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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1905-05-25, Page 66 FOR OVER SIXTY YEARS. Mre.lehaVe's Soothing Syrup hae been used by IniIBM of inotaierS for their Children While teething. fl die - turned by night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of cutting teeth send at once and get a. bottle ot "Mr. Wilelow'S Soothing Syrup" for Child- ren teething. It Will relieve the poor little sniferer iininediateiy. Depend upon jt, mothees, there is no mistake about it. It cures Diarrhoea., rep - lanes the Stonlaa and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the Gums, reduces Inilanunktien and gives tone an4 ene ergy to the whole system. !`Mrs. Winslow's Smithies Syrup" for child- ren teething is Pleasant to thetaste and is the, prescription of one of the oldest and best female physicians and uurees in the United States, Priee 25 cents a bottle. Sold by all drug- gists throughout the world. Be sure and Olt for "Mrs. Winslow's ,Sooth ing Syrup." Hoe: J: hf: CfitlioP of Haanilten bus( been ordered by his phgsieiene to rest for a few days. Hie indisposition said to be due to over -work While not in very good health. ' The Ideal Brush Chiselled to cut to a line --made of • springy, se- lected bristles—capable k of delivering an even and copious flow of color; that • is the ideal brOple 00E00 BRUSHES fulfil these conditions. Their excellence for half a •century has made them "the standard goods of Canada:" ' United Potteries, Limited. =GILA Toronto, Canada. 007n:4;ra ;ern- •. -4 • Bach pupil is' given in- dividual instruction. The Shorthand System taught is that used by all newspaper, and court re- porters. Best systems of • Book- keeping, Penmanship, Aii th- zxietio e t c . , thoroughly. taught. Situations guaranteed to every Graduate. CATALOGUE FEEE. „ "4/ 0 (511 rid OffiCIALeliinST p EN9ORAPHE,--, Solomon Brown, a, teamster drop - ed dead at Camber. --Or-illia...ratepayers.-vated-a-botum..of. $30,000 to the James .Bay Railway. The new NursesHome at London was formally handed over to the l -los -4 pi tal Trust. • A large number of cases of trach- oma are reported amonigl the passenge ers of the Athenia, at Montreal, `and several of the immigrants will • be deported. Exhausted- Nerves Aching Head Three years of suffering— Health restored by seven boxes of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food.. Persistent headaches usually come from an exhausted condition of the nervous syttera, and can never be cured until nervo. force is restored by such treatment as Dr. Chase's Nervelood. Miss LAURINE WELLS, St. Catharines, Ont., writes : "For three years I itiffered'agony with nervous headaches, and my nervous system was entirely run down, Though I -consulted Bev - oral physicians, I got but little relief. On theadvice of a friend I began using ' Dr. OhascestVerve Food; and it was not long until the, spells of dizziness and fainting had entirely gone. • "I Used 'altogether seven boxes of Dr. Obese% Nerve Food, and 00 wELLII now I do nob know what It is to have a headache. 1 cannot may too much in favor of tide medicine, for it has done wonders for Me and saved me many dollars in doctor's bale." Dr. Chase's Nerie Food,' the mat blood builder and nerve restorative, 50 eta. a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bides 8606.,Toronto. Portrait and signature of Dr. A. W. Chase, .the 'amour; receipt book author, on every box.' Sport1;„ecito, If yoU andperiences of anglers, shoot- ers and campers, or yacht. Ad veliture \ ifng; dr you. • • ate terested n COtifltry J&, WV A IAA ask your newsdealer ifor RodSTREAM,' or send "PC/REST AND us twenty-five cents tiA, .1 for four weekstriattrip. A ‘,4, large illustrated weekly Gjournal of shooting, unfishing) natural . tory and yachting. A new depart, ment has to do with the• Co Untry Home arid KS surroundltiga. Toms: Oti a year, $2 for six months. We send free on re- quest • our catalogue of the best Woks on outdone life And recreation. FOREIT'AND STREAM ME. CO. • 346 Besati'Wetto NeVi le 