The Clinton News-Record, 1910-04-28, Page 6++++-++++++++++++4+++.
+ • STATIONERY for PAVERS -1;
+ As the. 'years go by it is +
+ Pleasing to note that more far- +
+ niers write lettere on printed +
+ letter -heeds and have their +
+ cards on their envelopes. Zt +
+ was, mice thought that net Otte +
+ could do this unless he was en- +
+ gaged in the peattuction of some -4;
+ specielity or _breeding some +
+ pure blood farm stock, No +
+ One believes that new. Let the +
+ larin be named and then give +
+ that 'with the natne ei the o'Wh-
er s,ad his postoffice address +
4'4+ and the business is done. The +
+ cost of printing is. .trifling +-
. + comparison with its benefits. +
° + Let The News -Record attend to +
• + it fctr y.ou,
'4..
. ++-f+4--4- +4-
Sessafloaal UpOrielICIOS 10
Search of a Cues •
$53 FOR ONE SPROIALV.A,LONE1
elle varied and costly experiences of
some people who suffer frorskin, dis
eases and get into the hands of im•ealled.
specialists s• are rarely heard of
AL.,est daily the proprietors of Zant-Buk
aro receiving letters of gratitude from
persons who have been eared by Zeal,
Bolt, and in many cases these letters
tall a story of suffering in the searCh
fur Cure vhich truly pitiful.
bir. Arthur Fairbank, of 547 Lens-
es, Avanuo, Toronto, says: "Some
ilux ago I had a bad eruption on
my forehead, v,hich I attribute to
• ,16. infected at tne barber's.
e tee eruption became very sore and
tea e.d ov:r.r my scalp in the form
et • pen sores. I went to,a doctor, who
ti r•.1 v<1 me for it. Still the sores spread
az.z.! almost the whole of my head was
I.Ccetz:(1. .As the doctor's treatment did
a.e very little good I left it off And
various home remedies. I also
t.ii taking various aperient medicines
to Try and exite the outbreak through.
tle Wood. Still it:was in vain!
"i
4hen 1 tried blood mixtures, but,not
one
of them did Me any good. I was by
clat time hi a shocking eonditibn, and:
as a last resource I went to a, skin
specialist. He treated rae for a period
aid it cost me over $50, but the Sores
got no bett,er. They would itch and
born at times unt11-I was nearly mad.
"Cao day a friend asked me why I had
not tried Zam-Buk and gave me a little.*
That little bit of Zam-Buk did me more
gooti than all the long treatment I had
had frozn doctors and specialists, / im-
mediately sent for- a supply of the balm •
and started right in to gyve it a.,proper
triz 1. Very soon began to see and feel
a ,rest difference in the sores and I:.
knew that at last I had got something
that would curei nae. Zara-Bult cored
1..e and at a trillteg cost. Indeed onlY.a
feor boxes were necessarY to do it."
Not only for skin diseases, but for
erase burns, Melees, piles, inflamed
surfaces, etc., Zani-Bult is .unequallede
AU druggists and stores, 60e, box, or
post free from Zam.BuIr Co., Toronto,
for price. Refose imitations. ..
A W011144 believed to be imitating
front leprosy wail teUnd in * crowd-
ed tenement in New York.
Owing to the rush of ehareholdere
to unload, there has been drop M
the pr:ee of rubber shame in Lon-
don.
Jewels valued at half a million idol- •
tars have been stolen from the Uspep-
ski Cathedral in the Kremlin, at Mose
tow.
The warship brake, invented by
Canadian has beentested on the Un-
ited States battleship Iediane and
has proved a emcees. •
ways Cure my coughs and colds,"
Repeat it ee-Sbiloles Cure Will al -
The 6"ernpase in China.
It is, generally admitted that the
Chinese used the compass at 4 very
early period to emiclo them in their
journeys woes the vast plains ot Tar -
Lary. They made little images, the
arms et which, moved by a freely see,
1 pendecl magnet, pointed continually
toward the north. An apparatus of
this hind was presented to nmbassa-
dors from Cochin China to guide them
on their homeward journey some 1,100
years before the Christian era. The
knowledge thus possessed seems grad.
uallr M havo traveled westward by
means of tne Arabs, though it was
over 2,D00 years afterward before
it was generally applied among •tho
peoples of western Europe.-
New verston..
