The Clinton News-Record, 1908-08-20, Page 3AuU5t Othi 1901%
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Clinton Now Record
A MIGHTY GRAFT
eas- The Great brink 'Saved the Town
Ott'evene:. 108*
M. 1410104g delivered his last bud-
get speech on the 17th day of `Mar*
lust two weeks ,hefore the 010$8 of the
fscal year. He should haiie known
pretty, well how "business was ceming
out, but his estimate Was Wide. The
revenue for the year was less than he
eetimated, end the 09011(144re a goed
deal more. On March 31st the debt
had increased during the year. betW'een
. ;314,000,000 anti $.15,000;000. • Mn.
Fielding had estineated the increapeab
only $12,000,000.
Worse Than He Thought,
One-third of the neict hseel. year
-has passed e.:14thar-Firi'alreirlYtiffister
. is meeting greater disappointments.
He foresaw a delline in the revenue,
and judged that he would receive clnl•y
S90,000,000 this year in PlNee Or
$96,500,000 last year. But instead of
loosing $6,500,000 in twelve Months;
he is. Short that much beet= „menthe.
The customs revenue alone 'has de.t
creased $6,106,940 ; Intereolonial bal-
ance is worse than last year 'at this
time by $323,000, andethere, is a;
'crease in intend revenue.
To be ,Viewed With, Alarm.
. .
On the other hand, both the current
and capital expenditure are 'rapidly
increasing. It now seams certain that
the increase in debt this year will
be quite as largo as in any year in Our
history, and five times as targe as in
any year since •the completion of , the
C. P. R. It is about time for the
Liberal party to call another conven-
tion and repeal that plank in the
platform which says :
"We cannot •Init view with alarlin
the large increase of the public debt."
And perhaps they should modify elle
declaration
"We dernand the strictest economy."
• One Railway Estimete.
• It was Mr. Fielding who made the
most precise estimate of the cost of,
ethe Transcontinental, which also pro-
ved to be 'abeut, , theleast. correot.
There isan interest no* in examin-
ing the statement made by the Fin-
ance Minister, the Minister of Rail-
• ways and the Premier eqncerning the
section from Q.uebec eto Moncton,
which runs through a well known
tees stateineW Mr. Fielding accept- of “Preliniiiim expenses!' which 'the
ed the .Prentier's geometry and 1%1r...engineer was alfited to 'certify as
Zillinersen'a topography, but for thei.eharge or actual eonstruction. The
sake of round numbers figured the accountant obieeted, but the bill ,was
length of the Quebec .teAfonoton see -
at. -400 instead of 860, or
38.4 . • . -
e 400. milee at $25,000 a mile is.
$io,o0o,vol....Thooe • were Mr- 'Field-,
certified just' the same, ate c Mr.
Schreiber had •cOnellited„the Minister.
of Justice. Finally it was brought to
the attention Of Mr. Courtney, then
Deputy Minister a Finance, who set
ing's figures and on that understand- to work examining the items. There-
ing the contracts were endnrsed. upon, the Company suddenly withdrew
, the Claim to $56,000 and asked for the
Not 'Much Shorter. ntimaining $100,0010!. Tit accountant
objeofied to these, which were largely
paymente to lawyers and other pro-
moters. Finally Mr: Schreiber took
back his recommendation and the bill
was not allOwed.
• An Easy Certificate:
with the Intereolonial is' 20nuke in-
stead of from 100 to 120 miles, More Theaccountant who held up the
over, the new road is ' to -have a claim was transferred to lVfoncton,
”pisher" grade, ' that is to say, a and it will be remembered that the
grade whieh requires an extra engine 31tAraP of ' the $56,000 first withdrawn
to push the .train up. Everybody could 'never afterwards be discoe,,,red.
knows that". the Intercolonia,1 could The •DePartlitene had given un the
be shortened by much more than 22 etatenteet of claim without kecoing a
mile% by cutting across a few minor coPY of it It was sent back to tho
eortipany, whose proper officer when
ettrves, So that there is really no
shortening of distance 7Eiti au, summoned to give 'evidence bels)l-e the
COrnntitbe sailed for Europe, Hie
• The road is under contract, and its
length is pretty well ascertained. It
is now declared to be from the ,Que-
bee Bridge terminal to • Moncton,
458.i. Innen; and this will be a little,
increneed,-The - as onniparid
• • More -Titan Double the .Cost, • assistant:'testified that the paper hed
been destreyed, and the Government
Now, as to the cost Mr. Fielding
, . - • majority in the Public Aecounte. corn-
eaid he had, obtained . ' Careen eteete-
sustained afterweeds by •the
making it 125,000 per mileJuly
ments from the Government Engineer 1'41,1171:ay
in the flouee, voted down all
. In.
