The Clinton News-Record, 1910-02-17, Page 6loa INFoira•iitiocord
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..:-.--- DODD'S af,A,
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, biABETE's
,
,,z b 23 'ME Plt ' 11
. Irti
Mr. Redmond announced at a meet-
ing of the United Irish League that
he would put the Government out of
office unless it had both the will and
the power to deal with the Lords'
veto.
Repeat it :-"Slitleh's Cure ;will al-
ways cure my coughs and eolds,"
Winnipeg Ministerial ,..assocititiou te
,c onsidering the question ett, having the
. ladies take off their 'hats in churela •
Six men !wornkLId in .boiler ex-
plosion M a Witi11. near Bay City,
. • -•
eaere
Eitablisbed 179
FOR WHOOPING COUGH, CROUP.
ASTHMA. COUGHS, BRONCHITIS, SORE
THROAT. CATARRH. DIPHTHERIA
Vaporized Cresolene stops the paroxysms of
Whooping Cough. Ever dreaded Clroun can-
not exist where Cresolene is used. It at
directly on nose end throat, rualdug breathing
easy in the ease of colds. sorphes the sore
throat and stops the cou,:h. It is a boon to
sufferers of Asthma.
Cresolene is a powerful germicide. acting both.
as a curative and a preventive in contagious
diseases. Cresolene's beet recommendation is
its thirty years of successful use.
ror sale ty •1111 Drtalds
send lessee for De-
siripfiro Doo.klet
Cresolene Antiseptic
Throat Tabletsi oitunie
and soothing for •the
irritated throat. 10c.
Learning. _M_Iles Co-.
Limited; Agents, M.:M-
u-eel, Canute. soS
GODERICH
Monthly Horse Markets
Public Horse Markets will be held in
GODERICH
Friday, Feb. 18th
Friday, March llth
THE NEWS-11ECOHO'S
RUBBING Lill
FO H 190g-10
Much good reading
for little maney.
WE Nit LI Es
News -Record and Mail and I
Empire $1.50
News -Record and Globe 1.75
News -Record and Family
Herald and Star with
Premium.. 1.751
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Press. 1.75
News -Record and Adver-
tise' 1.75
News -Record and Toronto
Saturday Night 2.30
News -Record and Farmer's
Advocate 2.25
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and Dairy 1.75
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Free Press 3 25
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Free Press 2.75
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tiser 300
MONTHLY
News -Record and Lippin.
cott's Magizine ,25
01111111Mini
If what you want is not, in
this list let us know about it.
We ean supply you at less then
it would cost you to trona direet.
In remitting plettae do so by
Post -office Order, Postal Note,
Express Order ot Registered
Letter and address.
W. 411.Mitohei
News.,Retord * CLINTON
amimiumismiumummommos
•
CHASING CRIMIIALS.
ntern Pureieits Into The Arctic by the
Mounted Police.
Several thrilling Stories are given
in the "Century Magazine" of the re-
lentless wey in which a erinanal
traced down by "Canada's. Watch-
dogs," the men of the Royal North -
.west. Mounted Police. Many adven-
turous incidents in thee -lonely lives
sofetbeseiceeperenfotheoutpostant •I•hte •
Empire are vividly, related by Miss.
Agnes Dean Cameron.
Here ae the story of one. .of the un- •
'considered adventures te ordinary
round. of :police duties in the far
Northwest.
2. Lorileux Wien, who is now serv-
ing ft life sentence- in a Canadian
prison or .the murder of a two-year-,
old child,: had to be traelted down and
captured, :This -is how the' work woe
done:
"A mounted pelleensan -followedthe
wretch ton point neerer tbe- Pole then
many:explorers reach, and , get • his .
man. •
h .policeman stoned • a canoe
with provisions, end the .long and
betznr,lous journey up the lefeekeneie
River begen, For 1.200 'miles the little
proeession pushed its way along that
silent stream. •
"Atathe• bow sat the Indian, a man-
acled nnurderter, imaging torwerd no. a
lifetime within in
walls. In- the
stern, .paddle ' one lonely
policeman, representing outraged Pax
Brit/in/dee. •
• "The spier etrived eventuallY at
Reg -ii, : Wheee. ebe .eonstable heeded
over Ins.. prisoner, -saluted, an I felt
Melt three pace. Fie had no report
to maker there were. no . coinniendri-
tiotess..no fireworks," -
Anotheeincideut sho.ws agrim
pnliee.clittee which lasted six menthe.
