The Clinton News-Record, 1911-10-05, Page 3,"i04" 04". no
'r _ _
"�RXXX)00?tXlt
.,,
11
11
\
! e It 't llee ak big =4 to 'command
Interoat front :the wbolo uaktiou fifteen
3 F.ra after retiring froiri active :po-
littent life, That is fair Charles Tup-
I)e s record. A,lthoosh be now spends
2UQ4t of tills UTUO. to England, no one
t Sgllo ws the • trend of politlegi affairs
f IA Canada with al keener eyo. At
41nety' years of" ago his occasional
contributipay. to • the press Aow the
sgme fire which .eullveacd politics in
the "early nbietteo. "Age cannot dint;'
As Quo inhn lately discovered .when
the doughty Knight corrected the ]F'1-
n4nce Mfulater'.s memory on several
points.. '
. I:tcoenttq, • an, event :of special luter-
, .
Salt' CHAS. TtFIIarEII, )Strut.
est took place in London when •a
tablet was .1invelled to commemorate
whore the articles of Confederation
were drawn up, It was Sir Charles
Tupper's day, The gallant old man
with his 'unabated willingness to take
. Any adversary spoke vigorously, and
well. Ile Is the fast survivor of the
Fifteen of Confederation. It was rt
great thing to see him standing there
and to hear him sneak. Sir Wilfrid
Lauder's tribute. aiidressed to him of
"Well done, good and faithful servant"
was hailed as one of the Canadian
Premier's happy inspirations. He bad
said the right thing at the right time.
HON. WAi,TER SCOTT. 1.
Walter Scott, printer's devil, com-
positor, publisher, politician and pre-
mier of his province. It is not an
oxcilptional story for ,Canada offers
to every youth the opportunity to
ascend.Mr, Scott, o who was recently
elected for a second term to the high-
est office.ln the gift of the people'of
Saskatchewan, ban review a career
that is an inspiration to any. young
,man of ambition. To rind .the secret
of his success one must .know the
man. If asked to nate the qualities' .
nvhichled to the distincti11 Ion, enjoyed
IRON. WILLIAM SCOTT
rremler of Saskatchewan.
so early in life, his friends would
say that courage and stick to-itiveness
combined with an affable' disposition
ere theP r
ed onto
ant character
istie
s. It is n v
of every o
y b y who serves
as an apprentice at a trade who has
the determination to soar beyond the,
calling he had selected for life. No.
one would have dreamed that back in
the early days of Regina, when it was
a small town, its only claim to note
being the beadquarters of the Terr1-
t.oriai Government, that ' the boy
sweeping the office, pulling proofs
and doing other chores in connec;
tion with a country weekly, would
teach the honor of being the chief
adviser of His Majesty in one , of the
.principal provinces of this great Com-
-men wealth. In political warfare Mr.
Scott is a hard hitter. He wouldn't
thrive in the West unless he were, He
.. • hover strikes below the belt but when
It is necessary to make a charge he
+does It without resort to suggestion,.
,or surmise. When Waiter Scott- says
.anything unpleasant it's generally un-
-Comfortably definite.. As a speaker,
•he cannot beclassed as an orator,
'He is not prosaic, however, and is
pleasing to listen to. He has a free,
easy, conversational style and holds
'.fins audience without difficulty, He
Is not a man to trifle with as many
an interrupter has learned to his
ichagrin.
Welter Scott was born in Ontario
:in 1867.;
It's as hard for a girl to keep a
excret as it is far her to keep her
,cloalt buttoned ever a new gown.
in Health.
Abu
'Hogsa ndantLon' s t ' 1
w ne, lively sly acid
.somewhat fiae aaLd soft, growing out
of a pliable skin, which is neither
thick nor papery, and free from mangy
tObiiditions ,tells the story of robust .
-health, vigor,. thrift and active tit-
oulat on Th 1
i e idea hog oiiould not
be sloppy and sluggish, trot, on the
.ether hand, restless and uneasy. trice'
G slcfiOn and it bright sprightly mullah"
,sire sin Of
o bbd �l g ti ,tin ad
, ffi g, g s bn d g4
'} 'health. If he Is a ,comfortable, good
Matured, Yrlendty at°eature, wide«
awake, disposed to visit with hio
.O*nor Insted'd tot dinning -Away from .
.. hila, and has the othttr points of, 'ox -
0111I indirtion6d, he ,I sbai'cely ;
turd tet bo a jtfy to, the possesedr Arid
:ajypr61kImAte, In the qds ,of t 1wly"e r
i iitIt of bounty',
e
��
%
.,'
i II ..
%#
r
r
'
„^
. I
77,
. s
.