A echoolboy was aSited to write "in
his own words" the story efthe prodi-
gal
son. Ile wrote:
"He wasted his substance in right,
eous living; and when he eame back
his lather killed for him the fat head'
ed celf."--eLondon Pun.
Moetreal Street Railway Company,
hap granttd an increase of pay to
motormen and conduotors,
Vesselmcn are taking contracts for
wheat at one cent a bushel from Fort
. William to Buffalo,
George Nichols, snrt of a North Ox-
ford farmer, was fo.und it a field with
. his aka fractured and is not likely
to recoVer,
Mr. lefeNicoll of the C.P.R. extiects
that the mechanie§ of the ' eastern
shops 'will accept terms as the 'west-
ern men did. . • '
Provincial Constable Lane dropped
dead .at 2�ission, B.o., after a .fight
• With A lot of tramps, who had boar-
ded 4 passenger .imin. • '
THE NEWS -RECORD'S
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We can supply you at leaS than,
it would cost yoa to send direct.
In remitting please do so by
Post -office Order., Postal Note,
Express Order or Registered
Letter Alta address.
NeleiliRectird if CLINTON
J. Mitebell
Repeat. it :-Shiloh's. Cure will al-
ways coremy coughs and colds..."
it Montreal traveller claims to have
seen Miss„ Priestlatel; the missing
Jarvis girl) On tWo or three occa-
sions in the Maritime Provinces
Ten girls .and a man were killed by
a boiler exploslon in an Austrian
match factory,
A French art exert' saysthere ere
htinclreds of spurious Rembrandt por-
traits itt America; e
Mr. Lloyd -Gorge reintroduced his
Budget of 1910,in the British Idolise
of Com -mos yesterday.
Dr.. Wilgus of the New York State
Lunacy Commission says that One
out of every four immigrants to the
United States is an undesirable. .
James S. Havens, a Democrat, run-
ning on a tariffeeform platfornt, car-
ried Monrod :County, N.Y.) yesterday
in a .CongreSsional election.
• •
THE 'SOURCE OF NEURALGLse.
'It runs ...hand he hand' with poor
blood and weak nerves,. Health runs
down, nerves - get irritable, rieteralgfc
texture follows, For the moment ap-
plicatione may relieve -but he Moro -
°uglily eitre, •tlie system Must be
strengthened with nutritious blood.
What can equal .Perrozone? It in-
creases • the •appetite, forms abund-
ance of. rich life-giving blood, • sup-
plies nutriment and building mater-
ial for wornout • nerves. Perrozone
. Completely cures ' neuralgia. Every
root and branch of the disedse it kills,
Absolute success .in every case. Stop
suffering -fifty cents buys Ferrozone.
Fifty chocolate coated tablets in .a
box at any drug store.
GRANO TRUNK RserisTEtlY
FROM CLINTON 'XO TORONTO
- AND RETURN
$3.65. •
with 50C added for adiniesion
to Canaditte National lioise
Show. Tickets good going Ap-
ril 26th, Return limit May
2nd,
HOIVIESEERERS
•EXCURSIONS ,
Winnipeg and return $32.60.
Edtnonton and return $42.50.
• Via Chicago or Sarnia and
Northern Nave Company.
• Full information as to dates, etc.,-
fr•om
JOHN' RANSFORD, Town Agent.
A. 0. PATTISON, Depot Agent.
CRANtl TRUNK RSIVISLTVEtfY
•The
• INTERNAT/ONAL
ROUTE TO
WESTERN CANADA:
Through the metropolis of Chicago,
thence via Duluth and Fort Frances,
or through Chicago and the twin
cities of iVfinneapolis and St. Paul.
110MEI8EEXERS' EXCUMIONS
APRIL, 10TII, MAY 8RD AND 17TII.
WINN/PEG• and RETURN, .$32.00
EDMONTON Mid RETURN, $42.50
IICEETS good for 60 DAYS.
Prk,portiona.te rates to other points
in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Al-
berta.
Above rates apply on certain crates
via Sarnia and Northern Navigation.
Company.
Secure tickets and full information
from-.
.10/IN RANSPORD, TOWtt Agent,
A. O. PATT/SON° Depot Agent
ellaton News.Roc-orol
'Old' &Ont.-V.110MM itY.
Givers and Takers Ara the Two Greet
Divisions of Mankind.