"A • fugitive . having. fled from • a
ghastly. -Murder committed in -the
Klonddse, Major Constantine sent out
his sleuths on the -track, and for half
a year theyfollowed their men. South
from White }levee the constables .dog-
ged their nieirderer, picking •uptheir
first ealue in a littIe loggints eituni on
Puget • Sound. . - •
• "The bad man wastrailed from
Seattle to Butee, thence to Spokane.
'loan to Roseland, British -Columbia;
then at Ogden, 'Utah, we Sgt.?: Centel:en
Watchdogs, and on the Nevade-Cali-
fornia line, • • • -„ •
"Finally• ,the hunted man was ruo •
to earth at Laredo, where, waiving -
extradition.• he • waa • ..earriel le- to the
• coast of the Gulf of Mexico, tiedwes
put on -board a Britieh 'Vesseha
• ea
. RePeat Cute will el
ways cure. iny scoualis and solds."
' Beyond Soundings.
----Tbeeelloyetin Yacht Cluba
initial navigationnine Ta-
was marked by a tragio exhibition oi
sarcasm gone to waste. A retired lain
captain who hail set up a scbool for
seamen had been retained to impart
seine knowledge to the amateur tail
.oa this particular occasion, and 0E4
member of the large audience whicb
turned out to accntire wisdom win
. Commander Spain, R.N. The lattern
toleration for the sweet simplicity ol
'fresh water mariners' technique is riol
boundless; and his efforts to . conceal
it were not phenomenally successful
"Young fenows come to me," begs*
the instructor, "with nothing but tVii
:years' experience Wheeling -
"What dye say?" asked the con*
inlander in a slightly bored tone.
I To him. "wheeling" meant only twe
tbthbags-pushing a truck or riding icycle; certain not the quartermaa
)ter's or helmsman's occupation.
"I said young fellows come :to nu
with nothing but two years' experience
'wheeling," repeated the ex -merchant
eskipper in a slightly louder tone ol
;
voice.
"Wheeling? What's that?" The
,commander's tone by this time betray.
led irritation. ' •
; But the instructor was Unruffled.
He was used to uninitiated lubbers
'asking all sorts of questions, and had
no idea that he was. talking to a
Icommander of the royal navy: Hi
'leaned tolerantly towards his question,
•
er and said in a friendly, confidential
'sort of•way: '
"Steering, sir."
A PosiLiue Cure
for Indigestion
If yon have inorgestion, your food
ferments in the stomach ..etel bowels.
It- does more : It decays tind tha. nut,
retiotts* matter which should go • to
make new blood decays with it, and
this leads to an inipoverished con-
-clition of -the blood, to tiervoitsnees,
billiousness, sconstipation, sick. 'head-.
ache, ' bad breath which disgusts your
frientle, ahd -other disagreeable and•
unpleasant condition..
And'all thistrouble is ceusrd . by
the food that .doesn't digest, but fer-
ments -alai -a OW Mee' rotsl'a 'the
stomach, • ,•
And fermentation is. caused, by the
stomach not being • strong enough and
energetic' enough to thoroughly . rni
the food with the digestive :;.uices.
M -I -O -N -A is responsible for tens of
thousands of cures. in fact, it is such
a positive euro for indigestion and all
stomach troubles that it is guarante-
ed by.W., S, R. 11O1mes to etire. Or
nacioey back. • The price of a large
box of Mi-o-na 'tablets is 50 cents,
and they, are sure to promptly rel-
ieve • the Worst case of indigestion or
gastritis. Try them. •
(vaivorto Na-e-Afs)
cunes CATARRH, ASTHMA;
Brenchitit, Croup, Coughs and Colds, or
Money beck. Said aed guaranteed In,
GRANO TRUNK MrEt;
wiNTP,tt TOURS
to
Mexico, Colorado California and
Pacific Coast, Points.
Grand Trank Railway System
IS the Propular Route front all points
east trough Canada via Chicago.
