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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1904-03-24, Page 66 ffoosimmimaimes. After washing, tbe 'Sutter should be removed from the. client in the (arena - lar form, weighed. and plaeed ,apon the worker. It siseilld Ile Spread Mil- le- on the sUrface of the • worker and salted to suit the test° of customers. The tendeney ;weans to faver fresher butter. From one4ia1f to three-quar- ters of an ounce of salt to the pound of butter will be about right. The salt used should be the best obtainable, and It [Mould be sifted over the butter and perhaps mixed in to some exteat with the paddle. After passing the. worker over it once or twice the butter should be turned and worked again until the salt seems to be thoroughly worked In. It may then be put away to cool and after several hours given the Onal working, The amount of working re- , quired the second time is to be deteri mined by the appearance of the but- ter. If the salt is not all worked in at first working, portions of the butter will be of a lightev color than the rest. It should be worked just enough to !make it all of uniform color, • At first , working there is no way of telling pos.! • atively whether it is worked enough or not, as the "mottles," or streaks,ewill not show for several hours; hence. the 'reason for two workings. Great care should be taken not to overwork .it, as ,this will spoil the grain, which con. sists simply of the butter granules that , we had In the churn. When a pled? of ;butter of the right grain is broken or pulled apart, it should have the ans pearance of broken cast iron; If Worked too much, it will have a salvy, greasy appearance. Care should be taken to , keep the butter at all times at a uni- form temperature, as it will then re- ! 'main hard and firm until finished, -M. E. Bemis in St. Louis Globe -Democrat An Ohio Champion. . Herewith is the picture of the phara- pionship Holstein cow Paulia• Kola (No. 44,337) in ,the mill and butter test In /903 at the Ohio state fair over all breeds. She is owned by F, G. John-- ston of Franklin county, 0., and was• PAITLLA ICoLa. born Feb. 24, 1898. Her record was 2.69 pounde butter fat in twenty-four hours,. 0.04S2 per cent butter fat, 55.0, pounds milk; in seven days 4035 pounds milk and 16.16 pounds better fat; average per cent of fat for twenty- one innings, 4. Mr. Johnston says: . "This cow is the granddaughter f. old. Paul de Kol. oue of the greatest Ores of the breed. She is also a granddaughter. of Sadie Vale Concordia, the world rec- ord butter cow recently mentioned in - American Agriculturist. On the Slam side her great-grandsire is the grand sire of Sadie Vale Concordia, and - again the great -grandam is the gran- . dem of Sadie Vale 'Concordia on her sire's side. She was fresh Dec. 14, 1902, 'and the test was made Dec. 18 to 24. She is expected to calve again in - February, 1904, and ive fully expect - better resnIts than in any of her previ- ous records."-Americen Agriculturist. ICarry It to the Farmer. ! While we are spending hundreds of dollars every year in holding large, con- eventions for dairymen it is a fact that , a very smell percentage of our cream- ery patrons ever see the interior of a convention hall. ;The way to reach the farmer most '• e'ffectively is to carry instruction to him. I A buttermaker is admirably situated to do this work, and he can serve his company arid the dairy industry in no better way than to inaugurate a few local meetaigs. If you have never tried it, cad a meeting at the scheol- . house,- get a competent man to make an address. post yourself on the gees:. tions of breeding and feeding, and YoU will be surprised at the response from .the farmers. -Creamery Journal. I Keeping Tall on Milk Output. 1 It is n great mystery to as Why thousands of other dairymen do not • keep accure Le records of the milk yield. • of their elan:ideal cows. It has been demonstre t d over and over again that even the leen careful dairymen and the best judges of cows are frequently deceived. Even [30 careful and exact a man as Mr. Gurler of Illinois, after taking extraordinary paint; to weed out all the poor coWs inat lot oir fifty, fennel. four that brought him In debt for teed and labor. 