The Clinton News-Record, 1908-04-23, Page 3April Zirdt 1908,
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•
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A Black Cloud on the Political
Sku In the United
States.
. Secretary Tait remains in the lead
of the other candidates for the Repub-•
lican nominated for the Presidency,
the present situation, as revealed in
the cendidates, and the delegates who
will vote for them, being partly re-
vealed in the following figures : Taft;
109; Knox 64 ; Cannon 50; Hughes
•34, Fairbanks 30, La Follette 25, un-
instructed, 48 ; contested, 38. The
total number of delegates elected to
date is 488, the total number to at-
tend the Chicago convention is 980,
and to become the candidate 'of the
Republican party for the Presideecy
It is necessary that a ma,n should heve
at least 491. It is plain, therefore,•
that Secretary Taft has still a long
way to travel before he passes the
winning post.
'The Dark Horse.
And now, just as he appears to be
running along so comfortably, a dank
'horse appears in the shape of another
Ohio man, to wit, Senator Foraleer,
not only is the dark horse, but so is
his ridee, who is the Ameripan negro.
The Senator has made a bold bid •for
the support of the millions of negro
voters in the United States and
though complete success in mlleing
'himself the candidate of the negroes
would not necessarily, cause' the Sen-
ator to win the nomination for him-
self, it might easily prevent the nom-
ination of Secretary Taft. Failing
that, the negroes might fall in behind
the Democratic candidate and • elect
him. Therefore the negro convention,
held a few days ago in Philadelphia,
which pledged itself to Senator Foralee
or, is the subject of some anxious
thought on the part of the managers
.11.1.11.•
Clinton News Record
'CLINTON -- ONT
Terms of "subseription-$1 per year itt
advance $1.50 may be Charged' it
net so paid. No paper discontinued
until all arrears are paid, utdess at
the opinion of the publisher. The
elate to which every subscription is
paid is deleted on the label. '
AdVertising rates -Transient adver.
tisemente, 10 cents per nottparief
line for first insertion and 3 Center'
per line for each Subsequent insert,.
Loh. Small advertisements not- to
Mood one inch, such at "Lott,"
"Strayed," or "Stolen," et., in,
serted onee for 35 cent e and eadh
subsequent insertion 10 Cent&
Commueications intmcled for publica-
tion must, as a guaraittee of good
faith, be accompanied by the name
of the vvrit4r.
of the Taft boom, and Of some tee-'
xnulous hopes , on the part of the
other candidates who may hope to
melee a deal with Foraker for his neg-
ro support
Negroes Are Anti -Taft.
Any such hope: on the part of Secre-
tary Tett •isVain, for the negro •seeti-
meet in the United States, tradition-
ally Republican, is now fiercely hos-
tile to President Itooseyelt• and Secre-•
tarp. Taft,' The reason for the anini-
osity of the blaCks is •fceind in the
Browns3fille 'affair. A Texas town
was "snot uii" by' some•rnembers: of
a. negro regiment, and failing io lind
the guilty individuals, a whole cern-.
pany was dithnissed the service by.
the President. Naturally, •'the limo
-
cent negroes Were.indignant, and wen
of ,.their ceor in all parte of the f 0
tatted States declared "that--.1.1terifitd-ii
not reeeiyed- fair play; In Congress a
Setietor Foraker tharapioried the
disgraced soldiers, and ever Since he in
has been kindly eegarded. • ley the s
negeoes; while Secretary Taft, who do' fa
fended the President's draeic action,. ei
has been as tereially detested.'
The Black CatspaW.
But lying deeper than the irrita-
tion caused by the dismissal of ea
company, of xiegro soldiers is a sore-
ness on the part•Of the negroes caused
by their 'treatment by the. Republican -
party., They fee that they have been
awed as catspaws by •the patty, and
that, counting on theit gratitude to
the political. doscendante of •the Aboli-
tionists, the Republican' have, offered
then irijustice and ••• contumely. They.,
hate' beee given the ballot, but unlees
their votes ale 'to he used against the.
Demectath, they are. imtimidated oe
tricked into virtual disfranchisement
For exe mple,, 'the Virginian.. Reinibli:
can conveition. Mit week would enat
allow a single negro to beconee. - :a
member. %The • negroese' now declare
that the Republican party bas
right to. suppose that they must for-
ever 'cleave • to that party ; and in
this deblaration of independence they
arc .stiripeeted by the-Speiagneld_Rs-
publicen,'whicli tells the tregroes frank;
ly that they will have to vete as ne-
groes first, arid as partisans .eccorid,
the y• wish to beeome .thoroughly em-
ancipated.- . •
C --"Wong
The Clinton News -Record
The Weed Nuisance, Rs Cauie
and Prevention.
In our previous article on the ab
subject we' Showed some . ways
which farmers sometimes
aided in the spread of weeds by s
Mg too ea.rly before teed growth
begin' ; by seeding down dirty lan
by SoWitig fall wheat on land inks
by perennial weeds,• and by sow
late raaturifig crops on sue land,
wish now to Speak of manures
the handling ot it, as a very fret
course by which the. evil is increa
A certain portion ot weed seeds', ma-
tured on the whole farm, find their
way into the barn, also from the
neighboring farms. they come, carriage
free, in the threshing maehrbea ; these
&cede. pass through the maohines and
are let, some in the straw, some in
he chaff, and some in the grain, It
is common:, and a very 10911511 prae-
tice, in this locality, th crush . the
grain right from the bin without
cleaning; the result is, that not One
in a. hundred of the small seeds line
crushed, These seeds pass through the
cattle, the germ uninjured, and o
onto -the raethire heap to be Ana
hauled onto the land again. ,
ove we were compelled to pile it in one.
ail the
istiTtW601):14have
11 t
are built up
plumb and the heap tramped on as
built rip; there will be only ' about
one foot deep en the outside thoro-
ughly rotted ; the rent will be ores -
greed, exactly as ensilage is in a alio.
We Mast reMOMber in discussing: agri-
cultural topics, that what it practical
itt our locality and on one class of
soil, may not be so itt another, On
our heavy clay soil it is very much
better to apply manure in the fall on
land intended tor corn er roots, then
fall plow ; all that it requires then
Is to give it a thorough surface work-
ing in the spring, and you have e soil
In some respects • better then Better
soils for these ereps, besides, you
are then prepared for any 'vagaries of
the weather, and are almost sur e of
a crop. •
We cannot too Strongly condemn the
;1.: practice of leaving the Manure in the
, yard all summer, Besides the meow,
venience of it, the frequent raAns wash
exit ' out its asolable matter, which is Prao.,
tieally lost. It is better far to haul
he 4 ottUnto a heap convenient, to the
01- eel& wheTe it is ti be applied, the
ce loss of fertilizing matter will be much
re. "Sese, end the labor not 'very much in-
7,rwY I er• NeaVoheaed%lieve that. within the next .ten
years our present views on Manures
"e and the character of their action on
an the soil will be eetirely cheesed;
'from years of pbservatien. we have
concluded that we have not yet arriv-
ed at the truth, We have seen it ari.,
eun plied liberally, with no apparent
uen
ret on tlie mem ; we have seen mese
n" ! ionally, when it appeared try be an
c t
, injury ; we have seen. better results
from poor, .strawy ma.nuee: than from
good.stabie manure on the• same crop;
• we ha.ve semi more market( effects of
'its, use several years. afterwards than
:43 the season in which it, was applied.