10' E' A TURES
Double track, Fast service, finest
roadbed, modern equipment, uneVcell-
ed dining car serVice. All elments
of afety and comfort.
' or Tickets and fall information -
2.. 0. PATTISON, Depot Agent,
JOHN RANSFORD, Town Agent.
THE VOICE OF THE SELKIRK&
What is the meaning and trend of
their motion,
Thee fevered mid restless thinge at
our feet? '
They wander and fret like the waves
uf fiA ;wen,
With their rage as vain and then
hours as &et. -
'Trampled and earn by the hoeves
dieaster,
C'ertaken by thirsts and hungers and
fears.
Defiant of torrents no daring shall
They hurl their wills in the face ol
the years.
They come as the rainfall, and go as
the river;
We listen impassive and wonder and
Wait, -
Abiding the hour that our womb shall
deliver
The passiopleis eilence of -ultimate
fate.
'Tis we who have known not of tu.
mult and fever,
'Tis we who are patient and measured
ahd sure,
'Tis we who are done with desires lot
ever,
'Teti we who are passive, ,shall live
and endure.
'Tis we who are silent and changeless
and (Nail not,
'Tis we who persist through immov.
able peace,
'Ti' we who have seen that their ef.
forts avail not,
Exult, and survive, and never shall
ceaset
-By Arthur Stringer, in Canada.
West Monthly.
WATER IN YOUR BLOOD ?
Lots of people have thin watery
blood -they eat plenty but don't di-
gest. When digestion is poor, food is
not converted into nourishment -is
consequence the body rapidly loses
strength. To positively renew health,
nothing equals Ferrozone. It excites
Otero appetite, -makes the stomach
digest, forms life sustaining blood.
Abundant strength is sure to folloWe
If you need more vitality, extra en-
ergy, better nerves, then use Ferioz-
one the medical triumph, of the age.
Fifty, cents buys a box • pi fifty choco-
late coated Ferroecine 1.5blette. 6
The Isegislaturcs or Alberta and
Manitoba opened yesterdato '. -. •
,...._Tlieclett. re 01 the LO.O.F. has
. .,
forbidden Oddle ardiffingestrr--bees
• tonging to the -Oriental branch. •
Repeat it :--"Shiloh's Cure will al-
waYs .cure my cot.ghs and eolle."
.As Galt hat; abandoned the ...annual
horse show, Brantford 'will make an
attempt to secure it as an • ;mega
fixtere.
•
' HOW'S THIS
We affer One' [lunched Milers'. Re-
' rard for aoy (sae° of. Catarrh that,
Ballotbe cured ,liy liall's • Ca.tarrh
Sore. P. J. CHENEY & Co.,
Toledo, (L
We, the titidersigied, ,nase known F.
. Cheney for the. Met 15years, and
elieve hint Perfectly honorable in all
usinges transactions? sand 'fitienetally.
Ble , to carry Out any. otiligatione
'nidobyiiis firm. ' • •
Welding, Menem in Martin,
Wholeeale Druggists, 'Toledo, 0.
• • • •
, Catarrh Cute is taken .inter -
ally as•ein*g • directly upon the. blood
. .
nd tnucous surfaces of the. system.
.'estimohials sent free. •Price, 75a. Per
, Sob
Take. Hall's Family Pills tor constie
.ld .. .311 druggists.
' .
• The body of Robert Bonita, the
Ottawa : teecher, who disappeared
some time ago, has been found on. the
shore of Okanagan Lake, B.C.
. The condition cif King Gustave of
Sweden is iinprovilag• steadily. ,
The Grand Trunk Railway is seek-
ing an Geary, to Providence,
The debate on the Pruestan. reform.
hill began in -the Diet at Perlin yes-
terdays: • ' •
WHY BRONCHITIS IS SERIOUS.
Because it becomes a chronic con-
dition that verges •closely on Con-
sumption. "Catairhozone" is the
tnost pleasant, simple -and s certain
cure. Tey Catarrhoznees
Bennet C. ;Silver, who Was accused
of Black Hand practices at N,ew York
pulled out his moustache', one hair at
a time, in an attempt to Make it im-
possible for a witness to identify
netiewlemita.
