the different na- tionalities, and I soon discovered by the manner in which he received: sub- sequent arrivals that he could' oeak German and Prench as' fluently as -English. ' I banded him r my .letter o •credit, 'and he bowed politely and lefttli the room. For a time I was aloneWl my, own IhOughts. I 'looked over all the books and papers, watched- the traffic IA the street from the winclow, made two or three entries in my note- book, ann. wondered if the polite gen- tlenian had not forgotten all about me • . ' • salts) are considered the hest ter, • • • • Eall.plowing, mulching with manure and- thorough preparation of soil be, • fore setting- piants are the prig stet/4 tn. strawberry growing. A erbla of Clover or other green mai Inure known to be free from insects will, when plowed tinder, prove OS IT..teat yelp to the. crop. . '- ...ottres manure may be plowed undo? itrith good results, provided, it is 'air:. plied early enough to be well .decom• The infant of thehoUsehold waain ite „cradle. 'The head 4)f the house woo at 1 home, peevish and fault-findiag. length he became unendurable. "You'Ve done nothing hut make . mi dates to. night," he growlod.- "Ye'," cumwer• • ,.ed :meekly, "I begun by putting the , wrong baby to bed." "Remember, young mon," ..said the practical man, "that in order to ,succeed • you 11111.4 '44101 host you." "I have done' that," ;tom -mat the. ; gloomy young man. 111 have sucocede4 an pallor into '1;44 beyond my fondest expect utak:VS ."••••• Wasbioo 1 • n Mrs. 'Bloomer —"Door! dear! 1 dropped diaihood ring off my linger this I morning,. and (ain't Bud it anywhere.'" ! all Hold.. 1 (amt- across It in one of my troosSr poekete." . • —4-+-t-• One of his Majesty's insoeetrirs steed before a class of seven -year -4i boys. The subjeet of examination was Euclid. • 1 After failing several tines to•draw frOin the class -the definition 91 parallel Rhea,. he drew, by way of aluott'atit»), on the • 714.11r,- tiOys,". said the worthy edUca- ..ational...dignitarys "I've drawn tiro parals' ! lel lines • on- the Wall, they ever meet?" -"Yes, sir," said the pick of the. ;lass; ‘:4f."171P' yleonu.draw them right around the when a page in buttons entered with silver tray, upon which were two drafts — duplicates— for any signature The little fellow boWed like a Frenon dancing -Master, and seemed 'to be deeply impressed with a sense of re- sponsibility. He came in several times afterward en similar ;service for other people, and -his- salutes were re- peated each • time with -an -exa.otness that showed careful trainlog.. I was afraid he was going to be gone all day, and become impatient. • V sat dawn at the desk to write a letter, and had written- needy a whole sheet when he came back with my letter of credit and the money upon his tray. But the lat- ter was all in bills, .1 handed him one of St_herod creked him to get it °hanged. Ile bowed and 41- p ear d. 1 'roust have spent fifteen minutes regretting any folly, when the handsome manager came in to enquire if there had been a Re seemed to think had been overpaid, and was greatly.relleved when I told_ him, I only wanted a bill changed. He disap- peared, and It was a‘nother ten minutes before the boy returned with the small- er bills. I had been in that room for more than. three-quarters of an hour.", • We Thrashed' You. • • 4. ". - /VAN ,STUBBS of Ely' does not like Chicago. In his book, "In a Minster 'Garden o' ;the Dean's causerie revolves amiably round Ely, but where he discourses on his holiday irs the New World he ,becorries most attuning. .0f Chicago he says: "1 thought -it the most •hatefully unlovely Clty 1 ever Was in. There .were line buildings' of course—warehouses for the moatpart, of the 'sky -scraping' Yariety—but, as a ivhole, hateful, dm- pl hateful-ki clanking wilderoessof endleas streets, monotonous, • unpic- turesque, untidy, dirty; foul.". • Yet the -Dean tells at least one story whi h • roves that Chicago for I posed by Planting time. -- Spring set plants give the best r- -. sults; where falt get they.• should Pe5 nioted• to the Watery -class, and had beeri. reading about the War of Inde- pendence.' 'Father,' he said, `are you as Britisher?' !Yes, my boy, I aril.' 'OW . . Mother, are you a Britisher? 'Yes, dear; I am,' she said. !Well,' he replied; after a pause,' 'I don't care. grown especially. for that purpose, unloyeliness, has knack of digesting all who go to live there. _It relates to Archdeacon Rushton, the secretary of Bishop Maclaren. The'11.rchdeaeon was a Yorkshireman by birth; he had mar- ried -a Canadian; but he Ops11 been ,set- tled for some time in Chicag6. children; he told ine,over;e born Inthat city.. One day lately his. youngerit-boy 'came. home .frem• schciol looking grave' and' soiemn, e had just been • pros Small both being Most commonly used. Where plants are grown by hill cut- -tare they are usually get in rows 3 .or 8% -feet apazt and one foot apart 1n• the• row, all rtitmirs and blossonis be. Ing kept off the drat season. ' • • In matted rows the rows are front .31/2 to 4 feet apart, and plants are set frora 15 .to 18 inches .in the row, no- pording to variety. and width of row. • Fruiting one season only, is usually . adycseatod- by best growers. it is less • work and more profitable tooset a new l.red than.to renovate an old one. It is necessary to protect the plants You had the King's army, and we' were only a. lot of farrnerS,Aqt we thrashed yea!' .. • ' • • • One Obstacle Overcome. . . . • In winter by....mulching with, some -ma- teriEtl; such' as,straii, marsh bay,- pine: RafdISSrpine boughs ,- coarse manure Ate,' protect "frord beaViiigi•-•;" • "'".