44 01 Empire Day In The Schook. Hon. R. A, Pyrie's suggestion that Erupire Day should be honored' ia the, schools of the province le a happy ow and has been re-eohoed by Hon. Cebu IL Campbell, Manitoha's Minister ot Education, who has issued a similar mite to the teachers of his preview. It it intended that the ocoasion shall he observed by speeial exacter. s, bak- ing for their otject the development el Imperial patriotism, a seutiment broader than mere devotion to the land of one's birth. Children are cer- tainly not less patriotic than their Parents ; but usually they are not quite conscious of the benefits enleYedi by British sobjeets, It should be the aim of all Canadian teachers on Em- pire Day to present to their pupil* a. few solid facts, rather than a mush of twaddle, which is only, another narne for a lot of so-called 'patriot?. id literature," Patriotism in Sohools, In Ontario it is probol3le thet .95 per cent. of the school children have been born under the British gag. In them it is not neeeskary to. inculcate patriotic pride ; eltheugh a plain m- elte' of imperial facts Will be none the less useful. But in Other portions of the Dominion wherethe foreign - born population is larger—in Manito- ba and the Territories, for example— the teaching of patriotiera 'becomes a serious duty. This point has been brought forward by Dr. George Hod- gins, who was for many years Depu- ty Minister of Education and was ernehasiZed in these cohirons sane weeks ago. It was there shown the method adopted in the United States where the assimilation of aliens is• such an iretortant -problem. Ano- erican schools seek every opportunity of impressing upon the children the glories.; past, present and, future, of the republie. Whether intentionally or not, they magnify and distort the part played by the United States in the world's affairs. They represent Ore dinary Americancitizens of a• bygone age, as ,• heroes and convey the im- pression to the children that there neva was in history such a pountry as the Unlited States, such: a man as the 1 Ainerican. We do not suggest that liberties should be taken with factS to stimulate • Canadian patriot- ism, butbetter even exaggeration than the silenee which now reigns, As 'a: matter of fact, the ,British Empire does not. need the panegyriSt. It- is big enough paid great enotigh to fire the imagination by a mere recital of facts. and lignres. Biitish Sunjecti-400,000,000.. The British flag flies over 400,000,- 000 people, a minority of them venite: In.'facile the eIGGS of the Empire:a population is found, - the teat census, that of poi, accounting for, 231,080,- '000 souls. There are at least 29 well-defined languages unknown to 'Europeans. spoken in India, . and eg' distinct races alike' in one respect— siilijation• to 13ritish authority, Su- rely no glowing tribute,: to British prestige could .add to •thia simple fact that a grey island and a green, se small that they could be lost in , a country like this, should ha'ye sent forth men to rule over so vast . number of thc earth's peoples: Union. JacitS '011 the Mali. • To say •that- the sun never sets on British possessions is h. feet the full significante Of which it is • hard • to understand. Glanaing over a map .01 . the • world . we find the Union Jack' afloat in the following. quarters : The Mathis riewawReca May 2th,1905 In the Irisli Channel—The Isle of Man. In the gngliSh Channel—Jersey and Guernsey. In the IVIediterraneaur- Gibraltar, Malta, Cyprus. In the Gulf of Aden—Aden, Perim; Kurile -Muria, Solemn Coast, 4 and So- cotra. In Asia—India, Andaman, Meeker, Streits Settlement, Malay Straits and Wei -Hai -Wei. In the Asia,tie Archipelago-140,1MR,, Borneo, Hong Kong, Kowtoen, and Loma. In ,Australasia—New South Wales, Vietoria, South and West Australia, Queensland, Tasmania and, New Gui- nea. In the Pacific Ocean—New Zealand and Fiji Islands, In Atileriea—Cano.da, Newfoundland, Labrador, 13ritish Guiana and British Honduras, in the North Atiantic—Bermitda, Baherea, Leeward 'and Windward ,Is- landa, Jamaica, Turks and Cnices