PHOTO SURVEYING,
Cfitlifithe Firet. In Science That Has
Ravolutioniesd Work.
Surveying by means of photography
is now practiced with great, accuraeY.
The system ' was first used evith sue -
cess in 18.3es and it is interesting to
note that it is practically a Canadian,
idea. At all events it has been far
f.nore-extensively employed- here that
in any other country. The process
has been named photo-topogrephy-
another new word for. the dictionary
-for the reason; that it consists in
photographing a region from various
high levels and making topographic:
maps front the data ao secured. The
difficulties encountered in surveying
much of the country in the far nortla
west of Canada have been most fers•
midable. Indeed- it was found quite
impossible to carry on such work in
the regular way in the recent topo-
graphieal surveys made Wong the
boundary line between' Alaska and
northern Dritieh Columbia and the
Yelson Territory. Ily means of photo
enmity, however, the Canadian Goys
ernment surveyors have obtained re-
markably necurate records, but even
by this comperatively sunhazardous
method lives have been lost. So an
idea may 'thus be had of the value of
thie new system in unexplored re-
gions, where the extreme ruggedness
of the country and the climate make
the surveyor's work under the, best
circumstances most dangerous and
difficult. • The use • of phiatography in
this way is dessribed in a recent paper
read by Mr. P. W. Greene, befornathe
Canadian nociety of Civil Engineers,
an extract from which is here quoted:
"The instruments employed on 'the
Alaskan boundary survey are two, \the
camera arid the ',transit. On accotint
cif the nature of the country and the
climatic conditions encountered, both
are necessarily of. the simplest possi.
tile design. . . The caniera rests
on triangular base, 'identical with
t base el the transit, so that both
iney fit the same tripod. The eaThera
outfit complete, itlelildirig ease. 7
plittesholders; mid 14 plates, weig,hs
about 19 pounds.. . , Compared
W ith -most Europeaq instrumenM the
whole equipment is very sinipl•e,
'A photographic survey is carrierl
on necessarily , in connection with a
triangulation scheme, by means Of
which the positions of the .chniern
sta Lions 'are determined. Tlie triangu-
Melon stations are so chosen es to
form good camera stations. The quali-
fications of a sa.tisfactoev camera sta-
tion are: (1) a good.view of the sine
rounding country, unbloeked by• elo-e
or higher peaks; (2) that photegeaphs
taken from It shall . coetain- points
seen .froni other .stations ; and (3) tilut
it. intersection. on• any points to be
plotted from two eamera stations shall
not he teo Route. A judicious selec-
e it b e stations to avoisl both
duplications and -omissions,. is the
Most diffieult part. of photogrephic
work and requires thorough ander-
stadding Of the methods of plotting
and- also of the practical difficulties
met with in the field.
A full clinenngspeety usually Con-
sists of five men. On reaching the
suminit of a peak the observer itnil
recorder immediately shirt ofi the
•eaniera wor k whihe the inen y
themselves gathering locks for Ihd
calm which supports ethe trai
lion signal, The cemera is lei r 1 el tie
as an ordiritiey transit, mat :ifter
foeusing. is reedy tor ex postieee A
series of :Coven nihotograplis is anion
inehiding the eompleta ronnd of the
horizon, •e'each . photograph slight' •
oeerlapping the lest. The points- to
keen in .inind are that. tins camern
shall ril ways be- focussed pe described
arid time ehall be level before ex,
'nosing. :The .eximenres vary fret)" 10
to 60 eeconds. Aheliaip peak or tiny
•ver.,11-defiltede point ie chosen in •the
field of circle photograph,. and this is
slsetelied anti. nrietly described' by the
reeoaler. • Ile /Ilse records the .0E-
posure end the ranee exposed, . .
When the photographic work is.. fin-
ishial the transit ie set up. in the seine
place eue.1 the points theetioned.above
ar, fried hi to eoure peek or station
Of ktiewn meitiate. . . . 13y means
the• sketchee arid descriptions, the
points may be easily rechguizet. on:
the photoge•apies. . .' •
•
What Detained lier.
• Sae was tech and she was good-
. natineel, tWo things. to 'recommend,
' her, but When she first bought a big
;lore.= in Toronto's meet feshisnnable
strces. one cm trunifelly say that
-swinge `she hadn't arrived."