'4) We can never understand why egrieul-
to tural authorities recommend green
!e -manure, while authorities, on liorticul-
as ture recommend well rotted mailer&
" The crops are similar in their seasons
It
e of growth and their demands updn the,
or soil. It is a, constant surprise to us,
n-
e to see, soils stand cropPing se long
ea' without any mantire whatever. We
believe that by •a proper: totation. of
crops,. etc., e thorough system oi cuie
aP tivatiofi, good soil would !lever be ex-
hauited.. Mr.. Meat an.enthusiastic
_experimenthlist .in Ehgland thirty
years ago, , grew forty succesSiVe clops.
of 'fall wheat on the same.ground
without any fertilizer exhateiver, and
the lest year it yielded 17 bushels,
per acre. We mention this to • show
the. geeat importance of tliorougle'cul-
hivation. 'Tide, With a proper and
wise use of ma,nureS; will greatly in -
()mese its value, ' et is beter tto ap-
ply a less quantity per acre and
spread it over a large area, as
the results will be greater than by
applYing larger quantities on a , less
-area. We belieVe. the :reason •tce • be
"the manure promotes the growth'
soil ,barteria, by whiCli plant life . is
made available, We trust that these
notes will be useful to some new be-
ginners at iarmieg. It' is for theie
we write, and. not tor many 'of yew,:
miders • exeertenice may he
„greater than'teur,
by large heap to remain
giy Manure piled thus doe
Ow- the 'extent that scion
has us ,believe if the sid
d ;
ted
ins
and
ful
ted.
• We are aware that this . stet=
will be challenged„.buteit is neverth
less truce as we have 'proyen. T
heat of an aid:ma:Ps lendy is not su
clog to desthe gereen, and • ev
A period Of ferinentato'c'e in the maim
heap will not destroy them all, H
importantthenis it exercise eve
care in properly cleaning the grain
fore feedirig ; gso in.sweeping ap•t,
barn floor occasionally and either f
it over or bent instead ed thro
ing it into. the yard as is frequent fe
done. Agate seine ed their we
seeds th sheep, but •this is not t
beet way to dispose,: of thern. T
only safe way is to boil them a
feed them to hogs or fo*1 ; fa
any kind of stock Will at them mix
With •elmff. This :brings us .te t
question of hew • best to handle
menttre if it contains More or less
weed seed. The old method was
pile it in . heaps to ferment first
destroy any seed in it, and second
bring it into 6, state more immediat
ly available: for plant food, but th
prectrice is now condemned by seien
as , being too wasteful of. nitrogen,
ie certainly :a practice not. in fa,v
with farmers generally, because e
tailing extra work, The beat farm
we ever knew made -a 'practice every
spring Of. cleating out his barn' ya
arid piling the manure in a large •he
to remain until the following year b
re- putting it on the land. He had
een f11WiiThi4 platelcif-20- yeare;
nd at the time of our visit his farm
w
as the cleanest, and Molt prOdective
the locality. He was an eminently
uecessful farmer. ' and gave all' his
mily a good start in life. We Men -
On this incident to show that 'this
etliod. of rotting' manure cannot. be
• The President's Enemy. •
. It is doubtful if any 'other man in
the public life 'of the United 'Stakes
so well deserves to be •described as
•the enemy of Roostweltfas Voraker. In
his tippositiento, the President and
to Taft there is plenty, of 'personal
bitterness, for Foraker was a big
man politically, and Was mentioned as
"the next President" before either
Roosevelt or Taft was heard of. He
was .prominent in . 011ie before the
names of McKinley. mid Hanna , Were
well known. But 'somehow political
leck was against him, end though • it
man .of magnetie personality and fcroe
of character, the men_who were • ob-
• scure when he was famous, crept Up,
one by one, while he remained where
he began, a sort of infant prodigy,
that didn't "train on." No wonder
he kola bitter to the President, for
it was under • the Roosevelt banner
that Peraket fought Mark Hanna, only
to find thal the President's favorite in
Ohio Was William Howard Taft ; and
no %vender he hates Taft, for it was
Forats'erliyho gave Taft his political
start in life, when. the Senator wee
Got enor of Ohio, and the preseet
Sect:key for War a struggling lawyer.
of course, the ballot is seeret, but it
William Taft is the Republican nomin-
ee, the vote of no mair it sin er lot
his Democratic opponent than that of
Joseph Benson, Poraker.
•
W. J. MITattlf„1„
Uttar And Proprietor,
DR. RAM/LTON"S VOR
PliV1pLES.
All skill diseases such: as pimples oie
iginete through Were of the 'kidneys
and Hirer. Ali taints that bloc:: the
avenues 6f health must be removed.
Dr. Hatniltoaci Pills do this, quiedv.
They cleanse the systeM, make the
skin ;Smoothy restore ' roses to he
eireeks and give clear, dititity comp'ex.
ion, or good Woes, good health anet
good spirits (herr' is nothing no s,re.
as Dr. lThretitites ' it
at all deil4r,,
S� wasteful as is made.out.. Wodo
not altogether approve of this received:
The fact is, that The proper handling
of manure is the most p.srplexing ques-
tion that owe farneere have to deal
with To haul it, and spread it . on
the land, as Made, is net practical on
our farms. Our land ie rarely, frozen
when snow falls, and early in the
winter our lanes and fences ,are piled
up .5 feet deep with eaew, so we are
forced to keep it piled up in the reed'
'until it •is ,needed in the spring: Even
then we'. are sometimes neable, to put
if on the land. The springs' of '88
and '85 -v'ereso exceedingly wet that
. .
Animmunnnuoir.•
in The WeeklY Sun,
ROYAL, RATOATCHER..
Twickenham :Veteran Who Did Spade
Work In the. Crimea.
Now that seal an outcry is bent
ade against the, plague of rats. Mr
dward Pritchard of Twickenham i
per -ion of more_trelinitry
rest, since be was the last th
oat ratcatchers. The office ha
eh abolished, and, as Me. Pritchar
airs, , Twickenham and Hamptoi
curt are the rither to -day by a. col
ny of rats, that would keep eve
ick Whittingtores cat at bay.