of this year 00.preneo..ministe; ot attempts to further inveseigete these
secret expendituree. Mr. Sebreiber
Railways brought down the 'etatemente
e
would have, had the Whole bill paid f the presene iestimated cost of this
without enquiry, as :his VinistSr
part of the road by divisions. Itere -
it
:doubtless desired.
is : . •,.
For 39 miles .......32,.573 pee Mile
Fo • 50 Mile § -$41 995. per mile:
r • • ,
For 644- tnilee $45,341 per mile
For. 61 Miles $51,130 per. mile "
For 53 miles 165,771 per mile
For 1 mile ... $65,371.per mile
For 4 mike ,... $83,57.0 per, mile°
For 32 miles ... $144,1.73 'per mile. '
For the, remaining 149- milee ne es- •
timate ie given, but it is said to be
as heavy as any section except the
last mentioned. •• .
Itwill be seen thai thn: averageceeti
*ill be; at least $00,0f,ao:.-per miler or
between $23,000,000 ,and $21,000,600..
ieg •-the whole. ;*.instead of only' $25,-
000 per mile; and Only 110,000,000. al-
together ' *.• • :,
Portuguese revolutiOuaries are im-
Pcitting secretly large :(1uantities of
merle and ammunition• •
, King Edward and . Queen Alexandra
will pay teetate Visit to the Kaiser all
Berlin early next year. • -
Four sailors •lost their: lives through
an .error in the trenenatssion of an ore
der oh' the German :warship Undine.
The .British Goveininent has' refesed
to interfere to have COlicessions can
celled by •Veneettela restored tp.-Brite
ish companies„ • .
Trouble has • agaia risen • betWeen
China, and :Japan, Owing to• the sae -
de by. China of a Japanese sitearner.
loaded With rifles' and ammunition
• rn.i rernerkable .. flight at Liemies„
Wilber Wright attained an .altitude ef
ninety feet with his aeroplane, and re-
Maineeelneist seen minuts in the
*..Sali!telber. and the Ministers.
country.
The Premier began it by saying ,N1r.r. Fielding . now -tries to throw
:that of course the IntercoloPial was the responsibility of his had estimate
a failute because the roar, from Qui,- on Me. Schreiner. Theeengineer tenoti
leg-lee-eyeeeereeefellowed twa_ sides ,in a p.osition * explain, but eN1r..
.ofa triangnei. The GoveTiirnent''pr;n- !S'ciirether• has not, -troubled hionseli tel
posed to follow the third side and dirscredit the arrangements which the.
make a road about 120 miles shorter. Ministers have ad eor desire to maleel
Mr. Emmerson said that he had hunt- with Grand „Trunk Pacific people.. It
ed all through the middle of New was shoWn last year that when the
Brunswick (probably pursuing "Beast Company put in its first' claim . of ex -
of Ephesus") and knew every mile of Penditure t be covered by guaraptee
tin, country. He confirmed the Prem.:. bond's, there. was an, item. of $16,2,000
- - -
o.00kokoA04"*"0•049,4!"Ao% A•W000koi,olioolool,"PearisotA1%.#'14
I
ELECTRO -CHEMICAL
Rhentna
Rings
Are guaranteed to cute Rheumatism and•Neuralgia.
The Electro -Chemical Rings is not an tenet ant charm
or faith cure, hut a seientiec niediote for ehe
eliusin-
tion ce uric add frotn the blecid. • The secret, the
power, the merit in this ring lies in the combination
of the various metals of which the ring is made. • No
matter what. the trouble is, if it is ceused by, excess
of uric acid, The Electro-Chernical Ring will effect
active. Looks just like any other ring. Can re
worn day and night. • We guarantee' these Rings to
do all we claim. • •
• Call analE7pamine These Rings.
Jeweler and Engraverissuer of Marriage:Licenses
esaAiNOtefteeeeeeeeeeWtieteeiaielieteetetiaileekeiieeewee.teet‘eeftleee.eiteeedleN0~01
.0tern.