The world of humanity is divided
into two classes -those who give and
those who receive. The perfect wo-
man is she who understands how to
receive as well as how to give, who i
as graceful in acceptance 48 8ales18 i
bestowal.
"I am sorry for that girl," said
friend of mine, with whom 1 had bee
discussing peoele in general, and
very tharnung young gir/ in partieu
lar, at whose corning out celebration
we had both been present the after
noon before.
"Why do you say such a thing?", I
asked in some surprise. "To me she
has always seemed to belong to the -
highly -favored, elapse of mortals that
the -gods have exempted from the -or-
dinary -cares of humanity,"
"It is net a question of environs
mut/ was the answer, "but of tem-
perament. She will always give more
than she receives. Emotional, aensi.
tive and impulsive, the .very qualities
that render her so attractive, are
those thhe must bring her sorrow. A
girrof her type must eternally be at
a disadvantage With the world around
her, on whom she squanders her PIM-
pathy and tenderness in vain."
"But," said I hesitatingly, "such a
nature as you deribribe finds compere
sation in the mate joy of giving. If
the sensitiveand emotional suffer
keenly,. they also enjoy keenly. It is
natural, for such a type to express it-
self liivishly without a thought Saf re-
compense deserved, or looked. forward
o. Like the sunshine and sweet air
and the perfume of flowers, the terns
peramental giving out is impartial and
he act blesses the giver."
"Then you are making littoral a,ppli,
ation of the wiectozn thee 'it is more
leased to give than to receive,' Is
hat what you axe trying to bring
orne tome?" inquired my friend.
"Not altogether," I seid, "for peos
•le differ widely, and it seerns to inchai the blessing is broad enough to
enefit both classes. Isn't it right for
he fiowers to open their petals to the
iSS of the stun? Isn't it equally so
or the two classes -these who give.
nd those who receive. The perfect
mean is she who undarstands how to
eceive as well as how to give, who is
a graceful in aceeptance as she is in
estowal. •
"If she understands and appreciateg.
right; the joy of giving for herself
hould she, throughherself, be un-
illing deny that joy to others?
rom the smiles which come natural.
ter herelips, even to the bestowal
her own dear self, a woman thrills
the joy of giving. It makes as
uch or more the happiness of her.
fe• as her joy in receiving." -Mary
Ives.
"gvalit9 and,Gaisty ere Their Oahe
Oheracteristies.
-There are no ma zinit4.11 women in
,atin." says Senorita Carolina Mar.
ai
l, nstructor in t nis-I at Welles.
•y College. "The charm 0 the Span
4 1 women lies in their extreme wo.
4au1iness. They are petite end vivid,
tad nothing beetles home s and
dutie
Vomanlike pleasure, such as house.
21 keeping and eewing, appeals to them.
They do not indulge in athletics or
A Rejected Novel.
• Before he had achieved fame the
French novelist Xavier de hfontepin,
on conclutling a long and elaborate
tale of adventure, took it, eull of hope,
to a publisher, :who promptly declined
it on even the most advantageous
terms, to the -writer's,poignant morti.
fication. Twenty years afterward this
identical publisher besought at hia
hands a sensational story, one of those
,serials which were the delight of gris.
• ettes, offering any .priee within rea-
son. •"Well,' .said De Montepin,
• Will oblige you, but my terms must be
very heavy. want 20,000 francs."
After many protests it was paid. In
'telling the story De ,Montepin used
to add, "The beat of the business was
that it was the very same Story which
he had .previously rejected and which
I had in varioue directions'endeavored
in ram to •dispose of."
•
• Church Encouragement of Sport.
Ecclesiastic recognition • has been
given the sport of skeeing in Norway
in the special short, early serviees
herd in • all the churches during the
season for the couve.nienee of sheers.
These services are called skeeing pray.
ers, and a Stranger coming into the
sacred edifices on •such an occasion
might think he had blundered into the
barracks Of a skee corps. However,
the: services' are much liked and very
tvell• attended, and there is no differ.
ence, of opinion 'about the. wisdom of•
the church authorities in thus entour.
aging a sport- leaking so strongly for
healthy bodies and therefore going a
long way teward making healthy
souls.--Oriting, •
• "Salted' by Mr. Salting.