Islands, Barbadoes, Trinidad and To- bago. In the South Atlantic—Ascension St. Helena, Tristan D'A.ctuilia, Falk- land and Smith Georgia. In Atrica--Cape Colony, Basutoland,. Transvaal, Orange River. OQlony Nee tal, Bechuanaland, Rhodesia, British Central Africa ; East African Protec- Orate, Zanzibar, Pemba, Nigeria,La- gos, Gold (oast, The Gambia, Sierra Leone, and Wolfish Bays. ; Wonderful Growth of the Empire. EgYilt alight also be inclutied in 0 the list,. for British influence there is par- amount. For mere oratorical purpo- es, Tibet also might be added. When Queen Victoria ascended the thron'e the area of the Empire was 8,309,000 square miles. On her Diamond Jubi- lee it had grown to 11,250,900 square miles, an inerease of 2,921,000 square miles in 60 years. That is to say, •in the reign of Queen Victoria territory about sixth -sevenths as large as the United States had been. a,centirett in , the same period the population had in- creased from 16.8,00000 to 400000,- 000, In 1837, the total revenue ethane' nied to 275,000;000, In 1897 it was 2225,009,000, almost three times that of our oousins to the south. Of Ceti- ada'e share in these treatendotik ftg- urcs it be more fitting, to speak on Dominion Day, for it must bonbon,. ne in Mind that or: 4Empire Day it is •not our own land that we are !tend- ing, Mit the Empire of whioli it is a part, perhaps the most important part, with the exception of the Unite ed Kingdoiti.. The sentiments of the' .day we • share with Hong Kong . and •New 'Zealand and Lagos and ,Borneo -- all round cm Empire Day, the same thought, the same prayer will be in the minds and the hearts of the Brit- ish people..111ail and Empire. THE WONDERS OP Tilp BODY. Its mechanism, like delicate reech- inery, by even a slight cause is so disarnanged . as to be pro-tic:illy use - lees. A headache is no trifling mat- ter because the stomach, kidneys •and liver are 'sure to be affected. I'm cure. the cause of headaches and erevent lew—alrieTs7tTirrelrozorie ;it nis the stomach by •supplying nourishing blood, vitalizes the nerves aad blanL instantly. FerrozOne braces—gives tone—elevates your npirits, No Such: health bringer known. Fifty cents per box of fifty choeolate coated tab- 1letsatall dealers: Japanese -immigration to the United States. While the inpouring of Russian Jews' and other refuges from. thee Czar's dominions is, causing :diffieulty in the Eastern. Statee, ,alarzn is being creat- ed in the West by the inflex of Jap- anese. So keenlyis the competition of Japanese felt by some classes of ivorkmen and traders that the labor unions of San Francisco have taken alarm and have begun anagitation to compel the nation .to exclude the Jens as the Chinese have been ex- . . luded • • . , It is estimated •that there are no* t...ilillaely_Ot this immigrat. in .the United States about 60,000 japanese,. of whom 35,000 are. in Cal- ifornia last' year alone 71800 oi theSe rPrie2rtalS entered the country by way Of San Francine° alone. There is-a-grea ion in the Hawaiian Islands, • which are United States territory, rand into which there has been a stream of Jae panese immigration for a number. of years; The Japanese population of 1,,a‘vaii numbered 611000 in 1900, ar.d it ha e prollably increased geeatly eirt- en the eensu$ of ,that year was, taken. The Japanese evho enter the United States, it is alleged are largely el the coolie class. The San .Francisco labor men charge that these itrunigr- ants are praetically slaves, awned by great contracting companies„ Who irie- port them, and handle them ingangs in such a way as to make it impoe- Sible for the fete white laborer to live' itt wmpetition with them. Ine tho fa- mous Vacaville fruit distriet, it is said, the Japs have ecured virtual wetted not °iffy of the labor market but of the land, so that white people can live there only by: sufferance of the new -comers.. It is assumed that as 'aeon as the present war with Russia is ended ; hundreds of 'thousands Of 'Japanese! re- ttutiled Soldiers and army helpers will leek for honms) and that, • besidepethe great