Greatest Live Stock, Exhibition
oi Western Ontario
'••
Fuli erograindie of AttiraCtiOne twice 'dilly, including Icemp's
Wiid Weet Sheive Beet 01f.rilunic. "Firework* Each Evening,
ATI-ILETID DAY 'MONDAY; SEPT. 14.
Come and enjoy yelireelf at London*e Popular Fair
REDUCED RATES ON ALL RAILROADS
Prize List, Entily Forms, Programmes, and all intermatiOn
given Oh Application to
W. J. REID, President A. M. HUNT, Seey
London, Sept. 11- 19.
Came:to Many clinion,,People.
of Rothenburie
• Whitsuntide of each year witaieosot.
in the historic town of R.,othenh.2174,
on the Tauber, the aetirkg of a drain4
which recalls a dellverateo in the
Thirty 'Years' war, when the victories
of Gustavus Adolphus had endanger-
ed the Catholic league.
Tilly came to bemege Itothenburg,
• which was in league -with the' Swedes.
•The town was at that time wealthy
and well fortified, standing' upon
steep cliffs above the Tauber and hay-
ing massive tower crowned walls.
Againat this town came Tilly with,
• great guns that soon put fortune on
his side. The defenders Of the, Phiee.
however, •contested every inch of
ground. Not eentil the Powder tower
exploded. th're-ugh a grenade of the
• enerny, did the Swedish' garrison and
citizens reluctantly hang out 'the
white flag atter a fight of thirty
hours.
Tilly would hear nothing of terms
of capitulation. The Swedes might
withdraw, but 'unconditional surren-
der Was demoncied of the tawn.
• When he had taken poesess•ion of
the beautiful rathhaus he sett for the
senate, with 33orgomenter. BeeOld• at
Their head, and announced their con-
demnation to death for their obstin-
• ate resistance and their disobedience
to the imperial commanders.
In vain did the *omen and children
1
WASIONG OF 'EYES.
How to Bath O Thom, _Properly Witt
Lotions.
If more persons know that the eye,
balls. need bathingmilt° as muchas
the body, rio dressing otand would be
without' an eye cup and lotion 1 or this
purpose. In washing the eyes use a
special gloats thatmay be bought at
any druggiet's. This cup isshaped
something like a winoglies,. except
that it is elongated instead of round
andhas a rim that elopes down iri
the middleto tit the eyes.*
. To use this. little vessel fill itthreo,
quarters • full of whatever lotion or
liquid is prescribed., then place it
cleeely about the eye and throw back
the head. In this position Open and
Shut the . eye, 0.0 that the bell is
thoroughly 'bathed, •
• As to the lotion for the bath, an
excellent and simile wash that will
cleanse .the .ball and relieve it.iiiverish.
or tired sensation is made by boiling
and filtering half a pint of wider and
pouring into it while still warm one -
hall teaspoonful of refined borax and
ten drops of 'spirits of camphor. Let
this vool, then filter again through a
piece of thin muslin. •
- Thecup may be partly filledwith.
thiseliqUid morning and night and
any time during the day when the
eyes •feel tired, It should be applied.
as previously directed and after teeing.
,for a time will usually clear away the
yellow seeni. so 'freqtiontlyseep on
eeeeweeentee„thitternerieetePlee_n, throw' eyet.)alls and .alWays so edisfiguring-
IISoomiller
Mr, and Mrs. jaines Stewart and
'on left last week for their home ; in •
Kansas -City afterspending three
weeks at ;the ,old home, the, Benmiller
nursery. •
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Walters left
last •week for 'Yellow Grass, Sask.,.
where they. will visit friends tor
couple of 'months.
Mr.' and Mrs. Jesse Gledhill have,'
gone on a trip to WhitehoOd, Mane
to see their daughter, Mete Allan
Potter. They. are not eXpeetedi. hack
for six weeks or so. -
Rev. W. Baugh'sthree sons and
daughter Are spending their vacation
atthe parsonage with their: parents.
They are all echo): teachers and are
borne for their' holidays frem. their
.scboole in Ontario and Pdanitobe.
MiiseeOltiff of Dungannon enteredup-
on her duties as principal of the'Ren,0 -
miller school on Monday-, She emirs
well recommended.
. Mr. ,Emanuel Nobring ie ,still on the
eielt list and unable tie:attend to the
. duties of the farm.
amnia.
The beech and butternut trose
carrying a groat crop of nuts,
season. Thio galls up the old
That plenty of nuts meatlie a 10
hard winter coining. Batt t
saying don't always coms true.