The veteran's dog Punch, a mix
re of spaniel arid bull terrier, di
ueh doughty deeds in the war o
tri that in the Jubilee of 1887•eariou
hopheepers of Twickenham subscrib
d to provide him with a handsom
Ilar, inscribed, "The Royal
atelier." '
Born Lydbury, Herefordshire
ept, 14, 1833, 'Mr. Pritchard at twent
ears of age Was working on a new
iliyay in South Wales when the cal
arms for the Crimea carne. Si
oseph Pakten, who built the Orel],
xhibition, afterwards the Crysta
• -got a commission to raise
vil engineering corps for active see
ee. Pritchard came to Sydenhan
n june 13, 1855, and on the 30th o
ire genre month was shipped off te
ie Crimea, ,
They formed a unit 'entirely seper
o from the fighting division, (tressed
brown cord clothes, with navvy
oots and sou'wester hats varian
the Modern cowboy headgear) and
ad 30s. a week.
They arrived after tattle:Iva, but h
e thirteen months they were out had
enty to do. They constructed road
ays for trams to carry ammunition
here mule pack had previously done
1 the duty, and tor three months, on
d Pritchard was engaged in Ohl
Uesome leek of bneyine the: • dem
arriors ;n the hills. I?,very day
Might its dread complement of tail
raight young fellows,, sewn in leen-
ts-victires of ilalaelava,letterman
Id Alma. ,
Pritehard was in at the fell el qe-
stOpol. his near mightier% being
e 17th fettleers, of whom Mr. trust
-
d. the talaeleva veternn, still Bar.
Vila at (q01, a al
Me. Pritellard o!! Into eon -A tine
orked (Mamie Pee ,,, r",1 or
stOrie assoc:ation, b it now,
any things to -de in mate- t
r "desirable rriefl,,)e 4.,,nenisnt-1 ''e residea Within hundred Vol*Is
the !among Terie".eibani ferry. fle
otul forbenr of •eeven children liv-
g oet of twelve. and • twenty-one
andahildrert. use4 married at
ampfon Clittrelt me',- fifty-one years
BALM LEGISLATORS".
The Majority of Brilish M.P.'s Are
Hairless.
g Taking observations from behind
• the. grille, the wife of au M.P. has
$ been struck by the majority of dark.
- -ehatred.-men--ae--compared-evith-their.-
o fairer, brethren. The proportion
s' dark men, she says, is quite two to.
d one, It is,. however, difficult to a.r.•
1• rive at any safe conclusion as to the
- relation between hair and success in
n politics, since most of our.M.P,'s are
bald! ,
- The liveliest jokes and gayest laugh
-
d ter come from the benches where sit
n the bald heads. The bald heads also
s seem to carry off the prizes of life.
• The balder the man is the niore sue
-
e cetisfel he seems to be in 'polities.'
Not 4 men with flowing locks is to
. be seen on either of the front benches.
' The Young •rnembers, with Plenty of
Y hair, are to be found only, belew• the
•gangway. It is a fact, says the writer
1 in "The Ladies' Realm,." that the
✓ fair young member site below the
t gangway, because there. he Can hest
I• be seen from the Ladies' Gallery.
te
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itt
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.h
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at
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Pr
in
14
ago, end his uifc et•11 living.
Talk v:..netto, LIU Silence costa yet
a great deal leils.-St. LOUls Globe -
Democrat.
• Fairy Rings.
The fairy rings, which are so famil-
iar a feature in old grassland', Mid
sometimes in lawns, are regarded more
in theelight of a curiosity than that
of an evil or disfigureenent. • AS far
as pastures and meadows are con-
cerned, there is an inclination to re-
gard them with favor, asojudging by
its dark green color, the herbage itt
the affected parts is impeder in pale.
tehility and quality to that of the
surroundingiparts. It appears, how-
ever, that n this case as in some
others, color is decepteve, nnd tbat
the grass is really depreciated in
value by the action of the fungus,
which is known to he respottsible for
the rings. There is evidence in imp -
port of this theory in the fact that
live stook do not graze "fairy rings"
closely as the unaffected parte. If
the grass were as sweet and nth as
it looks, it wooed be picked bare, but
this IS rarely theease, unless scarcity
compels the enimala to take whet -
ever is within their reohti. It natty be
coneluded, therefore, that it weould be
an advantage to triremes, as well AS
to owners of infeeted lawns, if fairy
eings weld be Crltdicated. The dis-
covery of a meow of accomplishing
this hes been the subjeet of eepeited
enquiries in Australia, and it looks es
if sueeess told rewarded the •
efeete
of the experimenter&
Er:611y Settled.
e! Nueee, - Doctor, a sponge •M 'Mitering
Poneible you Armed it tro Merle the
I. , patient. Einitiont Surgeon-Tit:Ink eott
' Ilemind Inc to add $10 te the hill tot 1
neriellee.
GLASGOW'S SLUMS.
It, Awful Sleeping Quertors and It.
"Penny Pawn;."
, In the MlItgate Monthly there is a
description of the "Aleatia of thaw
gew"-the COMA) driene- where "ail
that is roost unsalubrlouti end repelled
In our modern Ilfe Is to be found."
Side by tilde with all that is denier:OW
Ing live and flourish harpies, of %%Nous
kinds and degrees. None is so dare
Serous to the health of the eoannunity
as abe who 1413t after night seeks to
make a dishonest penny by overcrowd -
lag her slummy house. • sanitary in.
specters .find the oceupants of over-
crowded housos, Itt their attempt to
avoid detection, eoneetilea in every
conceivable coruereehidden In cup-
boards, under bed.s and even on the
• housetops. TWO tiers Of people have
been found le one bed, ono on -the
boarda or mattress, the bed then flung
over, and another living tier on the top. ,
What are known as "penny pawns"
abound 1» the district. A broker who
keeps one of these can purchase an
article of any value froth a penny up.
ward. He Is compelled to keep it
for only seven full days, and at the
dnd of that period be may sell It to
whomsoever be clicoaes, and that, lob,
in all probability,for several hundred
• Per eent 'more thau he` paid for It
Thotisambi of poor peOpie are entirely
ignorant of the difference betwee,n a
pawnbrolting establishment and n
"penny pawn," with the result that in
many cases when.they go to the latter
they lose goads which, if Pledged with
the fernier, they might have redeemed
in time.
•
A TERRIBLE REWARD..
Cromwell's Paymect For the Capture
• of Pembroke Castle.
During the struggle between leing
Charles and the parliament Pembroke
castle was so well fertitled that Crom-
well, with all his cannon. could Inot
take it.
• After many failures he gave up his'
intention and began to march on for
Tenby, But before he had 'proceeded
far a country ,,shoemaker came tip to
Cromwell.and asked .bitn. whether be
would reward hini If be would tell alla
how to get the castle into his posses-
sion. •
Cromwell. very glad of this offer,
consented. Then tlifs old shoemaker,.
glad to get some money, as no doubt
he was rather pooretold him that there
was a pipe through whien they got
their water and that if he were to cut
the•pipe the castle would surrender.