nuinber that, will go to colonize • the country they have eortquered nt —• • Korea, anti, manchttria, many will look ; for places in the United States. • The , situation wili then,itis feared, be- oome acute. , The situation will be far more zoin- plot and difficult than. that 'arising from the iinMigratiOn* of the 'Chinese. (Laves excluding their People from the etnited States called forth me protest iron the *Chinese authorities, because their policy is not only ,"China for the Chinese," . but '"the Chinese for 'China." Besides,: China has lot efface ; tively asserted her right to a Placc. airtong_cfryjliied. 0nationnee natetnena, has been occidentalized inso' many ' ways that she will. probably believe ii einigeation as. a ' means of getting rid .ofsurplus population. If she .takd es that view it will be a rather tick- lish matteri for the United States to exclude. new earnere from thatcourite ry if American manufacturers are to demand an "open cloor" inalapain XT HEALS THE LUNGS. When the antieeptie vapor of "Cat- arrhoziene" is inhaled it spreads thr- ough thebreathing organs, carrying healing and health to the sote spots. An irritable throat "Catarrhotone". cures in live minntes bronchitis it soothes instantly, weak lungs are O fed and 0Iquidly nourished back 'to` ;health. TO he fret from 000lds and coughs, to avoid catarrh and broil- chitis--use Catarrhcvzone ; it is pre- scribed by more than twenty thous- and physicias in America alone and used by the people of nine Patton% ' Provincial Rights.' The Liberafs are tiOVit in the inabr- ity :both in the commons and in the senate. The principle of provincial , rights is at the very heart of Canad- ian Liberalism. It tests to a degree with the Liberal members in both. houses whether tbat prineiple wili remain in the special custody of the Liberal party or Will. PASS into the hands of Mr. Borden: and Mr. Whit. ney. In some of the provinces the doetrine of provincial rights rnay have lese meaning and a less signific- ant history than it has itt Ontario; Here it has been the strength and glory of -Liberelism, Ottario Liter - is afford to let it go.—Toro. Tito Glebee, WHY SUci`FER ?ROM RIIEUKA- TISK ? O Why suffer from rheumatism when. otie ,a,pplioatame of Cherniberlaiu's Path Battu will relieve the pain? 'rho quiek relief which this Belmont after - de makes rest and skep possible ind that alone is worth Many times its cost, Many who have Used it hoping only for a short relief froni suffering have been happily surprised to find that atter a while the relief beeame Permanent. bits. V. IL Leggett of Yutnb Yum, Tennessee, U. S. A., Writ' - "1 am a great sufferer froM theeMatisiti all comer from litetd to foot and Chamberlain's Pain Wm is the only thing that will relieve Per sale by 4; 0, Codinh ClintOTI• Lkens 0 Reform in Huron County. " *••••••••••••••••••••••A•.•••*o•-•••..o•..-.•e•,••• Goderieh, May 16th.—The proseiniai, new broom sweeps (deanaud the ' cease Commissioners are living up to the proverb* This editorial item front the Goder- ich Signal (Liberal) is no dottP.it fair reflection of public opinion 00 the enforcement of law by the new Board. The regulations, with hew amendmen- ts, are being enforced as never neffere. Many of the hotelkeepera claimed to be ignorant of them, only three of them observing the rule which impure es a copy to be posted up in a eon- spicuous ple.ce ; they are now ordered to tack up a copy and road it, and act in accordance therewith. Less comment was aroused by the appointment of a new inspector than might have been •expected. }lit hest friends never pretended to believe Mit License Inspector Paisley enforced the law to his fell ability, and while Mr. Alfred Asquith is not as well knoWn throughout the riding as some otheiin, he has a reputation in his Own Weal-. ity for just that sotto! ability gen- ius for organization that will stand him. in good stead. in this capadity. The new Conunis.sioners are well aed favorably lament: Matthew Locenart, Auburn; Thomas Durnin, Dungennon, and Thos. Churchill, Clinton. Mr. Locilthart, it May be