Here is a story of the late Mr., Salt-
ing, the great colleetor, who was very
,,near," to put it mildly, in all matters
of• ordinary life. He bought at an
auction a case of old vintage Chem-
pagne. One of his friends, who hearcl
of this, so worried Mr. Salting con.
cerningthe matter that at last he
asked eight -men to dine with him and
to •drink the wine, giving them a long
• invitation. All eight accepted, but be-
fore the date of the feast each received
a fetter saying that Mr. Salting had
received..a very favorable offer to sell
the wine, that he had accepted the bid
and that the dinner, therefore, would
not take plaee.-London
Died by Order. •
After the battle of Custozz a sot-
.dier supposed to have been killed was
entered on the books of 'his company!
"Died on the 24t1L of Stine, 1866.
ete.
• A few days afterward it turned out
that he was still alive, and the honest
sergeant mede the following entry;
"Died by triisteke." ••
At length there came a letter from
the Ministry of War annoutichag the
•loath of the man at the hospital.
when our sergeant recorded the fact
as follows:
• "Re.died /by order of the Ministry,'
A Tongue Twister.
Do you read by sight or sound?
Do you skim the sense or pronounce
the words as you go -inaudibly, but
consciously? There are meaty readers
who read by the ear, and when this
writer had written the sentence about
Wiek (there was an election there),
"Wiek is rieh Pictish relies," he
leaned back and tiled to whisper it.
thinking of the next. "Wick is rich
in Pictish relics." Say it three times
quickly. -London Chronicle.
COUGIIERS, flAvNEflS, SPITTERS.
• Public expectoration is against the
COmmOti law, against the. laws of
health also. When the throat tickles,
that's the time you need "Merril°.
zone"; it soothes away the irrita-
tion, cuts out the phlegm atid loos-
ens the tight feeling. You'll quickly
cure that catarrh and throat trouble
with Ca.tarrhozone, it positivelypre-
vents new attacks and cures catarrh
forever and for all time to come.
Don't take our word for it, try 'ea-
tarrhozone yourself. Once used you'll
be delighted with its pleasant and
in gamee of any kind,be for this weuld
considered most improper and un.
womanly. The Spanish wow& go to
Mil/fights less frequently than in olden
days, but they still attend these overate
front 4 desire to be loyal to the Span-
ish festivity; also, perhaps, because
they like to improve every opportum
ity to be seen le the national head
attire, the white lace rnantilla..
"Women of Madrid and other great
cities are frivolous and gay. , They,
thoroughly enjoy all kinds of amuse,
meats; they attend regularly the Opera
wed theatre, for there is =thing they
enjoy raore than good music and fine
aeting.
During the winter society in Madrid
takes a daily drive in -the afternoon
through the Retiro and PaCeo de la
Caetellana, while receptions and balls
at court, dinners, small dances and
fancy dress parties at the foreign em.
hassles or at the homes of the aristo-
crats are the great events in the life
of the society belle.
"When the winter season is over the
Spanish aristocracy re -appears in Lon, •
don, Paris or Biareitz, while- the well-
to-do people go to Valencia or to San
Sebastian and other eummer reaorte,
and there they continue the same fri,
Yokels life.
"In: the Entail towns the life of thoi
Women is very dreary and dell. In no
Country of Europe do women lead
more monotonous and uneventful lives
than in the Msser places of Spain.
Early in the morning -the • Spanish.
'women, with black Mee mantillarecev,
ering their glossy hair and pie rcing
'black eyes, make their way to mass -
this is the only place where they may
go alone -and as they offer their pray,
ors inattentively in the shadowy nave
of some *old church, they indeed re,
soluble the type of Spanish beauty
that dwells in the imagination of most
people.
• After they have gone to• church and
have attended to their household dit; •
' ties, there is nothing left for them to
do. They seldom make emits, and take
no pleasure in visiting. They sit by
the gratings and pretty balconies full
of bright flowers and spend their
hours embroidering, singing .as they.
sew, sweet and sentimental Spanish
songs.
"eothey dawdle avvey the weary
hours and become oldIong before their
time," seers Senorita lefarcial. "Their
lives are often unhappy, for their hus-
bands, often suspicious and jealous,
keep a sharp lookout on all their ac-
tions and never recognize that they
have any rights or acknowledge anY.
duties toward them. They enter.life
the most beautiful, charming, joyful
creatures in the world, and they leave
it worn-out, weary; disappointed wo-
men."