While helping at the 'threshing. at
Mr. William StraUghanke on Wednele-
day of Iasi week, Richard Sprung
met with a severe accident. Ills hand
came in contact with tha knife ot
the straw wetter, taking off parts; of
three Angers and part of the 'thumb ;01
• the right hand. He was taken, 'to
the nearest :hospital,
The .townehip council has placed, a
number oi posts and a neat wire
fence onthe river side of the road
• leading up from the brewery * to the
'top of Sands' hill., That piece of -road'
has always been a dangerous seet and
has cost the , township some money
• for demagen 14 the years gene by.
1Ira D. Sankey, ,the evangelist and
singer, is dead at Brooklyn. '
ing themselves at the feet of the YU= Befiire applying any loteett theeeyes-----
•must always • be carefully bathed in
warm Water. • •
• For eyes that are weak a tailie
wash recommended by Englieh ocu-
listis made in this way: One half
of an •ounce of •rook salt and one
ounce of dry sulphate of zinc simmer-
ed in, a perfectly clean, covered per-
eelain vessel with three pints of water
until the ingredients are all dissolved.'
Strnin through thick. Clean muslin,
add one ounce of rosewater and cork
tightly. Use when the eyes feel weak.
H the lotion smarts, add a little
water, • The •.eye cup should be kept
perfectly clean,
• If. after simple home treatment' the
eyeballs continuo to show a yellow-
ish appearance no time should be
lost in censultirig a physician, for
something wrong with the system is
indicated. • Any inflammation of the
eyes is • likely to exhibit itself by
secretion on the lids in the morning,
and this conditeen 'should be checked
before it leads inth another More seri-
ous state: •'•
•After bathing. with • either Of the
totione given the edges of the lids
should • be coveredat night With a
paste made of two mid One-half centi-
grams each of oxide of zine and sal-
-acetate of lead, twenty-five eenti-
grams of oil of sweet alencincls, three
grams of white veseline and three
drops. of tincture of benzoin.
It is well to have this compounded
by a chemist, for should there be the
least lump or grain it is apt to find
HS wayinto the • eye and cause Irrita-
tion. In making any lotion at herne
too much care cannot be given to
filtering, and should the liquid be•
°kende after a. time it must be
strained again to :prevent causing
irritation. • •
tors and begging for .mercy. Tilly
had already summoned the execn-
' tioner when some of the wives Eine-
ceeded in penetrating ineo the council.
hall. .•
.
• The conqueror at last allowed him-,
self to be 'softened, but he coupled '
his, clernence with a; elates° that ap-
parently made it of no avail. ,The
senators should be spared if one of
their number could empty et a draft
• the great loving cup of Tauber wine
presented to the victor. .
Hopeless as the case seemed, the
• condition was fulfilled by ex -Burgo-
master Nuseh, who thus* saved his
own life and the lives of his col -
The cu , whieh• is of 'glass • and
holds abut three quarts, is to this
• day in th possession of one of the
. lineal de eendants of the mi,ehtv
drinker.
There are 'diye, of diezineet, spells tqf '
drowsiness,. headache eideeehes, back -
Sometimes rheumatic pain after ,ur-
inary. trouble. • ' ." •
You. are plainly told that. the Kid--
neys a,rn sick . ' •
;Booth's' Kidney' Pills mire
ney illS. •
MT ir A.' •Igogridge, of Ontario
St, Clinton, Ont. says :
"From the early. winter I had suf-
felled with occasional spells! of: , head-
ache and dieziriess end there . was a
eanetant ,bearine down Pain acrase`the
small part ot my hack, 1 mit eanguiet.
and ,done out: and iny eneral health
was greatly run down. I had tried
sevetal • remedies but found 'little
or no relief.. The Ittrabegol be-
came so severe thattould
not • stoop ever or straighten my-
self upe I learned ot Booth's Kidnpy
Pills :and • prottu•ing a box' at ;Mr.
Holmes': Pharmacy 1 coMmended treat-
ment, Theheedaehes and azzincss
had soon gone. taut in the one. hoe of
Booth's Kidecy' Pills I found a com-
plete and lastieg cure for the lumba-
go. I ,afn as strong and well as, peer
end feel • grateful in recomMending
Booth's Kidney Pills,'? 'Sold by
dealers. Price Weenie.. The R, T.