mentioned, en - Joys especially tho confidence of. the temperance people, and his eppoine- merit was naturally pleasing' to them. Commissioners Are Active,n O The meeting of, the Commissioners in Goderich, on SaturOay last, makes five iii as many 'weeks; two were held in Clinton, ono in Auburn, and one previously in ,Goderioh. At Clinton on April 2.0th, they were waited on bit a deputation representing the More al Reform League; Who asked, emong other things, the reduction of sellieg hour?, amendments to the regulations: goveruing bar screens, par titiomi, •blinds, °tee and that there should he no shop licenses in the district. Ilie Board enacted an important amend- ment with reference to the sethens, windows; partitions ; etc., prohibited the holding of dance or card parties in a ;licensed place, and shortened the selling hours. The closing hour as made 9 'o'clock in towns, but this last clause was afterwards rescinded, on the advice of Mr, Eudo Sanders, chief afficer of the License Department, To- ronto; who thought it was beyond the powers of the board', Another new and important regulationle 'the prohibiting of seats and oheirs in the bats of ,the hotels, ' Sortie Reforms Ordered. The tWo,ho.tel licenses in Auburn and Lonclesisoro are cut off, as -Diet is new • a Weal option district. Neil McDonald, Mittel', • whose limise and fianishings were not satiSfactory,was given three Months to sell" mit, and .several new applications far 'different places were 'refined • . .Itt Goderich -the- Bedford, 'Ocean. and ' Colborne Hotels Were ordered to pie - vide proper atablingn the Union is to improve the ' building, and the' British. Exchange and • Horan to' remove cer- tain screens, partition's and other ob- structions to the•satisfaetion of . 'the The Inspector is Deterininni. The new inspector talked to The ,News at his home in A111311E31, and spoke of many improvements' thee will yet be required before some of the he- tels get their licenses. He was of the opinion that • half the bars wore be- hind the time, and explained in ne- • tea how some of them were eetintru- cted, with concealing partitions, no. direct eetrance, and ether violations of the rules. One hotel keeper wanted to pay the fine and leave his parti- tion where it was. lilr.,Asquith re- ferred to the common violatbm of the regulation governing blinds, and of the ignorance of some in regard to that regulation One man, be said. WKS- surnmoned for having a back blind of his bar down on Sundey,and it, developed that it lind not beent rai- sed for years. Perhaps the commor.- est defect was a partition betwetn -the front window and the bar. Many hotelkeepers had not been et% en a copy of the regulations for seviin c- ars, At the time the license is givin, they are supposed to make an ellinn- ation as to their intention of keeping the law, as to their solvency, etc. They had not been required to do SO for years. petitions supporting an application for a license were roquir- ed by regulation to. be in bY April lat—theY had beta corning in four days before the meeting of the cow- Lmissioners, Instead. One town hotel )hal Absolutely n.o heating .facilities for its bedrooms, with the exception of a pipe theough one room. In many places the . water closets were vety bad, No doubt with most hotels, the bar is the Arst consideleition, and bet- ter accommodation would only he giv, ea wit& made 'Compulsory, "No; they don't ,say much," ,said the inspector, referring to those who were ordered to make elteratioes; "but I guess they think a good deal." Not Completely Satisfied.. It •cannot he said, however, that. everything has been carried out to the entire satisfaction of that vaguely-cle-s fined element known as "the temper- ance people." They aredissatisfied with the extent of iinprovement call- ed for in bedroein accommodiation, and. with: Wha:t they consider Ito la- ity of the Board in regard to the• character: of some Cif the lessees. One for instance, was reported to he O "good, since corriteg to tewun-lied le' fore." "We are not satisfied in. Clin- ton," said a ' prominent temperanee worker there; and I hive it on ' the best authority that there have been more drunks in this town since May 1st than An, any equal length 'of time before." ,-- • • • . "An the .same,',' he continued, • think the general feeling is that the Whituey Government is snaking a gre- at effort to live up to its promises re the enlacement of the "law, and tha they are to' be. eangratnlated -even by the Uncials. ' '—Toron to News. O A GOOD SUGGESTION. Mr. 