'rhe average profit for these fifty cows was $19.98 each, but among the number there was one in debt to him $11, another $6.80, another $5.34, another $1.15, and one other made a' profit of only 44 cents, while the four best cows in the lot made an average profit of $53.77 each. We venture to , say that there is not one herd in ten where there are twelve or more cows thnt does net bave one or more covirs that it would be profitable to kill out. right. Excellent spring balances can he bought for $5 or less, and the time , required to weigh the milk both might end, morning is Jess than one minute , per cow, sVho is there, then, that din - not afford to keep reeordel-Field and (runt Wonder's of Invention. It recently happened that Marshall P. Wilder woe In the company of a num- ber of men who were discussing the wonders of invention and tif discovery during the lust inindred years. During n lull 14 the conversation Wilder ventured to intimate that to him °dynamite seemed the most wonderful of ad inventions. "Why dynamite?" asked bee of the wen. "Beettuse there's bathing In the World that can hold a candle to it." Whereupon the gempany chased Mar. Snell from the room -New York Times. II I I I 1 I I I s .1 1 I lit • • . CHILD CROWING.' Treatment That has; Save lisibrni Lite When Aallieted, Child crowing is the popular 1141414 even to a peculiar throat ailment from which rieltety and teething Infante sometimes suffer: It is a spasm of the glottis -i. e„ the opening at the Upper Part of the windpipe. When the child •seized with this spasm the, throat closes, ono there is imminent danger 0e suffocation. The little sufferer iighte for air and in the gasping for breath "crows;" hence the name. The face becomes livid and blue, and without Preropt aseistence the infant may die of suffoeation in a few minutes. Not 4 moment is to be lost, • Seine one should of course go for the doeter, as his attendance is very nec- essary, but if treatment were deferred until be came the child would probes hlY be beyond his power to aid. Proceed them: Dash cold water over the head and into the child'e face, •hold a bottle^of smelling salts to its nose, put a vow wrung out of very hot ;water to its throat over the windpipe, put the fin- ger down the throat to excite 'vomiting end at the same time pull the tongue forward, as this frees the air passage and enables the child to breathe, This and the use of the smelling salts (a bottle of ammonia will do es well) are meet valuable modes of treatment and have saved many a baby's life in this distressing complaint, Further treat- ment should be directed by the doctor. • r`fr7t FOLK PAPER DOLL HOUSE. Mahe it In a amoebae's and Wive Lots Of Rooms. Certain little girls I know are keenly interested in making a paper doll house, and on a rainy day, when outdoor sports are impossible, even their broth- ers do not feel it beneath their dignity to look through old magazines and put out the furniture which appears in the advertising pages. Seissore, 4 pot of • paste and a scrapbook of thick paper, the larger the better, ere the materials required, Been two pages Constitute a room, If there are some reninante of wall papers in the storeroom the Wails are papered, as this makes the pages thicker and insures longer wear 40 well as a prettier effect. • If no wall papers can belied a good result can be obtained by leaving the AllaE--.2/4011=1:13111 FOREHEAD WRINKLES. l. -- - SORAP13001/ DOLL HOUSE. pages white -and putting at the top a frieze of soft colors two or three Judea • deep of. -the fancy papers te be bought for a few cents a sheet, The first tit° pages are furnished as a hall, the 'next two- as a parier; then a librerY, dining room and pantry, and EICi on through kitchen, bedroome and nursery, the number of rooms being limited only by the desire of the little makers and the size of the paper family. A play room full of toys, a sewing 'roma, schoolreom, music room, conserv- atory and garden will extend the work almost indefinitely: Advertising pages from .magazinefe. furniture catalogues and advertising eatalogues:friem the de. partment stores, sent readilY on re- quest,will yield ample material, and pictures, ornaments, lamps and vaeed of Bowers can be so arranged as to make the little rooms really chernsing and giere'opportunity for the display Of much artistic taste. -Good Housekeep- , ing. . • The way to smooth out the