Boca Co., Ltd.,.Fort Erie, Ont.,
Sole Canadian Aients. •
CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBI
'MN, TORONTO,
Many Special Features: includ-
• ing the Siege of Sebastopol,
Grand Trunk Exhibit t'in Rail-
way Exhibit Building) and
.01-Taed Fireworks Display.
—
from' Clinton
• --Good, Going Aug. 29-
-TO September 12. -
SPECIAL EXCURSION RATES
Good Going Sept. ,1, $, 5, 8,10.
All Tickett are valid returning irnm
Toronto on or before•Sepit 15, 1908,
Ticket; and fell Information may, be
obtained from •• '
F, It. Hodgens, ' Uptowti Agent.
• A. 0. 1attesot4 pcnot Agent.
• HOMPISEEKIIIRS' mccunsrom.
,r0 Manitiklui, Sestet, +oven and All
• bate points. All rail via Chicago
and St, Paul. Sept. 1, 15 and 29,
• also via. Sarnia and Northern blaviga-
• thin Co's steamers leaving Sarnia
.3.30
Y. ni. August. 31. •
• ---Ainnipeg and return, $32.00,.
THE WEST., POINT RIOT.,
Happened During the Cadetship of
• • • Jefferson, Davis. •
• .. Closely connected with Benny Ha -
'yens' was the great Cadet riot'of Christ --
mai. 1826; in the middle Of Jelerseni
Davis' third year.. Before Christmas it
was rumored' througt,. the bap -stele
that Davis and other southern and
southwestern Cadets were going to ex:.
plain to the' other. members • of . the.
.corpethe mySteiles of eggnog. Cadets"'
Davise Tlightnan and Temple were to
Set the necessaries from Benny% but
It seems that'something•prevented, aidf
others had to' get the materiels:, The
authorities. were .sispicioue.... and Or-
deeed. the :inspectors . to stay • un all
tight to. keep cater; .• This angered the•
eadets and the prepa,ratIoes forthe
eggnog Went on. in the dark of the
,morning ot .DOC. Z.. the.. ineltetions
were sent" out.. Robert E. Lee and. .in;
_seph E. Johnston decllned J B. itta-
Virrightiindoth:7::
iiiie'ffreir-ettiTieepe,eXtetidine". the' •
invitelions when he heard:a rumor that
captain...pliteheoek wde...abroad. • He
ran'. back . to No.. S . north barracks,.
where the refreshments • Were celleeted,-
called out, "Put away tbat grog :boys; •
old Hitcti is coming," and looked up to
'dud that Bitcheoch was already in the
• room.' Davis was sent' to his quarters
linder arrest, fortunately for 'him. for
. . . .
after some ..hilarious Melee he went tot.
sleep Mad' dld not 'get into the riot
which -them began. The instructors
and ofticere werechased out of .the
halls into their own rooms and .there
• heisieged. The: cadets obtained aims
.and ..orgttnized. the Helvetian league to
'Protect themselves' against'. :the %born-
btirdiera Who, . they; beard, ' Were or
:clered. out toeubdue them.... Davis' room-
mate,. Waiter 'a Gnion of Miseissippe
'was • the leader 'of the Heleetlans.. •He.
:Secured a Pistol and tried to shoot
-Mdmonton and rettien, $42.50,
proportionate rates to other points.
./ in the ,West. Tickets good for 00
days. Pun information from any
amt. of the Grand Trunk Railway
SyPtem. •
:,CaPtitin Hitcheeelii Some of t e
cers were, badly brielsed With .etove
*odd that the •cade,ts, threw at them. •
'After an heat or twO the riot •wore
out. ' Litter , nineteen eadets, among
them Onion, were court niartialed and •
dismissed. Davis, with 'others*, was
kept long 'under .arrest and given de-.'
• merita.-Professor. W L FletnIng th
•Illetropol tan Magazine
' NEW ENGLAND WITCHES.
• Small Record Compared With .That
,
•
• of Other Countries.
• Yankees here so icing arid So fondly
Confessed their ancestral sins that the
feats sin the ease are little knOwn. So
- much Is saki about Salem that the exe-
cution of *Itches in Pennsylvania b
overlooked. The scant 'score of persons
hedged for. Witchtraft in New England
causes more Comment than the many
thousands legally burned for that '
erlme Ip Europe.
In all New England. neeording tO
Nathriniel . Hawthorne, nineteen. peik.