, `,.
ri
Cready,. of the .Ontario Agricultural
College, has ,been •appolttted. as in-
spector._of special agricultural classes
and director of elementary agri-
cultural'*
in: the. province:.:
'These speciai•.elasses will be- coh-
ructed not _only in the high school
eentres where an agricultural repre-
sentative is stationed but at other
centres selected by the. minister, -ofeducation, upon. the 'application of
other' hi it or contlnu
g atian school
boards within the county.
Agricultural dopar
tments have al-
ready boon established at the.conti-
nuation :schools 'at 'Carp and .Mark -
hair !high schools at Dutton. Es-
sex, Newmarket, Norwood, Orange-
ville, Petrolia or Ho
P t e Si meoe and
Stirling; and h : ell
+
S g, tee egir~.e institutes
tit Collingwood, Galt, Lindsay, Mor-
risburg. Perth, Piston and Whitby;. -
Weak -legged. Cockerels.
This is a .disease w0 -•often. meet at
this tlme: of the, year. It is found in
7 st ck P b th 1.
many Yettrs. he filled supervising and
inatraging positions .on various rail-
roads of the United States. Then, in
1881, he came to Canada and became
General Manager of the.C. P. R. Later.
tie 'vas mads Vice -President of that
Colnpany, and In,.turn, President and
Chairman of the Board -of Directors,
from : which latter position -he re:,
t;cntly 'msigued. He has been con-
nected -with the C. R. •i2.'since ,1882.
g
itis thorough ul knwl
o ed a of railroad
affair:, Is evidenced by the fact that
t
n, Occupies
positions.
of. trust with '
several other railways. He is a'
Knight of the Order of St. John of
Jerusalem. •
9Ilt'AtA'X i1RISTOL ATLE41'POII,TIi
Between Edward Artbur L,incaster.
ind Sir Alan Bristol.Aylesworth there
,s a to 1'
e d of one standing. YQars be-
forc tho, . Ulnister of Justice was.
t.aplidd :on 'tit; shqulder and tolyl to
'rise :lir Alan,'the energetic lawyer
Toni St. Catbarinos ,was camping on.
I
first.'place the work is hard ,and the
young couple are a,nxious,to pay the
mortgages as soon as possible. Sc
they overdo.. Then: the little family.
grows -and .the babies keep. the faimet'
and wife at home. • The habit of Mayo
-Ing home grows and becomes..a part_
of life itself. • . . 1.
"Some Hen, This.. .
The. humble but helpful hen bw
been held up to us of late as :th(
greatest wen h- r
It t,ducer of
g p the coon.
try — the . automatic provider of
health, .material support, and' -break.
fast. 'It has. remained for a suburk
oind Toronto, to present this simple-
minded. but Industrious ri end f e of th
e
farmer in the role of
hired *hand.
and.
Vinding her master - . we hate to say
owner. — busy building a chicken
coop presumably for her occupancy'
Biddy waited about' until the man
In the case dropped a nail. Turning
to plek, it up, he. found that Biddy
dad already forestalled him and was
standing by the coo with the n '1
younis o o o sexes, a so in
pullets that have overlaid their
r s tra 1, and the. mutual dislike
sprang from 'the • somewhat con-
g P '. al
In. her bill, held -ready for driving
LrARKtAMNS
0 99
W110% W110 1nI 11 FAN�"LD I
' Wn" WHO
+ .hIN
rt�TAtl a+
+i.r�e7AG�,l�A
a
,if the country's• legal department
w- ..:7": KXti0
6
UNSVITAI AWS . CA ty[$z
t*REAT RAILWAY N GNATES .ALF.ALPA, VX11tgE'b, D,ED CLOVS4
" • RON, D4. U 'PPXTiI ORX
TROUSIAIL
anti forcing a diet- also causes this
rpsnect to the level crossing evil It
"""""" ""�-
Thri• men ,who have been instru- CIoy-sk Eek Ad+tptetl For SIt
i :ental la budding the great railways ; , �#atiois, orl
When t e or
li Iiabeais C putt Act was
P1sle $tt4gld l�epluae I3prlln>t Veath
cf Ca*iada which stretch from ocean•
extended to the North Wept Terri-
11arrows.
,....,..
to ecPait across a continent, uniting With so much "'Moller," about .alfalfa,
the people of a large country, have :
tortes in 1887, .HQA. Fdward L. Wet
'A• gre>it utany fariuers maths' the
and with pox departments of a
performed tt wont whfch cannot be g gri-
overestimated. First those ' culture boosting this Peat legume, i,,
more was chosen .one of the jud es
11
Palled for to fill the seats of power
mistake of using unsuitable itar,rowa,
lsmong
. there not •a danger that the oipter
in the 'five judicial districts then
or usingg barrows which greatly In-
crease the expense of the operation.
crop, red :clover, will be neglected!