Cromwell said. "I thank you for the
-Information you have given me. but as
you have turned traitor to your cohn-
trymeti the only reward' I will give,yoe
Is that you shall be hanged on the very
next tree that I come to." •
Cromwell had the shoemaleer banged
and cut the pipe hei, had told him of,
leading to the castle.- silleti then sur
rendered. -London Telegraph..
Made et Clear, •
• When Coltinel, Edmund like was in
cominanh of the Twenty -910e infantry
(mostly volunteers. from New England)
.in the PhilipPines, orgaideed frein
his regiment a coeilianes :ofmounted
sceptre To equip them tor this service
he made requisition on headquarters
for the neeessary outfit, • including
eighty_ nom.bugs.„ _Somu,nlfielousjtlerk
Itt ,the quartermaster% office In leiti-
nha • returned the requisition to Coloe
nel Riee with • these -written . re-
marks:. "Your report Shows but sixty'
men ia your Mounted coMpany. Why
de you require eighty •nosebags?
The celonel'S-explanatIon waS:shert
and,characteristic. It ssas It Is true
I have but sixte Men, but I have eighty
horses. The. tioSebags. are . Per the
'horses, not for the.,men," •
"Inoculation .For Siyiallpox.-, . ;,...
' Lady. 'Mary Wortley 'Mautagu Is gee-.
erally credited .vvith heeler; ine•rideee'
inoculation inte Eugland !non I•nrhey. •
Itt 1719'.'she .bad her sou itmeniated rer. .
Adelenople with suecess. . She vnwnI-
Iowedd to haveIt tried' in Englend on: •
seven condemned criminals in 1721.
'and,in -1722twe members' of .the rosal.;
-4stentereivereeetoeelatee-preetiee .
waiebitterle opposed be thO clergy un-
til
,
1760.. A. Dr. Mead practiced. Memo
'littera with suceesa ripte .1754, ansi n De
Dunsdale of London' Inoeulated Cath-
erine 41. of Resale in 1708. Vaccine
°Ciliatiofl. was' Introduced by.Di Jan
ner in" 17.9o.
, .-The Moors'. of Today..
. The Moors 01 today are the descend-
ants. of those who conquered' Span,'
.whe were practically' .paramount le
the southern Portion for. two' centueles •
and 'relics of Whose . wonderful build-
ings are to be found at the present day
In that country. .lindeed,. it is•strange.
hi consider the position of the 'Moors
of today when eve see the Work of thele
hands. In past eenterles, and the only
explanation lies inthe fact that they,
are unable toadapt,themselves to mode
ern conditions. .
Crushed.
• "Brudder dimes, If you didn't stnoke,
you *night Ova a brielx house, like,
what I does." . •
"Look here, man. don't you cote.:
Desterin' wit me like dat You didn't
git dat brier boUsle' hy not smokin'.
Yoe got It by borrowin' mah news.
paper to reed an' mall clothes trii wear
an' tinth vittles to eat. You may bon
fly financier, but dat don't gib you no
license to Set up ter a human copy
book?' '
•
66
Where Shaking
is Respectable
Ors/1 oil ittrilllee OW, WO MI other
ass(stattSe, 11 pownrt es* to suoroonto
Out nill4onso 4hahlno tints. Only surplus
Oust dans of It$of g0000 10. fne. Croat
bulk duosenOsinto nolontilt.noll mato Witl'
mato outlet to Wren prourdstl. Oust outll
'mope Monne, aoh and 1100
oPiarataeg ;go
In "Sunshine' Furnace the
legitimate dust outlet is pro -
(tided. It's a great big dust.
pipe 'running straight from
ash -pit to dome, thenee to Chimney. .When big pipe damper
19 opened, all dust In ash -pit ascends to dome; then,. When
direct drafts are opened, all ..dust passes op ohimoou-
. Always the clean and quick
dust route in "Sunshine,"
Furnace grate, to pan,
to Oust - pipe, to do me, to
chimney, to open alt.
LONDON . maw.
MONTREAL
TORONTO %sot
ar
„„.... -
Write to us for •
"Sunshine" testlimonials
received from Vour own
townspeople.
Sold by Harland Bros,
•1•111•66.0.110.101•11•110M
VANCOUVER
ST. JOHN, NM.
HAMILTON.
1. CALGARY
• Olint011
The Mine Owners •and Operatore'
Association at Fairbanks, Alaska, has
sent to Seattle for ten thousand men.
Canadian, flout miller named Ren-
nie comMitted suicide at Het% 'Kong
by jumping overheard from a launch.
Six persons are now knoten to Ave
perished as a result of the Chelsea
fire."
EiTigNekins ORFS INTO CON-
• SUMPTION.
Bronchitis weakens the tubes and
makes a resting place for the bacilli.
Why let Bronchitis Worries established?
It's 'easy to cure -just inhaler Catarr-
teezonebreathe in its soothing - bal-
sams and relief comes at once. Cie
tarrhozone is so certain in Bronchitis
that every case is cured, Throat •is
strengthened, 'ceugh. *tops, irritation
goes away, :all danger of tuberculosis
is prevented. For throat trouble, .ca-
tarrh and ceughs,. Catarrhozone is the
Remedy. 25c. and - 41.00 at an
crs. 'Get it ,today..
Rev. Father Heenan of Dundas died
in the hospital e Hamilton after an
operation.•
HA4: CALLOUSES QUICKfeir
CURED. '
•
Soak the feet in hot Water and then
apply Putnenes Painless Corn :Eke
tractor -it removes callous' ' quick- .
ly. Be • Sure you get "Putnafres" only.
•Psyc mi
ne ssionaries
A friend of Dr. Slocum Remedies
• writes: "Send ' a bottle of Payable
to Mrs. W... • They have a daughter
he decline, and I believe it would
help her. I have II mentioned your
remedies to the family, and also cited •
some of the miraculous cures accom-
plished inside the last 18 years, or
which I have knowledge."'
T. G. IRWIN, Little Britain, Ont,.
Rundown eonditions from lung, atom -
ac or ether tutional. trouble cur-
• cons
ti
ed by Psychine. 'At all druggists, 50e and
$1.00, or Dr. T. A. Slocum, Ltd., Toronto
Mr. A. Ne MeKelvie' was: noininated
for the Legislatureby the Liberals of
Temiskaming. '
Inspector Leake is working on'it plan
to give normal school pupils three
months at Guelph to take a oour'se in
industrial training before :graduating
as t :achers. '
A GOvetnincut bill has passed the
Danish Folkething allowing womeri to
vote communal electiona,
•
. • • • . '
Phe difference between the C. P. R.
and its mechanical sta.ff he the west
is approaching -he -- •
• . , .
Hon. William Pugsley announced in ,
the House ‘that he was considering the
question of deepening the harbors on
the lakes to twenty-five feet:
. .
Consumption is leu deadly than it used to be.
Certain relief and usually complete recovery
will result from the following treatment:
Hope, rest, fresh air, and--Scoitn.
Ernatsion.