-:t-t-,• • Failure to get .a maximum crop fre- gtiently_comes_from *proper , tion. Have at least one row in' evert four of a perfect nowering yarietY. The • practical gtowers 'generally ttgree upon the merits- of- the following ;varieties: Beverly, trindywine, -Bats bach, Clyde, Crespent, Rare' Arland, Lovett- and ' Irrigation' teas proved of greet *NMI f gyheremer tried. • • • with the "perpetual motion" idea, and. began to make all 'aorta of queer isle: chiness.despite the adylee -of his father,' who told him of men that had devoted their liVee teleasatirOearelrfor perpetus al motto violates the first ,prinelples mechanies, my boy,'.'- said his father. 'Action and reaction -are eal„ as you Will understand some day. When you- cao pull yourself up by your Poet-. straps, -you may hope to Invent a ma- ehine that Will start, itself and run svithout etoPping.". The next day Willie ccame to his other hi great. excitement . and told him he had done it—had pulled him - s WILIITTOP was a• bright boy, of an in - yerit'Ove turn of mind, At the age of eight or te"ri she was seized • elf up byl bilotstraps. . "It's no trick at all;" he amid as he ed -the way to'. the 'hero,. where- he showed his bewildered father a pair of old boots nailed, soles: up, to a team. overhead. here!" he e claimed, as he climbed' ed up, ran, his fing9rs ape of the boots and p, "What do yon think did not reply In words. a harness strap, and Willie gave an inalta- al motion Which 're- -ate apparatus. as Unntaeked, ondon, the Christmas maintain, a spentan. Within yourselves, but Ickens foisted into you, itself you have no real yoit continue Or keep redoing it, for Dickens' gulation way. It is a rvival.—Max Beerbohm Magazine."- e of his wife in an Eng- ,tteetty; loving widower d a iiiiirunirdr'fferrtrfr the Rubaiyat: erses Underneath . the ,a Loat of Dread—and Meng In the ' were Paradiso .1 14 A KING 01 • ••• combination c ring ittleitanc • It reprost, 6 healingc, drop of Net arapelowse.rrhiestrrh ' br.,1 ft, its tOtlea le . . ss... Year soon, , k it ' 1 I. 4,10" .. • t • , ,toom,? —London Answers.- AS EXPERIENCED DRUGGIS1b, WE GUARANTEE ACCURACY AND PERFECT SATISFACTION • In this age of worry, bustle and bust- • nevi cognpetition, arid care and attention in ihe absollut0elyygeressacreyWforr'B thereseilitP; ninoav n s.sise lfare of your family. We guar - i antee accuracy and perfect satefactiott • to all . our customers. Our toilet depart- • ment is always replete with trio West preparations and novelties. WINE'S CELERY COMPOTHID, Has cured thousands when everything else has hal O It has failed • •pive sick peopie happy resultiS---Ttsslfair 'never failei to give sick people happy results.. It strength re, °invigorates, gives new tole to the to stem, makes the blood pure , • . isofcieod foru. the nerves—it makes sick. P Ole pure and genuine Paine's Celery Compon: d, , • • • . 13 B COMBE, Dryggist, Clint* Ont, • •• - • •• of . . The critical illness of the Earl ef ea' Hinaberley,Liber d leader in tae House" of Lords, is announced.; • • . Welsh delegation will ask Mr Onamterlatn to day to _ provide trans.' p rt filly the Wrlsh colony from Pata• goals, to Correa. • • • DONI FORGETABOUTTOIJR CORNS C 11 they give you pleasure' and you have . them as en adornment don't apply, gat- nam's Painless Corn end Wart Extractor • for in twenty.four hours they would be en- , tirely removed and their beauty destroyed,• Fow this is known to nearly everybody, it. usua. oli.dihgycinr•drug,gists ;*•iik hiin if it is not . so. ' • • • ' anit r Is rig your storing resew the e result tartan !mare reeiti lo'tato York° ()Mani Rectal • treatia All ri 1,0 V., J. Sommerville, an ex serrean' of the 7th • Regiment of London, Opt., committed suicide by cutting ie • • A. detachment of Scots Greys w e --- cut off by tbe Boer. at' Klipdam. Two ' w ,re kilted, 6 wounded and 46 f..tri• tured. Mrs James Gray, of Rocirwocd, was Stacked by a•cow add nearly killed. • • I I • PILLS • _ • Those who have used•Laxa-Liver Pills- • say they have no equal for relieving and curing Constlpatlon, Sick Head. ache, Billousnesol DyspepIa, Coated Tongue, Foul Breath, Heart Burn. Water .Brash or any disease or disorder of the stomachs' -Ilyer..ox. bowels, I• Mrs. George Williams, Fairfield Plains, Ont., writes us follows: "As there are so many other medicines offered for sale in substitution for Laxa-LiverVills1 am par - Ocular to get the genuine, as they far sue- ' Pais anytflIngelie for regulating the bowels ' and correcting stomach disorders." ' taxa -Liver Pill; are purply vegetable; neither gripe, weaken nor sicken, Are easy to take and prompt to act.-' 0 Stt16/01 RUA MIS • Wes Sontogy will outwear pairS oe common rubbers. For three years we have proved that with gin0,5 sitisalive you can stub' but you cahoot stub tho rubbers Ring's genuine etaff .--are-Otamp 411k pion the eon of eaeh rubber righted name may e th our copy. ap,,,igirog do not alio* yourself to o calved by imitation& ONO ulna Top solift4. ths beet ea the snarket,„dilechi $-Ittob tad 11.1ecb tops. with Rolled Edits tad Hoofs. They ale titibried *0014 siaa Your olioahr tea ludo dose toc you. 1k.i. 001240 CO. thntud b• tve esseleslet • .. •