Alfalfa may. be an :abu daut yieldex
created to form the Supreme Court
of the Territories and filling that
For instance in many parts .of Canada
a spring tooth harrow Is very cora-
' of choice .fodder --•• but ,sa ca is red
clover, alfalfa. may give twor three
, post to the satisfaction of all lovers
of law :and order. there came, in
am•ouly used for getting sod land' ready
fpr., whereas
', cuttings in a season, — but red clovex
.1907,
i the higher honor of appointment as
grata, no worse lin-
element coilld be found or devised
will glue one good cutting and, filen'
:, provide nice Mall
Chief Justice of Saskatchewan,
Justice
of Sack,
for this purpose. One might tihluk
.pasture,
No. one can hope to. dethrone alfalfa
Dorn at N.D., in 1$41,
;Young
that all the powers :of evil: had been
- - no aloe should express a wish that
Wetmore of
g the ground work
working to devise such an Instrument
. the perennial legume should be de.
of his education at the 'local grammar
for such a purpose. It does more to
.1 throned. But agriculturists nc ,days
school, following as to Ding's College
root up, the sail, to leave it in bad
are sticklers on systematic crop rota,
there. now the University of Now
condition for sowing, it 'floes more to
. tion. Experience has show that,
Brunswick, ,and at the ea riy a ge of
cause the farmer to leave .his field
rotation systems spell succe s and
, 22 was called to the bar. This was a
badly Prepared or ha'i! prepaxed. for
t � 'prosperity 1f alfalfa is word grow-
, partteWirly good beginning and the
seeding, n
e i g, or in bad shape after seed-
, !� lug it is worth leavinrt fpr t least
' townsmen' and other.. admirers who
Ing than any other method or instru-
; six years.' In other words, it is not
took the liberty of prognosticating,
went that I have ever seen In use.
a rotation crop. It ,can, of course, be
; were, as results proved 1n no way
• It is an objectionableimplement, yet
grown for six or eight years on a
rash when they scheduled for the
I regret to say there ;are very many
Part of the farm not used in the rota-
Youthful son of Fredericton, many
1n use. in Canada to -day. We could
+ tlou,. and then the land is in excellent
honors' under the legal banner, to
and we should—and I am glad to say
condition for cereals, Red clovex. on
•
arrive well in advance of the average
we gradually are — anostituting' -disc
harrows in place of these' objection-
` the other hand,. is 'adapted to the
i ,III.,,:short rotation. The first season after
rptirat stage. Following on a number
of Years Auty as deputy clerk of the
able spring -toothed instruments, of
seeding down, It gives an abundant
Crown, Mr, Wetmore betaine a
soil torture now in -use. The best
yield of choice bray and improves the
Queen's Council in 1881; was presi-
form of disc in my opinion is the
land for 'grain growing, corn or po-
dent of the New Brunswick Bar- •
double cutaway. This instrument has
'to
tatoes. It would seem. therefore, that
rlsters' Society in 1$86-87; and for the
done a great deal cheapen the coat
i while too much 'attention canngt be
sante:, term. acted as representative of
of preparing the land and to improve
i paid to alfalfa, too little easily can be.
4"� tit-;="--- �--6. •
the condition of it
•; Paid to. red cloven,
,
Dont trifle ^with a 'cold is -good
Thio best plaster. A piece of >lainbl
.1 Naturally, ' conte will .smile and
.__:,�,
' COtT RAISING. BY SAN71
Pause to. remark that ;neither red
IOIIU 111Oti�T STEPIIEI solver, nor alfalfa will grow ons Ca-
::?:.> :s::a
, {:-."> ....4 .;:.,.
:r':tf
Study Peculiarities To Be Successfxtl
nada s, prairies. Hundreds of reports:
. is 'Baron >ti[ount Stephen, Cx.C.V.O. from all parts f each
P F o a h of the three
>': v:r'>:^.>:<:s c^ :<:::s<:
�; :?s>::.:::''
4>.:>::::,
_
The food for the colt should on-
D.L. He wets born in Scatiand tr. . Western provinces show that these
1$89 and .twenty Years later carne rc crops will thrive. The tnaith thing -ia
v
'..�`'` '• ' ^`
Z;;;s}>'
slat of two parts cows mills and one
settle 1n Canada, iia, was far Kom, proper preparation of the land and
Cough Remedy for a cold as that t
part water. A tablespoon full 'of
a ala
r n _ted sugar ghoulse
r d be added tseeded
g g 4d
years connected with the Bank of 'precaution to keep livesto(e, off the
Montreal, an 1 atrt
c I rhes became a P i
a . Pr ,old ,n ares,
ea in fall and spring:
4>.>;:•::,� `:`;
each half ,pound. of milk. This should
be ligated to 100' degrees, and one half
of. the St. Paul, Minn., and Manitoba _
Ballway. His -chief worts was. In Pon. !'— '�'"
:•• <:::;;;:<:
pint .given the colt every hour' for fire
nectlon with the C. P. R., and it was World's Wheat .Crop..