Lie-DR4GGISTS1-80o2---AND-84.00
001:1001041/0000001040010/1010(
on Mortgages of Real Estate at Current Rates
All Business Strictly Confidential
Liberal Terms of Repayment
Loans Completed Quickly
Expenses Moderate
Pull information gladly given
Loan and Saving. Co. London, Ont.-
-
Your dealer will
supply,you. If not,
write direct to
Perrin er Co., 14
LW" Guild.
Leap Year Biscuit. A
unique line. • Made
only by ourselves.
64 to the lb.
._ .
.11.1011MEMI
Sow
MINIMMIIIIMIN
barley
—
for -taro-fit
I
.
IT won't pay you to
grow what everybody
grows, ---get Out of
the rut this year and
sow plenty of barley.
Get 55 bushels an acre
from ordinary land, -48
pound bushel,—brought .
Soc. spot cash readily
last year,—ought to bring i•
more than that this year.
Barley is a readyemoney
crop that too few Cana-
dian farmers grotv. Try
it—you'll be glad you did.
• .
ese
.11.1.11.•
Clinton News Record
'CLINTON -- ONT
Terms of "subseription-$1 per year itt
advance $1.50 may be Charged' it
net so paid. No paper discontinued
until all arrears are paid, utdess at
the opinion of the publisher. The
elate to which every subscription is
paid is deleted on the label. '
AdVertising rates -Transient adver.
tisemente, 10 cents per nottparief
line for first insertion and 3 Center'
per line for each Subsequent insert,.
Loh. Small advertisements not- to
Mood one inch, such at "Lott,"
"Strayed," or "Stolen," et., in,
serted onee for 35 cent e and eadh
subsequent insertion 10 Cent&
Commueications intmcled for publica-
tion must, as a guaraittee of good
faith, be accompanied by the name
of the vvrit4r.
of the Taft boom, and Of some tee-'
xnulous hopes , on the part of the
other candidates who may hope to
melee a deal with Foraker for his neg-
ro support
Negroes Are Anti -Taft.
Any such hope: on the part of Secre-
tary Tett •isVain, for the negro •seeti-
meet in the United States, tradition-
ally Republican, is now fiercely hos-
tile to President Itooseyelt• and Secre-•
tarp. Taft,' The reason for the anini-
osity of the blaCks is •fceind in the
Browns3fille 'affair. A Texas town
was "snot uii" by' some•rnembers: of
a. negro regiment, and failing io lind
the guilty individuals, a whole cern-.
pany was dithnissed the service by.
the President. Naturally, •'the limo
-
cent negroes Were.indignant, and wen
of ,.their ceor in all parte of the f 0
tatted States declared "that--.1.1terifitd-ii
not reeeiyed- fair play; In Congress a
Setietor Foraker tharapioried the
disgraced soldiers, and ever Since he in
has been kindly eegarded. • ley the s
negeoes; while Secretary Taft, who do' fa
fended the President's draeic action,. ei
has been as tereially detested.'
The Black CatspaW.
But lying deeper than the irrita-
tion caused by the dismissal of ea
company, of xiegro soldiers is a sore-
ness on the part•Of the negroes caused
by their 'treatment by the. Republican -
party., They fee that they have been
awed as catspaws by •the patty, and
that, counting on theit gratitude to
the political. doscendante of •the Aboli-
tionists, the Republican' have, offered
then irijustice and ••• contumely. They.,
hate' beee given the ballot, but unlees
their votes ale 'to he used against the.
Demectath, they are. imtimidated oe
tricked into virtual disfranchisement
For exe mple,, 'the Virginian.. Reinibli:
can conveition. Mit week would enat
allow a single negro to beconee. - :a
member. %The • negroese' now declare
that the Republican party bas
right to. suppose that they must for-
ever 'cleave • to that party ; and in
this deblaration of independence they
arc .stiripeeted by the-Speiagneld_Rs-
publicen,'whicli tells the tregroes frank;
ly that they will have to vete as ne-
groes first, arid as partisans .eccorid,
the y• wish to beeome .thoroughly em-
ancipated.- . •
C --"Wong
The Clinton News -Record
The Weed Nuisance, Rs Cauie
and Prevention.
In our previous article on the ab
subject we' Showed some . ways
which farmers sometimes
aided in the spread of weeds by s
Mg too ea.rly before teed growth
begin' ; by seeding down dirty lan
by SoWitig fall wheat on land inks
by perennial weeds,• and by sow
late raaturifig crops on sue land,
wish now to Speak of manures
the handling ot it, as a very fret
course by which the. evil is increa
A certain portion ot weed seeds', ma-
tured on the whole farm, find their
way into the barn, also from the
neighboring farms. they come, carriage
free, in the threshing maehrbea ; these
&cede. pass through the maohines and
are let, some in the straw, some in
he chaff, and some in the grain, It
is common:, and a very 10911511 prae-
tice, in this locality, th crush . the
grain right from the bin without
cleaning; the result is, that not One
in a. hundred of the small seeds line
crushed, These seeds pass through the
cattle, the germ uninjured, and o
onto -the raethire heap to be Ana
hauled onto the land again. ,
ove we were compelled to pile it in one.
ail the
istiTtW601):14have
11 t
are built up
plumb and the heap tramped on as
built rip; there will be only ' about
one foot deep en the outside thoro-
ughly rotted ; the rent will be ores -
greed, exactly as ensilage is in a alio.
We Mast reMOMber in discussing: agri-
cultural topics, that what it practical
itt our locality and on one class of
soil, may not be so itt another, On
our heavy clay soil it is very much
better to apply manure in the fall on
land intended tor corn er roots, then
fall plow ; all that it requires then
Is to give it a thorough surface work-
ing in the spring, and you have e soil
In some respects • better then Better
soils for these ereps, besides, you
are then prepared for any 'vagaries of
the weather, and are almost sur e of
a crop. •
We cannot too Strongly condemn the
;1.: practice of leaving the Manure in the
, yard all summer, Besides the meow,
venience of it, the frequent raAns wash
exit ' out its asolable matter, which is Prao.,
tieally lost. It is better far to haul
he 4 ottUnto a heap convenient, to the
01- eel& wheTe it is ti be applied, the
ce loss of fertilizing matter will be much
re. "Sese, end the labor not 'very much in-
7,rwY I er• NeaVoheaed%lieve that. within the next .ten
years our present views on Manures
"e and the character of their action on
an the soil will be eetirely cheesed;
'from years of pbservatien. we have
concluded that we have not yet arriv-
ed at the truth, We have seen it ari.,
eun plied liberally, with no apparent
uen
ret on tlie mem ; we have seen mese
n" ! ionally, when it appeared try be an
c t
, injury ; we have seen. better results
from poor, .strawy ma.nuee: than from
good.stabie manure on the• same crop;
• we ha.ve semi more market( effects of
'its, use several years. afterwards than
:43 the season in which it, was applied.