Greene/ Detireen the Eyes... • ' If the frown between the eyes • is ha- bitual it can be nearly always traced to poor .sight. Nearsighted people and people troubled: with tietigmatisni near-. ly always' frOivie and la ease of .great nearsightedness the. frown la a deep'. ecoWl. If -these Will have glasses fitted: to the eyes the frown will disappear. If one has such alfroWn and it does not ,go of its own accord, try filling inethe fur -- VOWS with pod, wrinkle food, and the • wrinkles do not •graduaily absorb the,wrinkle. fopd:and disappear it is be- eallee they Were so. deep that the skin., actually..broken like the•tikin of an • orange that has been • creased and creased until It has teat its perfect. ent- er snrface. Physical culture of the face includes ea treatraent of the forehead not [thine -by massage, but by pradiee. If You Cannot talk • Without wrinkling up year forehead, then'learti to talk* all . over again so as to talk without Wrins: • klesi.An.. excellent eorrective of this abit is found • th forehead' bandage. wilich ?consists of.. a strip off fine. linen wet with almond oil and boundawross theforehead.. It ean be .worie for half -an ..hour to an hoer while tile 'sect:tin- practiees talking' before -a mirror as to .a friend. the baridege 'Must be 'tight enough fo keep the wrinkles Prod form, The.objeet of this -is a twofoldoiie- namely, to sr000thout the ri kl d to get the patient in the- habit of talk- -.thotit disfi s the forehead - . . Whenever it Is pcSesiple it is a good, plan for an elderly tetanal:CM Wear silk. - Duet have any --loose ends or staring. Pins,- Let your clothes be direfutly 'put on.. Have an air ,of geed ;morning.. tinbleache.d muslin .shrinks Much the wasbing. !Therefore allow an'extra• inch in etieh yard when Making a ger- nient. to allow for this peculiarity. '• anburn haired worcianivill alvsraYs , Zook • lieesbest in .black- bieWn; and dark green . disPleysthe lights' of this meet lovely Shade of hair to adVan-- tap... • , • Tucked chiffon. When cruniplect. and . shabby :looking may easily be. fresh- ened up by Passing a lmt ironover the wrong side of the •matetial. This 'makes ho tuels have the raised appearance they had when new, .'. • rn : • : • • , • S • • a • . • Eaeetneine . „... . Take lad earnestly. -Take it as anearnest; Vital; eeseetiamatter. Take it as though ;you: personally were born to , tbe task ef performing a noble Work in it, as though the. world -had waited for your Coming, Take It as•though it was • a grand eppOrtlinity to-do ;and . to aehleves to carry. ferwargreat. and. good schemes, to kelp and deer e suf- fering,. Weary,:' it may be, a heattbroe ken lister,' The fact is life Is. underval- _ tied by at. great niejority of. 'Women. It is not made half as -much of as shmild" be the case. Now .and then a woman. Steadsaside froth the ..ceoWd, labors. earnestly,, steadfastly,. confidently, and straightway becomes fametis. ' s Tender Peet. ' Tender feet are 'very painfill and re- quire special. attention daily.. A treat- ment .given each night Will work - won-. tiers. Bathe the feet•ift Warmwater.to which a heaping teaspoonful of borax. has been added,wipe quite dry and serape all callous spots • with Pumice. , Mae; theft dip them in odd Water to prevent taking cold. To harden the feet a salt, bath le invaluable. After it sponge' the feet and ankles with altohol. To reduce swollen feet tee only moderately warm water and. an astrin- gent made by two ounces eaela of reek salt and powdered alum, and putting two teaspoonfuls' to four quarts of water. . • . The carpet Sweeper. • The Unproved carpet sweeper has done away with most of the. horrors Of Sweeping' day, and the ineretising use of rugs Instead of carpets has also Contributed to the result. 