• .Finally one kindly dispesed ,persoif
decided to call son her ate home daye-
and did so. Tire maid, however, ex-
pluined that ."\4:11S • not
at hotrie." The cense., who thought
calls %we what :were wittitiel, was
seinewhat p=rpleaesi at this new as-
pect ot the ease, and asked "I3ut
n 't this her day?"
meid admitted that it 'was, and
mereover, •explaineithat •he' mietress
5.115 30 the houses • Finally, she said,
•"Weil, it you'll eon, • in, I'll .go and
and out if she'll see you." .
The caller weited 111 the • big draw-
ing-rooni While' the clock ticked away
the minutes mail at least twenty had
„passed, and. „then. euddenly the . door.,
was opened and in walked a figure
simply laden . with ornaments which.
at • first ,glance seemed to include
everything esutilly found in a jewel-
er's winude froth diver a tiaras to
chains. and ties:Islets and brooches and
Pins all apparently of great value.
"Now thiJ call kind of you, right
clown kind," voiced the •walking dia-
mond mine 414 she plumped down in4
an etiey ehtor beside her guest, "You
see 1 was in the attic) scrubbing it
out, when you arrived, and 1 just had
time to throw on a few jewels before
I came doe ti.,"
....„,11611111111.1111ftweeewermeom.......woess„,
Plain Talks toWomeno
Children's Skin Troubles, Cuts, etc.
Every healthy child gets them and
every mother has to "put som41iing
on." What do YOU put on 0
4
' When yott put an ointment on to a
child's' skin it gets to the blood
through the pores just as surely. afl if
you pu.t it into the child's stomach.
Did you ever think of that 0 T/ovtimu
portant, therefore, thab the salvo or
balra should be pure
Zatt•Bnit 16 absolutely plre ; contains no
animal fat; no miherel coloring matter; sea
said &stringent!' ; no burning antieeptics-yet
it fif antieeptio 1 /e is puede, herbal, Ana
that meete all the needs of the skin in that
superior and all-powetful way in which nature
gilono providee.
Children like Zane:Bak best 1:itemise Ise it(ion
as applied it steps the pain and the matting
of the irdory ot sore piece. Healing then este
ikiimmedietely,
ThWOOkati ts StihntS, 600,
*uolommoimuommuo
THEIViftiLLY 'Oat
Toronto Reporter Who Was* Celebrity
In--tia Day.
The playgoer Of thirty -years ago -
who took an interest in theatricat nothing gave relief. At times I found
criticism reealla the writings of a it neeessary to have all the doors
newspaper man known its the "Wool, and Windows open to get my breath.
ly Horee," who was *known in hia When. in "despair I beard` of "Catarrh -
own family circle W • W. Mrillituns,' °Zone."' I used it anct nn,., Per''
• February 17* 1010
PROVED IN MOUNI FOREST.
Every doctor in this town tried his
best to relieve Mrs. J. Withom of
Asthma ; none succeeded. "For years
she states, "I was a dreadful sufferer;
an wag fur linee on -the -stag -of
The Toronto Globe. He derived bis
• sobriquet not frum bis persona t ap.
pearanee, for he wits malt anti
but from the feet that in winter time
lie wore a very shaggy overeoat. More,.
over, he ,was elweys attended by
large bull -dog, and as Toronto was a
good cleat mailer then than it ie
•now, Ins attracted much attention on
Icing street. lie wrote in a pictures-
que style, and hie judgments were ex
cathedra -the final word, so to speak,
on a performance.. His advent in the
lobby filled theenanagement with awe,
and when he extended his august ap-
proval, it was in no unnaesieurecl terms
of praise.
First productions on any stage
Were not so frequent in Toronto then
as they aro now, but dining his reign
there was . one event of great import-
ance, Mrs, Scott Siddons, who had
won fanie ane riches as a drarnatie
reader, decisien to become an actress,
and eluese that place as the city ip,
which she should make her. first Ap'.
stp!a(ei jadtro;ance in that capacity. It was in
a Shakespearian role, Beatrice, in
"Much Ado About Nothing," it is
astiticliwhtheinl"sof.