How Victor Hugo .Worked: ,
• Victor Hugo always wrote standing
• at a high desk especially constructed
for him, throwing off sheet, after sheet
as fast as he filled it till he would be
quite snowedup in leaves of foolscap.
He often rose in the Middle of the
night to note down an idea or .a verse.
He got up fbr the day usually at six
o'clock and would devote from six to
eight hours per'cliern toihis work. He
made but few corrections, his „poems
being thought out complete in his
brain before he put pen to paper. It
is a vvell-known fact that he indulged
in the arduous task of composition
while traversing the streets of Perla
on the top' of an omnibus. 'When work-
ing outsome great %conception he
would spend hours- in this way.•
•
Amazon Ant Gardens.
. ,
. In the Amazon region "ant gaidens"
abound on a large ntunber of woody
plants. They. are generally 'spherical
in form and about the size of a writ,
nut. They are formed by several spe-
cies of ant, which appear to ecillect the
seeds of many different plants and to
sow them in these nests, covering up
the seedlingswith humus when they
begin to germinate: In the structure -
of these `ant epiphytes" the foliage
and the roots display characters
which especially adapt, them for the
situation in Which they grow and pro,
Mote else the .protection of the ants
themselves in their nett. Quite a
number of the epiphytes were lourel
as denizens of the ant gardens and
nowhere else.
. -
If Shs Had Her Choice.
A .gentleman .who , finds -great
amusement in telling his wife which
lady of their aiequaantance he will
select as .her successor when she dies
and who one day had •boon teasitg
her with numberless m•oek serious
allusions to the subject suddenly
called their' little daughter to him
and sasked her, shaking with_ laughter
at his own wit:
Madeline, how would you like to
have a stemnothei?"
The child considered for a moment
and then, with earnestness, replied:
"I think I'd rimeh rather have a
stepfather."
. A Friendly Criticism.
On the occasionof an exhibition
given at the Corooran Art Gallery, in
Washington, by the Art Students'
league one youthful painter was en-
deavoring to impress upon a friend
the merits of a work of his own.
"You would be amazed," annoutie.
ed the artist, "if you knew the
amount of time expended on my
'Two Sisters.' " • -
"Oh, 1 don't know that X would,"
airily responded tho friend, "Ines.
much as I hear that people stand in
front of it, for hours trying to make
out, what it 18."
Life Pr estrvsrs.
The history of liftepreeervers goes
back to ancient times. the Romani
having made cork jaeketre ,
aa -4046..
PIG PILLS. ,
J
Cum Backiehe, l3latider and KidnY
Trouble.
A few doses of PIO. MIAS will
convinee you that a few More will
cure you. Every box of PIG P/1,1,S
are guaranteed. • If they don't cure
all Bladder, Eidney, Itlibutrietism
and Liver Trouble, your ntoney will
he refunded. •
25e. a box at all leading drug
stores.
WOW •O' S/ONS*
••••ps.
It 1, Far More Funny EiecauS It
tinconiCioUS.
Like the beat bunior of other kinds.
the humor a the sign is of the un-
90Micems variety. Those who ereate
it are not aware of the feet that they
are,adding to the gaiety of nations by
theiy productions, or it may he that
their own aense of humor is too blunt-
ed for themto know it when they
are amusing. The man who put out
the following eign was surely verea.
tee, and yet 4 Sense of humor was
not among his gate or he must have
seen ye absurdity.
"Righ Class 'wade furnished here
for Concerts, Ueceptions, Bawls, and
Partys. Also chairs Caned."
Equally wide wee the range of ac-
complislunents of the woman who
set inone of her front windows a
erred bearing this information:
"Muaic Lessons, also „ High Class
Washing done Here. Doughnuts for
Sale Wensday and Satterdays."
Though not strictly an advertise-
ment, the following may not be out
of piece here aa its purpose is to
give infornmtion in regard to a sale-
able article. A writer in The Strand.
Magazine says he found it on a bot -
t1 of tomato saueee,
"Tomato Sauce. The sauce are
pur, ,The flavor are terrific. Hope
not to think imitation as good as us
tame. We haven't ,put nothing but
nice tornatee in sauce Which give us
such terrific flavor. One taste will
have more. Januwala and Co Afaill
Road Taiping Straits Settlentents"
The summer visitors in a New
England rurel district got no little
fun out of a sign in a berry pasture
near the public. highway :
• "Berry picking on these premis
forbid. Trespassing persecuted.