'When brooms ere teed on carpete let them be Slightly' moistened. The eiouds • of duet that Used to be raised Will be greatly lessen- ed. Dlist before sweeping as 'well as after, and cover everything that can- not be taken cait of the room With old tenets or cloths. a . • • . • ....a.. r •• ••• When. When cherries grow on ePple trees, And kittens wear laze caps, And boys their enders never tease, And bears wear woolen wraps; When 511 the nursery dolls end toys begin to dance abet nlaVY Then little girl[she little boys May lie in bad all day. When dohkeys learn to king and dance When pigs; talk polities, When London IN a town hi litatrice, When two end two triake When drops of raid are reel pcarle, When teal le cleftr and white. Then little boys and little girls May sit up late at slight " '"ton Bingham in lanalegatiel* essasemseass, eee.esaa. 000.000.0•.." •. • 0 ..0 - -a.101111.11•Mima . SPOILED HIS PICTURE.: • . The Story of an Artist and* an !suited Elephant. . ere was mice a painter in Parli Whci lesiStied to- paint a' pleture of an elephavt, 'So he went to the Jardin des' Plantes in that dty along With a boy' and a big bag of apples: In order that •the aniMal might assume a striking at: 'Wade the lad was to throw it an apple' now and' then, so that it'might bold its trunk aloft. • But to prevent the supply of fruit from belag used uPtoo soonthe hoes wee teld te Make believe to throw an apple occasionally. The elephant • said nothing .at the tinl.q. When, how', eVer, theemples were all gone theCrea- ture walked to the talk as if to quench its thirst, took•up in its trunk a store of. Water, returned and deluged the Paint - et and -the picture, washing out nearly . all the work. •As it walked round the inelosure It Was plain that it had , , de- liberateiy planned this revenge. • • ' Soldier's of the Deep.• Any one who has •ever bad en oppor- • tmlity of watching a species of mullet 'fish which Is found among the coral • islands' of the Pacific knows that the. sea is not *without its atilititrY 'organiza- tions.. - • - ' These odd little treatures swini sheet in armies and have officers and a van and rear guard: , Bach eriny is • Also Provided with scouts abOve and below. • When danger threatens from above, the upper icOuti plunge down if the danger is from.beloW, and.thealiwer scouts daft upward and thus wain the army. . With the regular* Of died - Wined soldiery the guard 18 relieved • two or three times an hone. ' ' • 'The Eyes of .risk.• Nature. has played wondrous pranks With eyes in her own world. A fish has boen eaught a inile deep in the south Atlantic ocean that had noeyes at all, as we are accustomed to think of theta. Instead had two , burnished delver mirror-like leases Sunk deep in its. head.. They Were golden in:color and reflected the daylight With wonderful brilliance. In the Antaretie mean fish have been 'dredged up from even greater depths with their oyes carried far away from their heads: on long stems. They ars true fioster eyes, ' growing on stalks, as do the blossoms on planti.-Obleitinati Tribtine. • • Realoned Well. Small Iillnier,had been presented•With a toy train of cars and insisted on tak-1 beg then] to bed with hilt When he re - :tired. . • "But that isn't the plitee for ears," protested his mother. "Course it is," replied Elmer, "'cause they are all sleeping card," steno ThYttwors. The most skilled stone throwers in the world aro the tativee of Terra del Fuego. Sailors have been struck by them with stories thrown by hand when they considered themselves out Of musket shot. The Oilitton News*Rocord • wrAteo.-- Stimerala It NOS lieceiav .`onisthiesf sf itq ord.ereisker. This Winter has been a,- sad blow to the Oldest Inhabitant, s.tyti l'he 'Wail- and Empire. It makes hint dumb and impotent in the presence of the youngeet audience. A mere t.hild MI5 sity to him with, impt,nity, "fleet Olio is the coldest weather ever I Men. And, say! ain't the Snow illesieeass ensue wish emu superiority deep?" No more can the Oldest III. 44d begin, "Cold? Why,..s1 remember In the year -e" and so on. To find more snow the venerable oracle has to tramp back nearly sixty years - and .the walking isn't good, either. If he has his memory with him, be can paint all Artie .phiture of the year 1845, when this district. lay numb and sanothered under snow whick hid the snake fences, of which only an occasional stake was reveal- ed. But the cold in that record- breaking year could not to 'compared,. ' to the dela of 1904. In fact, the • • .Winter of '45 was generally mild, even it it did snow without ceasing for ninety hours. In only five Win- ters since theearly thirties has January been so . cold. There is this to be said for a ter like the present --we expected it. thiscientiacally we made our fore- casts and we .have not been disap- pointed. We had one of the racist glorious Autumns in history; and as we drifted balmily thrbugh 'Septem- ber and October expecting each beau- tiful day to be the testa ' we said among ourselves, "Well, when the , :Vnionrtteerr.C„ontes, she is bound te ho 0, . . . This we remarked unguardedly, with no idea that it would ever get into print and look so ill-bred, Now . Mr. Stupart says that we had no • right to make . any subh prognostics., tion, . Decease we have a beautiful Fall is ne reason why -eve should lot* forward to a severe Winter, Because we have a wretched Simmer, wet ••-and raw,. we have no right to •pro- gnosticate .a good Fall or • a mild • Winter. In short; tho seasons have ."