feverof
fever patient, and the child wi sum-
first ten days. •
largely through his efforts that . this Hungary, Italyd Sw
an 1t;erland are
:a; :>
It Is, wise to use the. milk from t:.e
railway was built" It was for hfH r
p omised an average wheat crops this
Kervices in this
' ' ?;..
same cow all'the time • and if the colt
be a large one give a little more
connection that bo year..
tivaH created .Baronet in 1886, and In 'France' 'the area sown is less
`
,,
. ;
;;;;:„ . ; : ; •,
;,
one-half pint,
Atter the second day gradually in-
Baron In 1891,. His enerons dohafion
g than 96 ` per .cent, of last year's
towards founding the R6yal Victoria, acres a per
g g .%
wheat conditions In
:.
. ::•»:
crease the quantity given and length-
liospitai, Montreal, Is well knotivn. France are very favorable but spring
., ?" *:. •.
en the periods, at. a week old a int
p
Sir William Corneous Van l;orne IFheat'leaves something to
i g be desired,
elrbm*1119 for neglootiog faspwkwa ''yids
ever two hour shoul suff ce at
Y s d 1,
was given . the title. of-IC.C.Al. . n ' . Russia has
Gl , t a hid 'extremely hot wen-
by over eig b���a inilli,o z.
three weeks old very four hours
1854• He was born slid educated in ther in,the• southern and eastern re. .-
g
'.:1,r>.`::::...
should be often: enough' and when a
the United States.
a At the age of ions. Along the Volga spring wheat -
:::: ::>:>:::.
month. old it should not be necessary
.fourteen he entered the railway office is alread ' much d
Y e Y unaged and part oP'
'%`'?<':
to get up .during the night to feed It.
of !s native!
htown Ana steadily work. ' Orenburg: crops are. said to be a fall-
.; 5;.:;
The attendent must• use judgment all
through •
ed his way up throe n the :various are. In the sout>iern -part of Russia,
g
stages railway
.
HON. ED`yAR T.. WETMORE
as the peculiarities of the -
.of service, until, in conditions have been reported as gen-
colt must be studied and it given less
1874 he became General Manager of etally satisfactory, although. hexa and
Chef . Justice Saikatchewan
or more than. advised as appears need-
there have been reports of excessive
Pul. Teach it to eat a little chop at
heat. Rouhnania has also had very
Alumni Association in the University
two weeps of age and. it can have
hot weather with fears of damage
Senate. In 1863 .he took the field as
grass as soon as' It will eat it,- the
In Bulgaria .rains have been follow-
an active. polttlelan with designs on a
sante as if Yt were in pasture with its.
, '`•�?z:::r
.,:t;,,ed by Floods .and some damage to h'ar-
seat in the New Brunswick Legis-
dam:
a...
vest fields, but at the craps iii
�'
lature: An interesting oa'mpalgn re-
' : that country are quite .satisfactory.
1;,-
.-utted in his being orogen "core-.
POULTRY, REQUIRE GREEN FOOW
. In Germany the weather keeps right
aeatative for. York County,! and during
Fowls teduire a certain. amount '
and is regarded as suitable' for the
the Session toot.# .followed he made a
of
green food to keep them In condition...
-IW
crops, with harvest prospects moder-
ately'better,'
very acceptable leader of the op.
position..:, The North West called him.
As they are the habit of - scratch= •
. The new seedingto Ar
Argentine is
in 1887 and since then, in�addition •to
in•
Ing up . by . the roof every, growing:progressingu
. oder favorable clreum-
h
the honors a]"ready referred to,'' the
thin that the find' palatable —the
g Y P e
to ,
stances.
Ho cora 1 nl
betem n
ge a was selected
poultry yard usually, being as barren
of vegetation a desert, lin cense-`
Great'drought retarded the growth
,
Chancellor of the Saskatchewan
-as
uence .— .the obi m o sti 1 '
q Pr e f pp Ying
"them `not 'always
of .spring ,cereals'. ih: Sweden. • The
same cause has kept back'•growth' in
University In 1907. And:_cliairman oP .
the. Committee for the consolidation
is .a simple one:.'