'C. B. Wainwright of Lemon City Fla., has writeen the • manu- facturers that anioh better results are obtained frontthe use of Chamber- lain's Colic', Cholera and Diarrhoea inspector. In Clinton the . Mason Remedy incases of pains in.' • the stortiach, eolic and cholera mo bus by drank. t That when takendn this way • the effect • is double in rapidity. "It seems to get alt, the. right 'spelt in- stantly," he says; For sale by IL B, Combe, Chianti. ' House' and Rattenlbuty House r( euived insernatioasnan4oeseereen4eeteeninethee bar, as 'did also the eroprietorof the Queen's Hotel; Blyth. Itt Ditngannen, inaproVeraents. in the bar were asked for in flYoth the Mallough and Mount,- ain POWs. " The .o ling.worn- of tbe ApPle (For The News -Record.) The codling worm is. the. C:11,0 *ot. greater . loss to the apple iiidestrY than any 'other insect., The ex tent of the loss to Ontaino alohe runs up eVery• year ,into the, hundreds of thou- sands of dollars', and into the mill - :ions in the ,United States, all because the' remedies ,..4whicii have digeovered by the Eriltortielogists have not ban applied by the apple-gro-Wers: , While there is but one brood di tbe Codling Moth east owl north of Tore onto, there are two broods wet and south of thesame place.' The differ - O ent stages. of this insect pest seould be familiar to the apple grower, for only with this knowledge ran he ap- O ply. hie remedies • 'ietelligently. The life -story may he •stated concisely' as tollowS : The insect winters over as aternillarnineancocconninesonneepro- *tied Place, and in .eariy linie when the biosiorns iire failing from the ap- ple the adult winged moths ' appear. The feinales ,depoatt their eggs on the lea.ves and newly •formed. fruit. In about ten days the eaterpillara ee- capes from. the eggs and a few .days later enter the apples, Usually. at. the calyx end. The "woral" reMaills in- side the apple about 00 days, after %,vhioh it comes'out to spin a cocoon Within whieh it lives until spring if there is but one brood, but only ab- out two weeks if there are two tiroodis in a seaSon, .The second brood of moths appear about the end of July or the beguiling ,of Aust, tnee eggs are again deposited, and the "woring' whieh' hatch from then eggs enter thn developed a,pples about the. middle of August, leaving them again in Sept- ernber to inake 000000iis within which to spell& the wiuter. With our •knowledge of these tants eve ate able to state quit the best times to apply rernediee. The ,plan Is to poison the wotms with Paris Green or some other ar- Senie mixture before they enter the fruit, • The trees should be sprayed' (1) e few days after the blossoms fall and ;(2) about the middle of, nugust for the second brood of larvae. An additional spraying tee days or two weeks after the first will, io most cases, be nroduetive of notch good. It is advisable of course, to nee the arsenic, mixture along with Ilerfleaux to control the apple Saab fatigue at the same time that theCodling Moth Is eyeing treated, For the eeitb two additional sprayitiga are neeeneary— o jnuelybe; fore bthesotning and „ one in The Bortleeux—Paris Green MiXitire Is prepared wording to the O ing formula :0 Copper sulphate or blue stone 1 lbs. Fresh- lime . • ' .• • : 4 line Water .10• eillens Paris. Green . eto 6 minces • Thehltie stone is dissolv.ed 'hi 15t 120 eewriarthehl: iaintrirstaakretd nd ' carefully and 10 to 15, gallons of • Water are added to make a milk Of lime. . Their the contents Of the tV.'6 barrels are !poured -.into he spray • barrel through a strainer. Pinally' the Paris Green, is made into a paste with Water and put inte, the „batrel along with the Bordeaux. It is eon'', necessary that the agitator should work vvhile pumping is going .on so as to Iteep the 'Paris Green well dis- tributed throeghout the mixture.