-.310 relation to cies other. *This is what the weather experts tell us, . rind they speak by the isobar ' and isotherm, and by other formidable • institutions. -But 'we• knoW it little more • thenthe Weather • Men. We . ‘speak as graduatesin the school 'of . experience, Where We have ' learned ' that thereis a law of tompeasation. We feel it in our bones that a beau- tiful Spring, a .glorione Summer; a . mellow .Fal , and a short, erten WI* - ter are , too geed to be true.. ,We don't deserve a year like this.. Simi- . larly, we know that .we .don't de- serve a yq.a.r, thatis bad all: through. - .. • The meat we can- eay about the. ' weather is that it is going to strike - : an average • somewhere. This is hi s spite of the rather contradictory fact _ that weather shows a disposition.' to .•perpetuate. • itself, to maintain.. 'it' , s. type,. as tboiligh every'. day:Were' the, father. of every next day end the seri or every .precadlrig: day. ' ' . • ]. = . . Themeen temperature. et January,• 3:904, •was about -16i. -degress above - zero.' . On five .,days. the . minimum , -.temperature fell .• to between ten and '. fifteen below, and On :five other days . ,. .. L., • . - . to between • five • and ten. The .cold-. : est days, according to the there:tease- • i.., was on the lonethe when e, frac- . tent lower than 15 degreesbelow was • reached: Somcia other cold Januarys_ were: . ' • • • . • a 185(4. Mean temperature. :16.0 Lowest.',1Z.0 1857..• Mean tetup0ature.v12.7 Lowest..20•°' 1805.: Mean t-inp-ritture, .17.7 Lowest.. 9.0 •1807„ 'Mean temperature,. . .17.61Lowest. 5.0 1873., Meen tempei,a ture: .17,7 Lowest..18.5 Ita70., Menu toupee:dare. 010.1 Lowest.. 9.0 . 1877.. Mean temperitture..17.6 Lowest..149. . Mean temperature...10.7 Lowest. .. 5.9 : 1888.. Mean temperature..15.0•Loweat..12.0 1S03.. Mean temperature. 44j Lowest. .18.0 . • I ..' . • • • It is. quite 'i.iii-se' 'sniffle, of :course, to add' up the lowest temperatures. and see what theYeall•Caine to, . bet, , beholding them in . a. coluinri; the Jan- ' . Pulse is irresistible. We' make. it 122 below zero. ' Having gone 'so far,. theire seems no reason Why we should • hesitate to add alsO the .15 :degrees . ,beloW .that were recorded in',the pre- . . • Sent • montbe This ives ep : Als: a grand : . total, Of e.187. ' In face ' Of this ceree- ..*helming,.`fict,' it . is idle to enquire,' • •.,`Ia-this cold Omagh for you?" . ae sasetseript, •We, Should like t Age o • add that.' illintera • are heeoreing mild • . er than. in the good old days, •whenT : the Oldest Inhabitant was a youth.. The contrary is the. ea,se, and the . very reason ascribed. for the aileged • softening Of the. 'Winter! in. that -which proves their increasingsiegors. ' The 'clearing up of the land has . an . influence eat the weather, but, inward . /greater extremes of • beat and. cold. -: • This tendency is so • ;light. that , no e. man'S lifeis long enough to permit it beireis noted,. , . • . . . , , ' lit'orbert Speloils.r its lilOstritstlt . ' • Mr.. George •Iies, in a personal' *it . tido on • "lettere Spenhei lit. 'The: ' Outlook, : tells. • , this.. characteristic . aneodote!... "Spencer Was. a -Very 'set' , . man; At Montreal X told him:that , the view from the stinunit of .3f0siet s itoyal commands superb stretches . of the St, Lae/relic° and OttawaVal- leys. But the View from half -Way up 'the' aeelivity contented Mr. Spencer. , He 'had found views thus' arestricted more pleasingthan wider- viatas, and not one step further would he budge, ' although twice invited,. Not ' far. away a costi.y•niansion Was being. finished . for a multi-milltonaire, Whose 'fortune had been won e with . little scruple, When it Was summit- • edthat his carriage should pass thin • • mansion, be was iedignant. . 