Holland; while, In Italy "some damage
of the laws of the province that same
A Tasmanian. .poultry. 'raiser sows
-has been, caused by a decided fall 14
year., Amidst :his multitudinous. legal .
grain in a corner • of his enclosure.
He has made a wooden frame' and
temperature: In Servla wheat was
growing well up to July -1st, and con-
. and social calls,. Mr.,. Wetmore finds
some spare hours to devote to fishing
covered it with close -meshed ":ire
netting. When the seed, has come up,
ditiotts were very good.
,
and shooting, ,and has put up some
he puts this frame on the ground so'
Hods records under bath headings.
a also a strong admirer of. the
£hat the wire netting is about seven
Inches above the soil, Then lets
Farmer-§' Clubs,'- '
game .of cricket, and from the earlier
.he
the fowls out on it. They nip. off the
Farm life -is so isolated that an
extra. effort must be, made to keep
days brings the honor of being able to
hold up.:a strong wicket. '
tips of the grain that stick up through
from crawling into your shell .as if
the meshes, and have a constant suer
ply of green food from a small area.
were and losing' the social instinct.
You `need social life, You ought to
cultivate the habit of flocking to-`
. kir. F. W. G. HALLTAIN; H.C..
• . . -
As�rftniture in Ontario `High School .
gather. There's : no _danger that it
Son of Lieut, -Col: W. F. •Haul#sin,'
Agricultural instruction In the high
will be overdone in the country. Town
R.A., 'dad born at Woolwich, :Eng„
and schools of Ont_•rio
folks are. on th$ go too much. Not
err November of 1857; Mr., F, • «'. ti.'
continuation
nized and put on a
is bene rebasi
SIIt so with farmers.
W, VA L OUNE
'very
Ilaultain of the Saskatchewan Legis -
g
permanent
permanent basis' of • the 'department.
of education Professor S B Mc-
You don't have to getold to
the Southern Minnesota Railway: For feel inclined to stay.at home.. In the
ative Assembly, was an atom in the
'
Cready,. of the .Ontario Agricultural
College, has ,been •appolttted. as in-
spector._of special agricultural classes
and director of elementary agri-
cultural'*
in: the. province:.:
'These speciai•.elasses will be- coh-
ructed not _only in the high school
eentres where an agricultural repre-
sentative is stationed but at other
centres selected by the. minister, -ofeducation, upon. the 'application of
other' hi it or contlnu
g atian school
boards within the county.
Agricultural dopar
tments have al-
ready boon established at the.conti-
nuation :schools 'at 'Carp and .Mark -
hair !high schools at Dutton. Es-
sex, Newmarket, Norwood, Orange-
ville, Petrolia or Ho
P t e Si meoe and
Stirling; and h : ell
+
S g, tee egir~.e institutes
tit Collingwood, Galt, Lindsay, Mor-
risburg. Perth, Piston and Whitby;. -
Weak -legged. Cockerels.
This is a .disease w0 -•often. meet at
this tlme: of the, year. It is found in
7 st ck P b th 1.
many Yettrs. he filled supervising and
inatraging positions .on various rail-
roads of the United States. Then, in
1881, he came to Canada and became
General Manager of the.C. P. R. Later.
tie 'vas mads Vice -President of that
Colnpany, and In,.turn, President and
Chairman of the Board -of Directors,
from : which latter position -he re:,
t;cntly 'msigued. He has been con-
nected -with the C. R. •i2.'since ,1882.
g
itis thorough ul knwl
o ed a of railroad
affair:, Is evidenced by the fact that
t
n, Occupies
positions.
of. trust with '
several other railways. He is a'
Knight of the Order of St. John of
Jerusalem. •
9Ilt'AtA'X i1RISTOL ATLE41'POII,TIi
Between Edward Artbur L,incaster.
ind Sir Alan Bristol.Aylesworth there
,s a to 1'
e d of one standing. YQars be-
forc tho, . Ulnister of Justice was.
t.aplidd :on 'tit; shqulder and tolyl to
'rise :lir Alan,'the energetic lawyer
Toni St. Catbarinos ,was camping on.
I
first.'place the work is hard ,and the
young couple are a,nxious,to pay the
mortgages as soon as possible. Sc
they overdo.. Then: the little family.
grows -and .the babies keep. the faimet'
and wife at home. • The habit of Mayo
-Ing home grows and becomes..a part_
of life itself. • . . 1.
"Some Hen, This.. .