Sens were executed as witches. 'One
. more was accused' cif the crime and
for retutell to plead wits pressed tn.
• donde after the outdone of the day.
• The feats Coneetning the widespread
belief in Witchcraft and the enormoud
number of Witches killed may be
found in any eneyclopedia. Haydn*ii
• Dictionary'of .Datet bays: "More
• than 10C4006 per1hed,, Matti by' *
dames. In GertnanYe" Chatnberte En-
eyekipedla Bays': "In England and Seek,
land the wftch manist was. soMendiat
• Inter in 'oettlug in than on the cond.
tient; but when It did Oto It, was little
if at all feta virulent, the referdnitiori
• notwithstrieding." "The Wateber:. Of
victims in Scotland from' findto last.
bas been testininted at upward of
4,000." Dr; Spreeger, in hiii 4Ltfe of
MohititiMedbe eoniptitee the entire num-
ber of persone whet havetieetelitirned
as %itches' during the Christian eptich
at 11,000,opo:. , •
Witchcraft PereetUtienti In feece...Eng,
lend tOok place in 1602.. They Were all
done in sit Menthe. In England they
continued t111 well into the next, ado.
wry. In 1863 a • reputed wizard, Was
drowned hi a pond tit' Iledltigtittnie td
• EtteX. SAYS Chamber* "It Whit eon,
sidered worthy Of nottee that nearly
all the sixty dr seventy persons con -
corned in the oblige Were ot the Melia
trtideettleri OAS* bone Of the itgriciii-
tint! laborere beide" Mixed tee it the
orair.".
•
Curious Callings.
In India all Ceiling's are hereditary.
A ,baker' S son becomes a,baker, and
cohismsention9afttertehnimer.atzohnd .soT4eeemonfron41
wever.• More -startling.'
vocations than that of the maker of
broad: The,- people of Allahaliad
elmeeielly, are not ashamed of their
professions. Thirty-five deseribe them-
selves as. "men who be with threats
of violence," 226 are "flatterers- for
gain," .25 as "hereditary robbers,"
974 as "low blackguards," 29 as
"howlers at funerals,"• while as many
as 6,372 publicly announce : that they
are "poets." In :the other districts
one finds, . besides the ordinary pro-
fessions, 11,000 tonftorn players, 45
makers of crowns for 'idols, 145 ear
cleaners uncle most., curious of all,
"heieditary Pointers of .horses with
snots." The census containing this
interesting information iskept at the
Sanskrit college at Benares.
Facts About the Bible:
The first book printed from mov-
able types was the Latin Bible in the
year 1455. The first Bible printed in
vas -ire -the Indian' lar
gull& in 1663, by John. Eliot. ' The
first English, Bible printed in this
country was in 1782. The*first Bible
printed in New York city was in 1e/32.
George Washington .owned a copy.
The Bible is now printed in, more.
than 500 different languages, repro -
senting the speech of eight -tenths of
the repute:Hein of the world. In the
thirteenth century . a Bible test
£3,000, which was more than the cost
Of the two arches of London bridge
and as, much as the entire earnings
of a laboring man :for -fifteen years..
To -day the Bible •is the cheapest book
in the world. The entire 13i to -may
be obtained.for 16 cents and tee New
Testament for 6 cents.'
Salt Is a Necessity.
"Sale is a most neeessary article
Of food," says a well known scientist.
"All races of mankind, eithee civilized
or in a savage state, have,the same
regerd for salt. In parts f central
Africa the natives regard salt as a
luxury and will willingly. do Much to
obtain it. So much do they like the
taste of salt that the ashes of the
burnt veldt grass are, used to Season
their meat. These °Atli contain salt-
peter, which imparts the coveted
4aVor to food. Animals, too, are fond
di (alt. In a wild state they will
readily go. to a spring the water of
which has. been salted. Sportsmen
know this and use it'as a bait."
Sold Human Bones.
The keeper of the public ceinetery
of a small Bohemian town tieat
Prague excavated the older parts of
Abe graveyard and sold all the old
'bones he could find for industrial
PurpOseet, as he found that certain
mantifantarers paid more for human
bones than for thiiee) of animals, He
I had been earning money in this way
• for several years before he ,as de-
• teetad and autipetied from his *wt.
•. Mixed. ,
Mrs. Browne -she's 'forever coM•
plainIzigi tart 1 think she merel$' lacks
stamina. Mrs. Wittinpro-oh, rid; She's
got it; at any rate, that's what the doe -
tor Calls her &tense. She can't tdeet%
yea know, -Exchange.