'It ie. - largely,' he said, 'the admiring the ' oetentation of -foich men that makes them possible. Baron Grant, the fraudulent speculator, Sent me an invitation for the inaugural of set- cester square, his gift to London, 'before a party of friends X tore 'the • 'card to pteerei.' SuCh men ' as Giant ' try to eonirieneate for robbing. Peter by giving paid • whet they , do not owe hina-.' " • Dality ifeeliwialr. 1 The Illeetration ',Mews two or three., 1 among the many charming accessories I I Ow fnshienable in the dresaing of the Ithroat. Tiaere is, a new linen collar ! . - I ' I MAIM f.:Jorm.sitra aim ceavar. hand embroidered i11. pink,. blue or mauve and a. hand embroidered liuen turnover collar with openwork sprays and [wallops itt buttonhole stitch. The smart cravat is or tvory oilk iuuilln with tiny satin • band e inlet with line !latching and with .valencieunes lace. Patting. Papa Up a, Tree. "Pop," said *tie Willie, Salo you know anything of sefencer "Well, my boy," replied his father modestly, "although I am no scientist, yet 1 may safely say that I have given Some attention to matters scientific. WhYr "Oh, nothing. Only1 thought I'd like to ask you a question." "My boy," said his father confluentlea "put your question, and I'll answer it. Never hesitate in the pursuit of know'- - edge." "Well, pop, it's thlsr When you look into a mirror, the left side of your face appears to be the right side .and the right side appears to be the left side, doesn't it?" --New York Press, . - • . . . • • Re Hair a 0,11064 ,rnoin‘rt Women • ZOPLIN bachelor regards woman es av ea7 wayward, tickle erea- ture And seems to have some grounds for his opinion. "Several year he says, "I happened to be in an- other town, engaged On it contract, and while there I ran Woes a young WWII. an. Whom used to know working in a hotel. 1 bad known her when she was but a girl, and at that tinae her par- ents were well fixed. She told we that her husband had deserted her, leaving her to work out for her living. I didn't like to see her there, and I arranged with a friend to give her a better posl- tion, Finally 'took such a liking to her that I proposed marriage, upd she accepted me, agreeing to Marry me as men as she could get a diverce. She went to 18Pringlield and proposed to get' the divorce there. Every now and then she would send rne tuarlied copies of papers containing items regarding the progress Of per case. All the time I was sending her money to support her there and aid her in getting the ease through, Some time after I re- ceived a copy of a Springfield paper With the' accoatit of her divorce being granted. She asked for a little more money to get her wedding trousseau Made. I sent her more money, and she wrote • me how she was progressing with her trousseau:" "Well, did she get it finished?" I and Sleighs • March 24th 1904 WORIOS FAIR, ST. LOOS APRIL 3o TO DEC. I, 1904 ONE WAY EXCURSION FARES. From Clinton To Billings, Mont. $38 3u Of Colorado Springs, Salt Helena Butte, Ogden, Salt Laic City $4o. 3o Nelsen, Rossiand, B. C., Spok- ane, Wash. ;40 80 - • Pcvtland, Ore,, Seattle, Wash.!, Vauconver., Victoria, II. C. 43 30 San Frarciacci and Los Angeles Cal:ferule 43 75 - Proportionately low- rates to other Paints. • - . Tickets •oe sale dally•IVIarch Ist err • til April 3otL, 1964. SPECIAL 'SETTLERS' TRAINS' TO .Causdian Nortit4Vest with Colonist •Sieeping• ear will leave Toronto everr.. Tvesday during March. east April at 9 p. 14, • Passengers without live stock should take the, Pacific Express leaving Tor— onto at Lea Tickets, reseavetione and lull infor- mation freer. agents. For tickets mei inferinationapply to .