The. humble but helpful hen bw
been held up to us of late as :th(
greatest wen h- r
It t,ducer of
g p the coon.
try — the . automatic provider of
health, .material support, and' -break.
fast. 'It has. remained for a suburk
oind Toronto, to present this simple-
minded. but Industrious ri end f e of th
e
farmer in the role of
hired *hand.
and.
Vinding her master - . we hate to say
owner. — busy building a chicken
coop presumably for her occupancy'
Biddy waited about' until the man
In the case dropped a nail. Turning
to plek, it up, he. found that Biddy
dad already forestalled him and was
standing by the coo with the n '1
younis o o o sexes, a so in
pullets that have overlaid their
r s tra 1, and the. mutual dislike
sprang from 'the • somewhat con-
g P '. al
In. her bill, held -ready for driving
. FREDERICK W. 0. HAUMAIi1i
strength.
•emptuotis tr'eatntrint which the head
Thenceforth, until the homely, noes-
nary task was, done, hen
Saskatchewan I:e islaturo
g
A bird. affected is usually unable to
,if the country's• legal department
pian and
6
stand up, as the legs appear too weak
,a support the body. Too stimulating
meted out, to Mr. Latecaa.ter's efforts•
to' brim the ,railways to time in
worked in. profitable and, pleasant al-.
fiance. This is all true, too, because
, Dominion census returns while yet
anti forcing a diet- also causes this
rpsnect to the level crossing evil It
It was printed In a Toronto news-
too young - to take anything like a
his
complaint:'
'.'coag chickens: under four months
was under the circumstances a matter :
)P astonishment to the Roust: when
paper. ,
11 -
live interest in the proceedings,
youthful school days being spent at '
old should simply be given one tea.
spoonful of Parrish's Chemical food In
`nr, Lancaster for the first time on
record, agreed with the views of :air
. I1osg lit Health.
'the Montreal High.:: In course- of
m the gun man asn ons the
time e y g P w
six ounces of their drinking water,
Hari on the merits of a cortain divorce
Abundant halt on swine, lively and
Peterborough Collegiate Institute,
Birds of more mature age may betill
dhscussed.recently.' The Minister
somewhat fine and 'soft, growing out
and subsequently to Toronto Unrw
given the following pills,
A Justice had delivered •a pollderai&
of a pliable skin,' which is neither
ersity with inclinations. towards law, -
Phosphate of .lime, 5 grains; sul-
argument against granting relief
thick nor papery, and free from mangy
and in 1882 was called to the,Toronto
phate of iron,. 1 grain; : sulphato of
.to
ausband and wife ,on mere heresay
conditions ,tells the story of robust
bar at the age of twenty. -five, Very ,
quinine, 1-2 grain; strychnine, 1.16 of
3vidence, and -after he was through,-
health, vigor, thrift and active Cir-
early his Interests centred on things
a grain. Make iG pills; one pill daily.
Vr. Lancaster rose and supported the
i;ulation., The ideal, hog should ,not
political and half a dozen years later
Better let your druggist make them,
contentions made by\_his .old time
be sleepy and sluggish, nor, tia._the
his :friends — and they are by no
as strychnine Is not to be Pooled with,
enemy- Hon. Charles Murphy, Se-
other hand', restless and uneasy. Free
means few -••- were able to ton -
but absolutely essential for a quick
..
retary of State, who• sets as reporter
action and •d, bright, -sprightly manner
gratulate him as member of the
cure especially in old birds.
,ar the Minister of itustlee Wheil his
are signs of good digestion and good
North-West Assembly, where he re-
• --.Y.
lesk mato, George Graham, is not .
health, If he is a comfortable, good.
named Until its dissolution, oc-
When grooming the. horse do not ,
there, leaned over and in- a stage
whisper said; . ,
natured, frlendly creature, wide-
%.wake, disposed to visit with his
oupying_the Premier's chair from 1857
until the division of the old North
do all the work with the brush and
"Lancaster Is agreeing with Y cu."
Y
>wner Instead of running away from
West Territory into two new pro -
the rubbing cloth. This may make
Quick as a flash came tllo return
Sim, and has the other points of OX,
vinCes, At the first several election
them look slick, but. It does not Pea
.
whisper of Sir Alan, loud +enough to
cellence mentioned', he can scarcely
following (1005) Mr. HAUltatn was
move the dirt from the hair which
be beard alt oven.the°ltfousc; "In that
"ail to be a joy to the possessor and
returned to 'the Saskatchewan Legis -
should be the object of the grooming, 1."ase
I must be wrongl"
hMproximate, In the eyes of many, a
lature, and followed on from the
FLY' WORSE THAN TI (�Eti.
jr in of beauty.
g.general
election of 1008, He repre•�
«
The house f1y is born in offal •Y-�-
..... I., - . • . . ..