Woolly arse" prepar.,
The riva71 morning paper, The Mail,
did not at that time have a regularly
constituted dramatic editor, but on
its staff were e renal men who could
write an intelligent critigne= an a pee-
forMance . f th = lLind. Mr. Bunting
picked out his JII0'.1, literary youth and
told him to take all the space 111
vaulted. A lie young man, who was
learned in Seel:vele:ate came back to
the offloe, and, elite admitting the
personal b ,auty and • charm •of Mra.
Scott Siddoas end her,ebility to recite
poetry, etided that she was not an
actress i.t all, and probably, never.
would be. 'Hie young man was a wor-
shipper et the feet of. Adelaide Neil-
aon, es was everyplaygoer of his gen-
eratioo, mid eorne of his comparisons
were oaious.
On the sante morning The Globe'
O7212. out, and the "Woolly' Horse"
had exhausted the, dictionary and
Barelett's • "Familiar Quotations" to
find words of praise for the interpre-
tation. MIS. Scott Siddons purchased
lt thousend copies of The Globe, and.
• tier manager went out looking for the
man who had dared to "roast" her,
As the ctrees lead many social friends
in Toronto, the controversy aroused
public attention, and for a teW days
reerbetinations ivere-fueiou.
gained a temporary • victory, • and the
young man on The Mail was told that
. lie need not do any -More neritingecin
Shakespeare and the interpretation
*thereof -it was hinted that he was
more useful, as a police reporter. eV
motiths later, 'however, Mrs. Scott
Sidnotee tried her fortunes in London,
lasen xtd,. The.doyen of English erities
at thst time was ;Toseph Knight, Of
. The Athepaetini, and the young man
�n The Torohto Mail watched to =see
. is haf ho might say. To his delight
Knight teok orecisety the same aiew.
•
of leer ecaieveinent as had TheMail
. after h .n first appearance On any. -
singe Hie critique was reprjnted, and'
dtl(i,si,e'a!tWo011y II:oreer". sustained a 'tardy
It wes Wil1hiiis who . accompanied
the Bari- of Dufferin through Abe.
Northwest Territories for The Globe
when the Governor-General made his
trip acmes the prairies. He traveled
by buckboeril, tied one reason why he
was .assigned : for OLIO task Was that
he had ben ell overethe Nottnyeeat
trails :soma yeare PreviouslY. before
.fital ereelc'Terento. • At one point
repreenntativee of certain of the
tribes •.evere aernibled: te , do 'homage
to Her Mejestyee yiceroy, and one of
the chiefs. of. tee Crean' niede e •s,peeeli
in hiii own tongoe. It Was notieed -
that he mad = pointed eeferenee to
't he . Glob' cerrespendent who was
'present teking notes, looking at him
:pointedly and saying' something. iri
genial tone .atter •the' formal. words of
weleenie n=l horpage had been..tztter-
Thr, .Artsitior..(011eiis1 x.v.as iOue•
toelinow .whit be had said, and .it
trenspireil that the chief had declared
that the tribe Mid fell additionally
honored by the feet that he had
brought .their "little •red-haired bro.
thei" vit1i nine afterwarde
wont south -and . became the leading
welter en nooses 'in the .eity of • New
Orleans, and is said to be still alive
in this south,
U. S. Money In Canada,
That United t.e.tes capital is inter.
ested in Canadian industries te the
extent of, tit least $224,000,000 is a
statement ihade in an article in last
week's Monetary Times, which has
just cempleted a. four months' invese
tigation into the matter, -
The artiele is supplemented with
list of 168 United States firms with
brancl(factories in Canada.
Connnenting on the oft -repeated cri-
ticism that British capital does not
partieipatis in this induetrial develop.
meta, it is noted that the British in.
vestor hitherto has been content to
invest in Canadian securities which
bring him a small return, give him
tittle risk and secure him no control,
Last year, Canada's bond businese
with Great Britain amounted to only
$61,000,000 lese than the total United
States industrial investment in this'
country.
Following is a seminary of the
figures given: .
One hundred and sixty-eight corn.
parties, average mipital $00,000, $1000
80015"°. 3. investment M 13.0, mills and
timber, 450,000,000.