• • . F L Hodgens,. Town Agent. • A. 0. Pattison, S talon' Asst.. . Cutters The bachelor paused to relight his cigar. "Yes, she did. I received another raarked copy of a Springfield paper. This tinselt contained the notice of her marriage." "Her marriage?" "Yes. The blankety blanked woman 1 bad gone and married a conductor, and heresshe had worked me for the money to buy her wedding outfit and get her di,Tv,orhgeet.,e the reason I'm still bachIng," We'have a very fine assortment of cutters and slei- ghs. All made iii. our own shop from .tjie best of iner.ch- andise. continued the Joplin mate with a sigh. . -Joplin (Mo.) News -Herald. Prices low :eon- sidering quality. ° „, Be sure, and call , before purchasing. Weakand Langidd • • . A eitis parents became alarmed and used Dr. Chase's Nerve Food •witls splendid minks: MRS. GEORGE F BRIMS, LakeStreet, Peterboes), One, sates:. -": One of my chits siren, a boy of about fifteenyears, did not have • .good health for a year or more. lie seemed Talmaae : .t!" to have no energy, Was weak and languid and 1 - Sufferedfrom nervousness. The doctors said : • began using pi. Chase's 1 . )1 6 0 that he was growing too fast, but we beeime • . alarmed about tem, and . SenliOn i ,,,, Nerve Food, It was not 4 \ , long until we noticed a , great change' in his Con- : dition. His appetite ime . proved, ballad a better •••••••• . , Repairing promptly attended to, . a. • .44.; THE ' . - ....".. OUMBALL and MoMATH . . .p.i.o, St, ountoa: ..0,200,1..0=0000000600-0 .7111111,028C1. , o... .1.1• 4 i + .. .1 Ix, ... 61.0,11.4 4 I ., a .... 04 01 V741....11703tettlit*Agitlil ri*S;a3.1 WitOrnalniTa~,i.'1 fe ,?„, , v 1 ..,°,vi.IG:tr..r.o. LI; 81C111...111N1 • • / ',.;. j y ' ..i '‘ ..• IA 61 : %El' air ellewer 4.: ..: 1 always r_estores color to gray hair. ninven,,Attrot,10.1.,.414,ro• A high-class preparation for the hair. Keeps the hair soft and ' glossy and prevents splitting at the ends. Cures dandruff and .40‘....aas.z...............m,„„„m„,,,at, E LA • ; :•••••• I'A: Talmage Sermon will be published in The . NOws-Repord t .1 ifcoler and soon became stroeger' and healthier. " Ss Asf, He is still using the Nerve , ' Food, and we are perfect - 1 . ly confident that he is •nnPryingrightg .Master Briaainunderthis treatment ' Dr. Cha...se's Nerve Food, the great blood ',slider and nerve restorative, g0 cents a box) 't ell dealers, or Edminsoe; Bates and Co., ion.,tito. To protect you against imitations 1 he pottrait and signature of Drat.. W. Chase, ' . A P1'1 7th .he famous receipt hook ;wilier, are on, every •••••,. - p___ ...._ :: 4444 • !Jai oflis remedies. . .. • v • •IP . ' • • II .... . -- -_-_ _--_--__-‘,.. . 44,0...0* ' r ut taiga vairs,ants. imstianasaiial amps acme Rs! . . . . . E DR....OVENS OF LONDON ffsi: . : ' each week, beginning R.attenburyStreet Woks: Direet imparters. Workman - saes materiel, guaranteed. -G.SEALE.46c.- , • • , , X aSes of Eye,' Ear, hos and fa ratirgesen, Oculist, apeciaast, ns • DiscI 1,11 'rlirorst, visits. Clinton•monthly Fr/ ESal • • GL. ASSES 1ROPILV jt TTE• D lk NasaCatarrh and Deafness • trea.ted. L at . Ta _ • 1,ondoe Office 2.25 Queen's' -.0 • Clinton Office Combe's [g] Store. , Lal Ho _ • urs 8 a. in. to Eit rig is cif visits -Tuesdays -Feb. 2, Ett xe.Mer. Met% 29, May 3, ,May tEt -kg 31,, June 28, July 26, Sept. 6, El 0 Oct. 4, Nob. I, Nov. 29. . . . Et, .nnnidatutonsiminuigsgmax.uniutt iun,2mg_ti .• • .Farrtiing For Profit..': Every Farmer should keep these 'three words constantly , in mind and conduct his farm on strict business principles. -Guess work and haphazard methods are n� longer used by , successful and up-to-date far- • By reading Tim WitexLit SUN, the Farmer's Business Paper, you will get the very • latest and most accurate in- formation regarding your busi- ness. THE Suses market reports are worth many_ times the sub-, scription price to you. Every Partner in Canada should realize the full value of the serviee THE SUN has rem* dered him hi a public way. It was due to the action of Tint SUSr in giving Voice to the opinions of the farmers that the law relating to cattle guards, drainage across rail- ways, and farm fires &used by railway locomotives has been antended., We will send Tint WEEKLY SUN from now to lst !aviary, 1905, in combination with r he News -Record For Isidetittnetiblis, Vendome, Perfect. Only 20 eentilme running toot. Supplied by us or liked denier. 001 • P.A".13E WIRE FENCE CO, Lisisitesdi • Voisilitandilia Mattirsal, Wiraitoso, $t, John. 'Sold and erected by Ed. Bedford, Cliritoni _ .k 0AtiaWii. • ' • Have your sale bills' printed at this office and the sale is adver- tised free in the col- um.ns of The. News - Record. We insert the entire contents of the bill which of itself is worth the price charged for the bills themselves... YOU' 4, AY NEED . Horse route bills or r'cards. We have ac good assoitrnent of ° cuts and our prices are reso4able. Let's do the work for .you. C 111 •:! ..k t