.. `
dented the North West Ter=ritories at
the Coronation of His Ugjesty in 1902.
na 'Whbre;else, The manure' pile and
'his
1
4"� tit-;="--- �--6. •
the cesspool aro'home. it is from
those haunto that he Comes to .visit
,
Dont trifle ^with a 'cold is -good
Thio best plaster. A piece of >lainbl
• . . �.,
.__:,�,
the kitchen, the dining -room, and he
feet
advice. ,for prufurnt men and w'eb wni.
,
.'
'trot, are '>Rot oxpert'menting on !sour-
llursof.v. He drags his filthy
the broad; dips them In
l ,
y clald,
itt� cta,
dampotb& with Chamberlains Lmi- ,.
self wly- r
l 3'ou take Chorrr6'betlam s
adrosu the
butter, wipes in
, p theta cit the "chat, and
ro t
Tlneria Is �
sig b 3 than Clu mr
Mont and bou'ad on, over 4+llb afleeted.
is
Cough Remedy for a cold as that t
bathes in the milk. He seeks Out' -the
sickroom tifid tips elle delicious 'eiccg'e«
,
bvrlaftt•s Cough Itbliutd� for coughs
parts superior to df,pi and
'costs
Cbsts only,, gene teiYth � itlrouth. For
haus won its great rbpnt-
t .
the consumptive, the ,yph'bid
c lots
anti til ch 1 re . I•
o i i n it is sato satta
`'"`
. •
sale by all dealers.
tat' n 'eictevsiv gala % re -
is itnd a bea Its
feverof
fever patient, and the child wi sum-
sure. For sale by all dealoirs.
markable cures of colds, and can
icer complaint.
-, .,— .
'IWWYr.. ... ,... �
alwoyg% be depended upon. It is i glial- .
'Ibero Is odnty of dlaeouraretriont
0 the wbrid, 'handed out fret of
Rop Mac onald was killed ri sx
The Moving liietUre ('>rpbrptota, Ii'llr«
ly valueble .for ,adfiltg anll thilcTxbn
'
'11i.rp,e, v+lthout paying pr3olpla to br'':g
9111 htm by��being run over.
fork Ctl+if fthed the p"rovl'nalsal Go*
sail ' be given young children
ti tato the house whoa you, aro illy
'
p'orelgn rade In August inolrtaosti,
elrbm*1119 for neglootiog faspwkwa ''yids
wAth Isnptleit rwss It
eft Con-
W batt*1 gold bp' all
by over eig b���a inilli,o z.
Work. ,
�drq.
d'e'siilryrs,
.
,
i
';
,or"Ift 1� For Y"A -
Tpsrr is no tiieputing tho fact groan, : I 'I ,.
bolo► is an excellent egg food �hd
ane of the .best eubotituto s, for war=*
icor fowls 'kept in; Cuuiilt2ulelat, alld .
increases egg production. It is Ilkor.
wise excellent for growlng sto oV. One • -
producer has tett insert cut bone twlc+t +"•1.
Rt week load ]sllt)wa about a pound w '
c:verY sixteen head of grown stock,
,-nd half the quantity to that number
ingrowing chicks'. To .feed green bone
ener than that or in larger :amounts .
s apt to produce bowel troubles. and
worms and also grow the combs, too We ToK You
Targe. Too liberal feeding of fresh
Bleat is apt to MaUe fowls Irritable t )
and Cross.Gs'
11
Faithful Shepherd Rog. '
Left alone on Wagoatiuo, 1,Ioun- *ager
tarn with 3,08.6 sheep' by the `
death of John Sa;oiday, her master, • Now r
whose death occurred from heart
failure one eight, a female sh4phprd- 1�i
dog two weeks later delivered to . 1 t; Ift
lianuai Saunders, ,owner of the sheep; QTl� -
3,085 of the animals, having lost only mat ;, ,
one during two weeks of privation, i;'
Phe dogs' achievement was carrlcd
out despite the fact that she wits tht� .
f puppies o f
ratheri tt w
o u a e
F Y f 4� a
P
F
r
.obi
alti when list master died,
«..
Biliousness is due to a id;isordererd ' JObf .�04# ,
epndtibion of Uhtt stomach, Cba}Zn"larlain'
trikllT4..1v e.....
Tablets are essentially a stomach hued-
fcine intended especially to act on that
organ ; to cleAUSe it, stlxengthan. it, 4 9, 81) 0 K
1( QaTi-.
tone and inviQgrate it, to' regulat+s .N., .
laic fiver and to banish biliousness
,positiively, anis e5ectua�lly�, For sale., . : ,
hyo all dealers,
1
'.