'4) We can never understand why egrieul-
to tural authorities recommend green
!e -manure, while authorities, on liorticul-
as ture recommend well rotted mailer&
" The crops are similar in their seasons
It
e of growth and their demands updn the,
or soil. It is a, constant surprise to us,
n-
e to see, soils stand cropPing se long
ea' without any mantire whatever. We
believe that by •a proper: totation. of
crops,. etc., e thorough system oi cuie
aP tivatiofi, good soil would !lever be ex-
hauited.. Mr.. Meat an.enthusiastic
_experimenthlist .in Ehgland thirty
years ago, , grew forty succesSiVe clops.
of 'fall wheat on the same.ground
without any fertilizer exhateiver, and
the lest year it yielded 17 bushels,
per acre. We mention this to • show
the. geeat importance of tliorougle'cul-
hivation. 'Tide, With a proper and
wise use of ma,nureS; will greatly in -
()mese its value, ' et is beter tto ap-
ply a less quantity per acre and
spread it over a large area, as
the results will be greater than by
applYing larger quantities on a , less
-area. We belieVe. the :reason •tce • be
"the manure promotes the growth'
soil ,barteria, by whiCli plant life . is
made available, We trust that these
notes will be useful to some new be-
ginners at iarmieg. It' is for theie
we write, and. not tor many 'of yew,:
miders • exeertenice may he
„greater than'teur,
by large heap to remain
giy Manure piled thus doe
Ow- the 'extent that scion
has us ,believe if the sid
d ;
ted
ins
and
ful
ted.
• We are aware that this . stet=
will be challenged„.buteit is neverth
less truce as we have 'proyen. T
heat of an aid:ma:Ps lendy is not su
clog to desthe gereen, and • ev
A period Of ferinentato'c'e in the maim
heap will not destroy them all, H
importantthenis it exercise eve
care in properly cleaning the grain
fore feedirig ; gso in.sweeping ap•t,
barn floor occasionally and either f
it over or bent instead ed thro
ing it into. the yard as is frequent fe
done. Agate seine ed their we
seeds th sheep, but •this is not t
beet way to dispose,: of thern. T
only safe way is to boil them a
feed them to hogs or fo*1 ; fa
any kind of stock Will at them mix
With •elmff. This :brings us .te t
question of hew • best to handle
menttre if it contains More or less
weed seed. The old method was
pile it in . heaps to ferment first
destroy any seed in it, and second
bring it into 6, state more immediat
ly available: for plant food, but th
prectrice is now condemned by seien
as , being too wasteful of. nitrogen,
ie certainly :a practice not. in fa,v
with farmers generally, because e
tailing extra work, The beat farm
we ever knew made -a 'practice every
spring Of. cleating out his barn' ya
arid piling the manure in a large •he
to remain until the following year b
re- putting it on the land. He had
een f11WiiThi4 platelcif-20- yeare;
nd at the time of our visit his farm
w
as the cleanest, and Molt prOdective
the locality. He was an eminently
uecessful farmer. ' and gave all' his
mily a good start in life. We Men -
On this incident to show that 'this
etliod. of rotting' manure cannot. be
• The President's Enemy. •
. It is doubtful if any 'other man in
the public life 'of the United 'Stakes
so well deserves to be •described as
•the enemy of Roostweltfas Voraker. In
his tippositiento, the President and
to Taft there is plenty, of 'personal
bitterness, for Foraker was a big
man politically, and Was mentioned as
"the next President" before either
Roosevelt or Taft was heard of. He
was .prominent in . 011ie before the
names of McKinley. mid Hanna , Were
well known. But 'somehow political
leck was against him, end though • it
man .of magnetie personality and fcroe
of character, the men_who were • ob-
• scure when he was famous, crept Up,
one by one, while he remained where
he began, a sort of infant prodigy,
that didn't "train on." No wonder
he kola bitter to the President, for
it was under • the Roosevelt banner
that Peraket fought Mark Hanna, only
to find thal the President's favorite in
Ohio Was William Howard Taft ; and
no %vender he hates Taft, for it was
Forats'erliyho gave Taft his political
start in life, when. the Senator wee
Got enor of Ohio, and the preseet
Sect:key for War a struggling lawyer.
of course, the ballot is seeret, but it
William Taft is the Republican nomin-
ee, the vote of no mair it sin er lot
his Democratic opponent than that of
Joseph Benson, Poraker.
•
W. J. MITattlf„1„
Uttar And Proprietor,
DR. RAM/LTON"S VOR
PliV1pLES.
All skill diseases such: as pimples oie
iginete through Were of the 'kidneys
and Hirer. Ali taints that bloc:: the
avenues 6f health must be removed.
Dr. Hatniltoaci Pills do this, quiedv.
They cleanse the systeM, make the
skin ;Smoothy restore ' roses to he
eireeks and give clear, dititity comp'ex.
ion, or good Woes, good health anet
good spirits (herr' is nothing no s,re.
as Dr. lThretitites ' it
at all deil4r,,
S� wasteful as is made.out.. Wodo
not altogether approve of this received:
The fact is, that The proper handling
of manure is the most p.srplexing ques-
tion that owe farneere have to deal
with To haul it, and spread it . on
the land, as Made, is net practical on
our farms. Our land ie rarely, frozen
when snow falls, and early in the
winter our lanes and fences ,are piled
up .5 feet deep with eaew, so we are
forced to keep it piled up in the reed'
'until it •is ,needed in the spring: Even
then we'. are sometimes neable, to put
if on the land. The springs' of '88
and '85 -v'ereso exceedingly wet that
. .
Animmunnnuoir.•
in The WeeklY Sun,
ROYAL, RATOATCHER..
Twickenham :Veteran Who Did Spade
Work In the. Crimea.
Now that seal an outcry is bent
ade against the, plague of rats. Mr
dward Pritchard of Twickenham i
per -ion of more_trelinitry
rest, since be was the last th
oat ratcatchers. The office ha
eh abolished, and, as Me. Pritchar
airs, , Twickenham and Hamptoi
curt are the rither to -day by a. col
ny of rats, that would keep eve
ick Whittingtores cat at bay.
The veteran's dog Punch, a mix
re of spaniel arid bull terrier, di
ueh doughty deeds in the war o
tri that in the Jubilee of 1887•eariou
hopheepers of Twickenham subscrib
d to provide him with a handsom
Ilar, inscribed, "The Royal
atelier." '
Born Lydbury, Herefordshire
ept, 14, 1833, 'Mr. Pritchard at twent
ears of age Was working on a new
iliyay in South Wales when the cal
arms for the Crimea carne. Si
oseph Pakten, who built the Orel],
xhibition, afterwards the Crysta
• -got a commission to raise
vil engineering corps for active see
ee. Pritchard came to Sydenhan
n june 13, 1855, and on the 30th o
ire genre month was shipped off te
ie Crimea, ,
They formed a unit 'entirely seper
o from the fighting division, (tressed
brown cord clothes, with navvy
oots and sou'wester hats varian
the Modern cowboy headgear) and
ad 30s. a week.