-- 'Use a . good spray pump and spray the trees 'eaten...line* the thnes meetion- • e•CITahbei7 above banding ...1.rev •it commendable,: but .everything taken into a;ccouht, is more expenSive thatt spraying; and is, moreover, actually O harmful unless the bands are eterinin• ed and' the larvae "destroyed every. ten days or tine weeks during half of June. and all.Of July. - . . Every feedt grower shOuld aCILLowg • ledge; the Value of such birds. as the Chiekadee; Dewily Woodpecker, Nun. hateh, Bluebird, Swallows, Wren and Song Sparrows in checking the in- crease of the Codling Moth ani other injuriotta insects, , for without them feint could scarcely be grown. En- couitage the birds, therefore, to come about the oroliard by keeping the gun at a distance atd by punishing the robber of birds' nests. —Prof. Lockheed RE:A},yo.oN ustiolj.t.D.us? W Ro,te ,Tea Because it is tested by skilled tea tasters. Tea tasting tan well be Qallecl one of ,the fine arts. A. Man who can taste several hundred Cups of tea 4 dap and byhis keen senses, detect the slightest difference between them, ancl who, blindfolded, can tell where each and every tea was grown, not only the country', but the particular district, and often the very plantation --such a man is the professional tea, taster.. O The head man in ray tea room, Ur. W. R. Miles, is a master in his profession. He learned the business In I,ondon, Eng., and is a tea taster by right of birth, as both his rather and Grandfather were tea tasters. It came natural to him and he is recognized AR One. Of the best fudges of tea in America.. O He and his assistants do nothing but taste the teas, and superintend the blending. • O RED ROSE 'MA. is the result., ESTABROOKS, St. John, N.B. O BRANCHES: TORONTO, WINNIPEG, . .• 'iTtrommeassasszalinainfiseninntameneendiMMISICSIIIIIiiiinil The•News-Record Mailing Lists ,have -been corrected. to • Ilez-SATURDAY, MAY 20thir _ . Look at the 'Red Label on the first .page of this .paper and see if the date is c4rrect• • If not notify us AT ONCE. menermiss,...0."111_, • .• • .!-A(s.,(- Varitter,pn Dry air IS light -- it lifts' and 'carries dust Dry air cracks your furniture, gives you a headache, ihrivelS, Your skin, parches your • langs. . • .the Water -pan in'tnost furnaces tt n pleasantry. : It has . no serious 'business io the work of the furnace -74 is merely. placed there for effect, because a water -pan is good thing. And, a water -pan is an absolute necessity to your health and 'comfort, but it n-iust be properly placed to radiate Moisture evenly and uniformly throughout the house The . water -pan of the Sunshine Furnace is the most scientifically arranged water -pan in any furnace in the world. It does the Work a Water -pan should, and does it Well. A01" VmA1Pit'S Silk Weide or Clotho seem like brand new whee cleanodylth .RrN 5VAParCATL541 odorlate won-ealsoneus siou.inassont.bie Warts weruirrs beyond totter on 1ho roaroca mid c.1` ti.brios,0400tft dunt:.tto EbthIA .ods, Kilts Ali etrues la carpets, OM. Mkte446t6 tiut* O nostoree etiore MSG $481V 0.411411.479 tr.4 taxing All in a feat Moments for few Omits and a child criti do it Witk, GAP.40.1ratsIM.0 lifakessla thin& troy and removes gresze nod et21.0 from now Ulbup. A t -,k your erecer for Cap.o.ron.e. O °ilk* tiraaht.nlrttotto'roOtcor Co. • . . LONDON, TORONTO MONTREAL. WItatillitEdillANotitiVER,"ar 0.10H!t.,N. k , _ If yonr local dealer does not handle the "SUNSHINE" FURNACE write to. our London Office for prices and complete irnformation. ive.sicalw L, TIIE McCLARY MFG. CO. Bicycles of the Best Makes 11AVE A STOCK OP NW wilEnLa OP THE BEST MAKES, CLEVELANBS, 11,ACYCLES, ETC. ALSO A NUMBER OP SECOND HAND WHEELS, 1 ALSO DO REPAIR/NG, SHARPENING LAWN' mowns, SCISSORS, ETC. • SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. ,t1o. .A.Lnmxtli AT THE OLP slioro nit.makipvai smstm4 •