This Company is' chartered by It' will .prove an honest * able '
Taw to accept the management g meat pf administrator of the estate. Every
the estate of a person dying with- interested person will, & p 1 be alloteii
out a will. his or her la ,
lawful share, i „�
It is a carefully -managed, Anan- Tho charges, in every, case fixed
claliy-responsible Company, with • b a 'u e
P Y. y ] dg , will be nor greater,
years of . 'experience in such more ,likely lessi than the : re -
matters. . munerat'
ton allowed the individual
. If appointed. to act as adminis- administrator. .' � ^� , `
- trator it will assume. the ma a - • '"" e.
a ge Services of Family solici
meat of
the estate, collect and a always retained pity y tt d by Company., ,
debts, digtribute legacies and pro• Correspondence ithvit�,•,"hntl
party among the heirs. answered promptly. '
P 11 .q .�, J a 4
1;
.
EIN119M - r M. M%t I . � I I .
. M13 I 1.
. .. LONDON. CANADA.
.
i '
Is . ,- . . ., � ".., I
II 01
.� . � I .. �.e I �. , t ":
.. I , 1t1
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•:.1
(NEW IDEA SERIES
certa�nl does
OM J.
E folks dread the winter •
. because of the'furnace,troubles, e .
S it brings
.el minafe
Antiquated heating systems are cer- , �' ;� •
taints a nuisance. Dust and ashes, un rG� C P/ . `
sometimes deadly gas -fumes, all over • ""'�
the house. Or hot air like .a breeze b Q'� h e r
across a desert waste—poisonous,. dry, '
health -destroying air. All .because ` .
. conservative manufacturers would '
not' consider New Ideas in heating. ',. Every buyer of d Sosvei, fr, „^
The SOUVENIR, furnace makes the: , Furnace is presented wills ".t,:
hot air' system the healthiest, cheapest a legal bond on date of our: , +
and best. chase, puaranteei,iq `•lirepgl Y,
against cracks=or breaks ,of
Its built right- A solid, one-piede iron fire;. " ;:
pot tested and selected iron at that --and • 7ny„ kind Jor: S' years.
flanges on the. outer side to facrease tadi i
ating surface. .1. r
The grate is simplicity i
p y itself—ashes easily � :
dumped by a simple tura of the lever -.� �,:
No place for clinker troubles.' '�• '1',I ,�
From base `, ring • to dome . every
SOUVIrNIR.furnace is perfect. .
Ask for our new booklet. • I r .
The�SOUVENLR Furnace,
it made in Hamilton, the l It
stove lentos of Canada, by o , r . .
The Hamilton Stone m° i �'
and$eaterCo: it
Limited ' -A,
9accene ,
ors to
f''
Quire -Tilde . .
Y R
@+
Commas. {
1
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' YWATE . I . . r, '7'
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. ROYAL NAVAI, CLUS,
Portsmouth,
0
b
England
To thetn-Bok Co.
Q 11Ue4rSirs,
-1 ham found Zaat•Bak most reliable for healing tuft
and abrasions while tot the relief of skin, Irritation itis invaluable.a
1 (Signed) RODNEY M. LLOYD,
d'
Adtmital,
.6 .
L.
a Bt,ik fur
t'I(1 !',!S Bad Burets.
6
H.M.S.
Striker Ringsnorth,. of 11M.J"Cochrane," say`et•-•"X slipped'and fell with
MEMy arm on an exhaust steam pipe, which fairly frizzled the skin. At onto
Q i
AA •
ship's Surgeon -dressed my arm, but the burns rook the '"Tong way, .owing
u .
to a. of of dirt from tho pipe setting up blood -poison. A largo seabappeared,
and from underneath the festering Aesh, matter ooted out, I was' it fearful
x ,
•'U
pain and didn't knew how' to get: ease.
'*For fr*eeks I remained Under treatment, but the ordinary ointments.
.
aarot*ed no so>ad. Indeed, I libt worts. I therefore obtained a septets of Zan -Bok
and almost as stied as this was a0lied I got ease. From the very first
.,
': 1
4
appllCatiohi, healing; eohnmenced, attd a few boxes of Zatu .nuk. healed say,
w6litid completely'.
m-111 MP 1 •.. .. .
%. nk oitr�trs .em ihlesrb tt
r bno6 rrnAornl, btul • rh►riooeb rtic®re,l�tilltsli
cold 'soien tlltaipt d hsnde, hal ias'twreb, �p All mom lfea, v"ifroolrom
`Lttm•}9uk`iln , T6ft1nto, fpt� encs•, Studio. ri7 mp for trIsA box. �
1}�
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