They arrived after tattle:Iva, but h
e thirteen months they were out had
enty to do. They constructed road
ays for trams to carry ammunition
here mule pack had previously done
1 the duty, and tor three months, on
d Pritchard was engaged in Ohl
Uesome leek of bneyine the: • dem
arriors ;n the hills. I?,very day
Might its dread complement of tail
raight young fellows,, sewn in leen-
ts-victires of ilalaelava,letterman
Id Alma. ,
Pritehard was in at the fell el qe-
stOpol. his near mightier% being
e 17th fettleers, of whom Mr. trust
-
d. the talaeleva veternn, still Bar.
Vila at (q01, a al
Me. Pritellard o!! Into eon -A tine
orked (Mamie Pee ,,, r",1 or
stOrie assoc:ation, b it now,
any things to -de in mate- t
r "desirable rriefl,,)e 4.,,nenisnt-1 ''e residea Within hundred Vol*Is
the !among Terie".eibani ferry. fle
otul forbenr of •eeven children liv-
g oet of twelve. and • twenty-one
andahildrert. use4 married at
ampfon Clittrelt me',- fifty-one years
BALM LEGISLATORS".
The Majority of Brilish M.P.'s Are
Hairless.
g Taking observations from behind
• the. grille, the wife of au M.P. has
$ been struck by the majority of dark.
- -ehatred.-men--ae--compared-evith-their.-
o fairer, brethren. The proportion
s' dark men, she says, is quite two to.
d one, It is,. however, difficult to a.r.•
1• rive at any safe conclusion as to the
- relation between hair and success in
n politics, since most of our.M.P,'s are
bald! ,
- The liveliest jokes and gayest laugh
-
d ter come from the benches where sit
n the bald heads. The bald heads also
s seem to carry off the prizes of life.
• The balder the man is the niore sue
-
e cetisfel he seems to be in 'polities.'
Not 4 men with flowing locks is to
. be seen on either of the front benches.
' The Young •rnembers, with Plenty of
Y hair, are to be found only, belew• the
•gangway. It is a fact, says the writer
1 in "The Ladies' Realm,." that the
✓ fair young member site below the
t gangway, because there. he Can hest
I• be seen from the Ladies' Gallery.
te
1:1
tu
,
ra
co
ea
to
.1
•ei
'51tl
tl
itt
St
01
.h
pi
th
al
en
gr
br
st
ke
at
th
ar
vi
Id
fo
of
Pr
in
14
ago, end his uifc et•11 living.
Talk v:..netto, LIU Silence costa yet
a great deal leils.-St. LOUls Globe -
Democrat.
• Fairy Rings.
The fairy rings, which are so famil-
iar a feature in old grassland', Mid
sometimes in lawns, are regarded more
in theelight of a curiosity than that
of an evil or disfigureenent. • AS far
as pastures and meadows are con-
cerned, there is an inclination to re-
gard them with favor, asojudging by
its dark green color, the herbage itt
the affected parts is impeder in pale.
tehility and quality to that of the
surroundingiparts. It appears, how-
ever, that n this case as in some
others, color is decepteve, nnd tbat
the grass is really depreciated in
value by the action of the fungus,
which is known to he respottsible for
the rings. There is evidence in imp -
port of this theory in the fact that
live stook do not graze "fairy rings"
closely as the unaffected parte. If
the grass were as sweet and nth as
it looks, it wooed be picked bare, but
this IS rarely theease, unless scarcity
compels the enimala to take whet -
ever is within their reohti. It natty be
coneluded, therefore, that it weould be
an advantage to triremes, as well AS
to owners of infeeted lawns, if fairy
eings weld be Crltdicated. The dis-
covery of a meow of accomplishing
this hes been the subjeet of eepeited
enquiries in Australia, and it looks es
if sueeess told rewarded the •
efeete
of the experimenter&
Er:611y Settled.
e! Nueee, - Doctor, a sponge •M 'Mitering
Poneible you Armed it tro Merle the
I. , patient. Einitiont Surgeon-Tit:Ink eott
' Ilemind Inc to add $10 te the hill tot 1
neriellee.
GLASGOW'S SLUMS.
It, Awful Sleeping Quertors and It.
"Penny Pawn;."
, In the MlItgate Monthly there is a
description of the "Aleatia of thaw
gew"-the COMA) driene- where "ail
that is roost unsalubrlouti end repelled
In our modern Ilfe Is to be found."
Side by tilde with all that is denier:OW
Ing live and flourish harpies, of %%Nous
kinds and degrees. None is so dare
Serous to the health of the eoannunity
as abe who 1413t after night seeks to
make a dishonest penny by overcrowd -
lag her slummy house. • sanitary in.
specters .find the oceupants of over-
crowded housos, Itt their attempt to
avoid detection, eoneetilea in every
conceivable coruereehidden In cup-
boards, under bed.s and even on the
• housetops. TWO tiers Of people have
been found le one bed, ono on -the
boarda or mattress, the bed then flung
over, and another living tier on the top. ,
What are known as "penny pawns"
abound 1» the district. A broker who
keeps one of these can purchase an
article of any value froth a penny up.
ward. He Is compelled to keep it
for only seven full days, and at the
dnd of that period be may sell It to
whomsoever be clicoaes, and that, lob,
in all probability,for several hundred
• Per eent 'more thau he` paid for It
Thotisambi of poor peOpie are entirely
ignorant of the difference betwee,n a
pawnbrolting establishment and n
"penny pawn," with the result that in
many cases when.they go to the latter
they lose goads which, if Pledged with
the fernier, they might have redeemed
in time.
•
A TERRIBLE REWARD..
Cromwell's Paymect For the Capture
• of Pembroke Castle.
During the struggle between leing
Charles and the parliament Pembroke
castle was so well fertitled that Crom-
well, with all his cannon. could Inot
take it.
• After many failures he gave up his'
intention and began to march on for
Tenby, But before he had 'proceeded
far a country ,,shoemaker came tip to
Cromwell.and asked .bitn. whether be
would reward hini If be would tell alla
how to get the castle into his posses-
sion. •
Cromwell. very glad of this offer,
consented. Then tlifs old shoemaker,.
glad to get some money, as no doubt
he was rather pooretold him that there
was a pipe through whien they got
their water and that if he were to cut
the•pipe the castle would surrender.
Cromwell said. "I thank you for the
-Information you have given me. but as
you have turned traitor to your cohn-
trymeti the only reward' I will give,yoe
Is that you shall be hanged on the very
next tree that I come to." •
Cromwell had the shoemaleer banged
and cut the pipe hei, had told him of,
leading to the castle.- silleti then sur
rendered. -London Telegraph..