U. S, investment in B.C. mines, $50,-
000,000.
$2LAn,d000deals in 13ritish Columbia,
Packing plants, $5,000,000.
11, S. investment in lumber and
mines prairie provinces, $5,000,000.
Instilment distributing houses, $4,•
boo,000.
Land deals, prairie provinoes,
000,000.
Total, $226,800,000.
•
The Root of Neuralgic Heada.cht.
Is an irritable condition of the ner-
ves aused by cold. Relief eOntea
quickly from InerViliner the great paht
reliever of to -day. "1 consider Nor -
virtue a magical remedy fiir neural-
gia," writes Mrs. 1i 0.4larris of
Baltimore, tut 1 nem worry if Net-
viline is in. the house. A few applica-
tions never yet tailed 16 Mire the pain.
I can also recommend Nerviline for
etiftness, rheumatigin and muscular
pains," In use nearly fay years.;
try Nervilint yirrself,
•
fectly,-cursecl, This proves beyoad
doubt that any ease of Asthma , is
curable with Catarrliozone. No rem-
edy so pleasant none so absolutely
arrhozone" yourself; it's guaranteed,
iftwo4mororontdedr.4-4,44,*4,
Wheat From Far North.
The Dominion Trade and Commerce
Department has received from Cana
nusaioner Perry of the Northwest
Mounted Pollee, a sample of wheat
grown in 190Ei at Fort Leard. Fort
Leard is an the River Leard, which
empties into the MacKenzie River at
Fortt. Simpson and is situated about
twenty miles north of the eoth para.
lel and twenty miles east of the Yu.
ektur Territory. The -grant Inspectors
at Winnipeg give the saMple the
grade of No, 2 northern,
The recent price of this grade is he.
tymea _04.,airmi 95 gents.
• •-"".
We Now Make and Galvanize
Our Own Wire
For many years we have seen where the
quality of Wire coold'he improved. So we
have set a ne* dtandard for the Wire in
Frost Fence, But. to got this better Wire,
WO must Make and Galvanize it ourselves.
Heretofore, we, like all other Fence -
Makers, had to buy our Wire ready.made
and ready -galvanized.
The Wire formerly used in the Frpst Fence
was made under our' own instructions, I
gave better satisfaction than most Wire, bu
we knew that we could makefar, better.
SO now we have erected special Mills In
these Mills we have ins tailed the most
modern Wire Drawing and Galvanizing
equipment in existende.
So we are now equipped to make better
Wire than has over been used in Canada.
And we are the only Fence -makers in this
country Making and Galvanizing Wire
exclusively for Fences.
Nearly every Wire Fence ia Galvanized
too thinly for Canadian purposes. That's
why so many rust about twelve or fifteea
years sooner than they should.
Frost scientific Galvanizing is about Too
per cent. thicker and smoother than that isie
any other Fence imade in Canada. Yet k
Will not chip, scale and fall off.
No matter whers you look, or how severe.
ly you test, you simply.cannot find another
Fence bunt azul Galvanized for permanener
like the Frost, Send for free Booklet.
The Frost 'Wire Fence Co., Ltd.,
Hamilton, Ontario 23
Agent is Wanted M Open Districts
9,
140S Fence
Local'
W. Stogd ill, Vitrr ; Wm. leterilceylil;UHctieesrtges Wm. Addison, LondeehOre
•
VIAMS1
...../OMMOINSOMMMEIMMO1•11;
o.
Brewed firom se -
ASK FOR lected hops, choice
barley malt and
pure spring water,
with the utmost
d at
the orewery depots
to ensure proper
handling. •That is
Why Labatt's Ale
is equal to the fin-
est surpassed .by
none, though it
costs consumers only about half as much as imported goods.
( LOND'ON
India Pale Ale
ommowernammernesimernmemimmismesemenew
Your savings are the safeguard
• of your future, - You want to
place them where there is no
chance whatever of losing them. -
...Yen can do that by depositing.
them with this Company, or 'by.
taking out a Debenture for $100
or more, for one or more years.
By law no depositor or debenture
' holder can lose one dollar of
principal or interest while any,
I1
assets remain to cover his
Investment. The assets cif this
Company exceed $11,000,000, so
that there is no chance of IOSS.