Willing to 'Take Chattel*
'The give anything It 'you
would 'kiss me. The Maid -tut the
seientlits say that kisses breed.
'tate. The kfttiths novo mind that
1,6to ahead and. maks Itie an thiedid for
tinettiter,
oty
cored a
The storthen .
Busioe"
Colic% 04,:oto
THEN Decide on the Baskin. College
We ash the privilege of sending you
our intensely -interesting, handsomely.
illustrated FREE CATALOGUE, In
fact, you really owe it to yourself to get
a'copy and read it thoroughly before you
select 4 Business College to attend.
This Gaialogue explains all about our
school, our 'faculty, our different courses.
Tells why we hiinestly , believe our. Col.
lege to be the best for you. After reading the book we *they,
you to iudge for yourself. Sending for a copy places you Under no
obligation. Just mail your name and address on a postcard.
Student admitted eny time. Special openings September arid January:
The Forest City Business and Shorthand College
., LONDON. . • ONTARIO
JI WI WESTERVELT. Principal .1. W. WESTERVELT; Jr:. C.A.
Lena*"
Banking
This Company offers you an incoesinient of the highest dais.
It has become an Ordinary, thing
for a person to do banking hymen..
You can open an account by
sending 8100 or :more, And the
account has the same care and
attention as though the depositor
• canie in person. •
If•you 'desired yciu could take'
_
-out a ,Huron ..85.,Erie Debenture
febearinernitiWetee
per cent per
annum . ' The simplicity and safety
his forin investment appeals
to ihost who desire a convenient
and profitable Method of placing
11
their savings. The savings are
not so liable td:being broken upon
if deposited in Debenture font.,
• This Company .has been hi.
existence for forty-three .years. "-
Its name is a household word in
Ontario. :It bas a paid-up capital
I Alfv.,900 ddo and a Referve F e
of $1.,60.0,00-Critd*seta
Deposit your money here. ,It
Will be perfectly; safeand will be
'earning a good rate a interest -
oan & Savings Co.
London, Ont.
to Harvest Fields of Manitoba, -Saskatchewan and Alberta:
Well-paid work for over 25 000 men.
one-way second class to Winnipeg Free :tickets from
Winnipeg to points where harvesters are, needed,
east of Moose Jaw, and west of Mane Jaw to,
Alberta at one cent per mile.'
RETURN TICKET TO ONTARIO STARTING 'POINT FOR ADDITIONAL
$18.00, AFTER WORKING AT LEAST ONE MONTH '
Apply to tipket agent* for full conicatiorts
GOING DATES
from territory
NORTHWEST OF TORONTO. SOUTHWEST OF TORONTO EAST OF TORONTO
AUG.14 18 AUG 18 19 AstiEGP...r.220: 121.21,427
•
,
SEPT" 11 8 SEPT 1, 9
From 'intim on Toronto•Nodn - From endow. East of To ete.
Bo line, eve to &mete:dui:Hog From stations on Toronto-Samia North Bar line. to_ and inerding
Toronto -Senna line. line, and south there:fin Ontario. Sharbot Lake la Kingston.
Tickeii issued to womenbei not at balf.fare for children,
. •
SPECIAL TRAINS FROM ALL C. P. et, STATIONS ON
• AUGUST 14, 18 and 20. ApplY to nearest C.P.R. &bet mete
for leaflet ravine conditions, train dines, etc., or wee
C. B. FOSTER. District Paremer Aseett. TORONTO
M ESEEKE RS'
Excursion; afford best accom-
modation, with Tourist Sleepers.
Laiwe: SEPT. I, 15. 29.
• Ask agent about them.
CANADIAN NATIONAL
Aug. 29 EXHIBITION sept..14
KONT
Greatest and Best Attended Annual Exhibition in alitfieWOrld
EverySoProvince $109,000L00
• uls Massed Baisd
Its Products in Prizes and •Attractions Concerts
Grand. ArtIoun Coilection.
rroantithe Parisi 514n. and eamor Oid:Weida Oidierkom
• 1.;ssierssationsil Military Tattoo and Iteelletie Speeteele
The Siege of Sebastopol
With 900 rittiorstio.
International Dog Show lOoroationtil, Cat Show.
8.000 Live Stock On *View
rr tU*$iWtvn0HL 01111,
REAP PARES