Made et Clear, •
• When Coltinel, Edmund like was in
cominanh of the Twenty -910e infantry
(mostly volunteers. from New England)
.in the PhilipPines, orgaideed frein
his regiment a coeilianes :ofmounted
sceptre To equip them tor this service
he made requisition on headquarters
for the neeessary outfit, • including
eighty_ nom.bugs.„ _Somu,nlfielousjtlerk
Itt ,the quartermaster% office In leiti-
nha • returned the requisition to Coloe
nel Riee with • these -written . re-
marks:. "Your report Shows but sixty'
men ia your Mounted coMpany. Why
de you require eighty •nosebags?
The celonel'S-explanatIon waS:shert
and,characteristic. It ssas It Is true
I have but sixte Men, but I have eighty
horses. The. tioSebags. are . Per the
'horses, not for the.,men," •
"Inoculation .For Siyiallpox.-, . ;,...
' Lady. 'Mary Wortley 'Mautagu Is gee-.
erally credited .vvith heeler; ine•rideee'
inoculation inte Eugland !non I•nrhey. •
Itt 1719'.'she .bad her sou itmeniated rer. .
Adelenople with suecess. . She vnwnI-
Iowedd to haveIt tried' in Englend on: •
seven condemned criminals in 1721.
'and,in -1722twe members' of .the rosal.;
-4stentereivereeetoeelatee-preetiee .
waiebitterle opposed be thO clergy un-
til
,
1760.. A. Dr. Mead practiced. Memo
'littera with suceesa ripte .1754, ansi n De
Dunsdale of London' Inoeulated Cath-
erine 41. of Resale in 1708. Vaccine
°Ciliatiofl. was' Introduced by.Di Jan
ner in" 17.9o.
, .-The Moors'. of Today..
. The Moors 01 today are the descend-
ants. of those who conquered' Span,'
.whe were practically' .paramount le
the southern Portion for. two' centueles •
and 'relics of Whose . wonderful build-
ings are to be found at the present day
In that country. .lindeed,. it is•strange.
hi consider the position of the 'Moors
of today when eve see the Work of thele
hands. In past eenterles, and the only
explanation lies inthe fact that they,
are unable toadapt,themselves to mode
ern conditions. .
Crushed.
• "Brudder dimes, If you didn't stnoke,
you *night Ova a brielx house, like,
what I does." . •
"Look here, man. don't you cote.:
Desterin' wit me like dat You didn't
git dat brier boUsle' hy not smokin'.
Yoe got It by borrowin' mah news.
paper to reed an' mall clothes trii wear
an' tinth vittles to eat. You may bon
fly financier, but dat don't gib you no
license to Set up ter a human copy
book?' '
•
66
Where Shaking
is Respectable
Ors/1 oil ittrilllee OW, WO MI other
ass(stattSe, 11 pownrt es* to suoroonto
Out nill4onso 4hahlno tints. Only surplus
Oust dans of It$of g0000 10. fne. Croat
bulk duosenOsinto nolontilt.noll mato Witl'
mato outlet to Wren prourdstl. Oust outll
'mope Monne, aoh and 1100
oPiarataeg ;go
In "Sunshine' Furnace the
legitimate dust outlet is pro -
(tided. It's a great big dust.
pipe 'running straight from
ash -pit to dome, thenee to Chimney. .When big pipe damper
19 opened, all dust In ash -pit ascends to dome; then,. When
direct drafts are opened, all ..dust passes op ohimoou-
. Always the clean and quick
dust route in "Sunshine,"
Furnace grate, to pan,
to Oust - pipe, to do me, to
chimney, to open alt.
LONDON . maw.
MONTREAL
TORONTO %sot
ar
„„.... -
Write to us for •
"Sunshine" testlimonials
received from Vour own
townspeople.
Sold by Harland Bros,
•1•111•66.0.110.101•11•110M
VANCOUVER
ST. JOHN, NM.
HAMILTON.
1. CALGARY
• Olint011
The Mine Owners •and Operatore'
Association at Fairbanks, Alaska, has
sent to Seattle for ten thousand men.
Canadian, flout miller named Ren-
nie comMitted suicide at Het% 'Kong
by jumping overheard from a launch.
Six persons are now knoten to Ave
perished as a result of the Chelsea
fire."
EiTigNekins ORFS INTO CON-
• SUMPTION.
Bronchitis weakens the tubes and
makes a resting place for the bacilli.
Why let Bronchitis Worries established?
It's 'easy to cure -just inhaler Catarr-
teezonebreathe in its soothing - bal-
sams and relief comes at once. Cie
tarrhozone is so certain in Bronchitis
that every case is cured, Throat •is
strengthened, 'ceugh. *tops, irritation
goes away, :all danger of tuberculosis
is prevented. For throat trouble, .ca-
tarrh and ceughs,. Catarrhozone is the
Remedy. 25c. and - 41.00 at an
crs. 'Get it ,today..
Rev. Father Heenan of Dundas died
in the hospital e Hamilton after an
operation.•
HA4: CALLOUSES QUICKfeir
CURED. '
•
Soak the feet in hot Water and then
apply Putnenes Painless Corn :Eke
tractor -it removes callous' ' quick- .
ly. Be • Sure you get "Putnafres" only.
•Psyc mi
ne ssionaries
A friend of Dr. Slocum Remedies
• writes: "Send ' a bottle of Payable
to Mrs. W... • They have a daughter
he decline, and I believe it would
help her. I have II mentioned your
remedies to the family, and also cited •
some of the miraculous cures accom-
plished inside the last 18 years, or
which I have knowledge."'
T. G. IRWIN, Little Britain, Ont,.
Rundown eonditions from lung, atom -
ac or ether tutional. trouble cur-
• cons
ti
ed by Psychine. 'At all druggists, 50e and
$1.00, or Dr. T. A. Slocum, Ltd., Toronto
Mr. A. Ne MeKelvie' was: noininated
for the Legislatureby the Liberals of
Temiskaming. '
Inspector Leake is working on'it plan
to give normal school pupils three
months at Guelph to take a oour'se in
industrial training before :graduating
as t :achers. '
A GOvetnincut bill has passed the
Danish Folkething allowing womeri to
vote communal electiona,
•
. • • • . '
Phe difference between the C. P. R.
and its mechanical sta.ff he the west
is approaching -he -- •
• . , .
Hon. William Pugsley announced in ,
the House ‘that he was considering the
question of deepening the harbors on
the lakes to twenty-five feet:
. .
Consumption is leu deadly than it used to be.
Certain relief and usually complete recovery
will result from the following treatment:
Hope, rest, fresh air, and--Scoitn.
Ernatsion.
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on Mortgages of Real Estate at Current Rates
All Business Strictly Confidential
Liberal Terms of Repayment
Loans Completed Quickly
Expenses Moderate
Pull information gladly given
Loan and Saving. Co. London, Ont.-
-
Your dealer will
supply,you. If not,
write direct to
Perrin er Co., 14
LW" Guild.
Leap Year Biscuit. A
unique line. • Made
only by ourselves.
64 to the lb.