In fact there is no financial in-
stitution in Canada which can
offer you more abseilute certainty
of safety.
'Correspondence will be gladly
entered into with those interested
in banking by real!.
an & Savings Co., London, Ont.
Make Each Animal Worth
25% Over Its Cost
.On of a Cent a Day
Nobody ever heard of "stock food" curing the bots or colic, making
hens lay in winter, incrPasing the yield of milk five pounds per cow a day,
or restortng run -clown animals to piuMpness and vigor. •
When you feed "stock rood" to your cow, hbrst, svvine or poultrY.
You are merely feeding them what you are growing owyour own farm.
"THE Your animals do need not more feed, but Something to help their
EEL" bodies get all the good out of the feed you give them so they can get fiet
2:02i and stay fat all year round: also to preventdipease, Cure disease and keep
them up to the best possible condition. No stock food" cart do all these
I awn -Winner of
' things. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC tan and does. It is
any Pacer on
Grand '48 Not a"Stook Food" But a "Conditioner"
ROYAL PURPLE STOCK s PECIFIC contains no grain. nor farm products. It Incteases
yield Of milk from three to fivepounds per ow per day before the Specific has been used two
weeks. It makes the milk richer and adds flesh faster than any other preparation known,
fed with ordinary materials at ten weeks.
Young calves fed with ROYAL PURPLE are as /arse atsix weeks old avhey would be when
ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC builds up run-down animals and restores them to
Plumpness almost muttony. Cures bots,1 colic, worms, skin diseases and debility permanently, •
Dan MCEwan, the horseman, says: I have used ROYAL PURBLE STOCK SPECIFIC
Persistently in the feeding of 'The Eel,' 2.02t, largest winner of any pacer on Grand Circuit in
7905. and 'Henry Winters.' 2.04. brother of Allen Winters,' winner of $36.000 in trotting stakes
in woe These horses have never been off their feed since I commenced using Royal Purple
Specific almost a year ago, and! will always have it in my Stables."
Pal urpie
STOCK AND POULTRY SPECIFICS
, One 50c. package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC wittiest one animal seventy
days, Which is a little over two-thirds of a cent a da' most stock foods in fifty cent packages
last but fifty days and are given throe times a day. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC
given but once a day, and lasts half again as long, A SIM _pail containing four times the
amount of the fifty tent peeeage will last 280dayk. ROYAL. PURPLE wilt increaSc the value
of yoUt stock 25%. It is an astonishingly quick fattener, stimulating the at:Tents and the
relish for food, assisting nature to digest and turn 'teed into flesh. Asa hog fattener it is a leader,
, It will save many times its goat in veterinary bills. ROYAL PURPLE POULTRY SPEC!.
PIC is Oar otheN HpeeifiC for poultry, not for stock. One 60 cent package will loaf twenty-five
hens 70 days. or a pail costing $1.60 will last twenty-five bens 230 day*, which is four timesmors
material for only three times the cost. ,It makes et '' laying machine " out of your hens
summer and winterairevents fowls losing flesh at moulting time, and cures poultry diseases.
Every package of ROYAL PIMP 1,13 STOCK SPECIFIC or POULTRY SPECIFIC is
guaragtuedse.
de
ROYAL PURPLE on Ont of Imite are:nets and IOW other preparation on another
animal in the same conditions after comparing results Yoti will sayROYAL PURPLE has
thent all beat to death, or else haekcomes your money. ainett-sesk
your Merchant or write us for our valuable 32 gag., booklet on cattle
and poultry diseases, containing also
cooking recel nes and full t`mtlicularn about
ROYAL. PURPLE STOCK and P0731.4
TRY SPECIFICS.
If YOU tantint get Royet Purple
SPecifies front merchants or resents, we
sem supply yon direst, exorees
on recent of sine a pail for either Poultry
Si" Stult Specifics.
Mahe moiler e 'Hag ns nue agent 10
nous district. Weitd'to e terms.
Poreate t,y Alt up-to-date merchonta.
V113.L.il'onkln$.11fg5t6., Lotdo, gam
401 Ptitele Steck at el ;tattltey see31a ati I. free ii)tettet ate 'tot iS styli,: by W. 9, 11. if tat