Berrys for spit at hcrese above. Roo
out. Eggig and chickens also for sail.
Washing dbeel fine ironing,"
• In one of the suburb s of Boston
there wala in a small store a window
full of the -most surprising jand-
scapes, painted china, wash basins,
roiling pins, flower piece.s, and nth.
roes, . A card had on it these words:
"Miss Blank, Artist. She done
these. Lessons inside, 50. cents. •
• Lessons outside, 75 cents. All kinds
of painting did to order. Also Are
Millinery. Conie in."
One will often find some hilarious
signsin the new mining camps of
the West. The humor of these is
none the lees amusing beceuse it is
intentional. Visitors to one of the
canape a fetv years -ego were delight.
ed to 'find the following befere the
door ef a log cabin about ten by -
fourteen feet in size; '
"Delmonieo's Hotel and Rest -your -
aunt. Rooms with or without Bervithe
No objection to poodle doge or in- .
hints- in arms if aecompanied by
their parents. Elevator not running
Barber shop and mannyeure rooms
closed for repairs. Turkish bawths a
la. washtub.' •
Nailed to another cebin was a pine
beard on 'which one read :
' "Bored and Lodging. Deer Bored.
Call* in,"
One of the leading dance and con-
cert halls in the early days of Lead -
Arnie displayed every Sunday this
"Grand •Saored Concert and Free
Dance Here To -night."
A woman of versatility in a West-
ern town put in one of her windows
a card on which she made the feliciw,.
Ing interesting announcement;
"Art Paieting Taut --., Here. 'Aliso •
Fans e Dancing and Fansy -teamed,
ery, Millinery, Masag. Corns Cut.
Fansy. Hare Dressing. Table Boar&
ers. Vokel Singing. Cooking Lessons
and General Art Work."
A nian who had gone into the
chicken business 'on an extensive
scale put up a large sign by the road-
side, on which he made Inc follow-
ing annOuncemente to the general
public: :
"Powltry for. Sale. • Setting Eggs,
Breylers. Ginny Hens. Fancy Foiffs,
Eggs and powltry suppliedTo Pre-'
vaM families.'Satisfaction Guaran.
•
• SENSE OF HEARING.
• •Sound Waves and. the .Way Ttey Act_
• • .:Upen 'the Ears.' .
. • The. delectlori...g. the direction cif a-.
• etieed by flee eenseor nearing IS; dire.
the rapid . focusing of the eye on Oh-
jeets at different. diStantes, •one of
'those intainetive operations whieb are
eon ti mia Hy do ne _without Any coesclous
tnet nod;
i
. .
Sound waves travexse" the air. as rip-,
' pies stir the water: and the ear by es.
perlence acquires some slight power of
• detecting the. direction inone' case' as
the eye does far greeter accuracy
hi the • Csualk we unconscious-
• ly. receive assistancemn other senses
as Well: Often we fail: to locate at
once some hidden source of sonnd.
eech 'as. a Singing bird, and Mee our
instliieffee. ingenuity displays itself.
Tete Intensity of rotted is, of course.'
by no Means So great behind a screen
as in front of it, and *very one carries ,
'with laini the screen ot 'Me own head.
Which may prevent a particular sound
fretil being heard so Well .0e one ear
as by the, other. If, then, the head is
flitted until this tnegtiality disappears
and both ea is hear eqltally well We
know that we ',Met be 'directly facing
or turned from the source tif sound.
and out previous rough idea or. ita
whereabouts generally prompts .ue to
face it.
Repeat it e-Shiloh's Cure evill
al-
ways cure my 'oughs and colds."
• TWO BARGAINS IIN ONE.
k Partnership of Papers al a Low
Rat,
We would call the attention of our
• readers, by which, they' can secure a
• dual benefit, this paper and The Week-
ly Mail and Empire, the two togeth-
er from now to next New. Year's Day
• for the nominal rate of 75 Cents.
While we are not insensible to the
marked appreciation of this paper by
our matiy subscribers, yet we will
gladly welcome to our list All, who
by any. reason whatever, are not yet
of the number.
The above offer affords an easy and
cheap way to find out tho merits of a
loeal paper, which, above everything,
stands for the progress and advance-
ment of this district.
The Weekly Mail and Rinpire, which
has joined forces with us, is known
1ron17' ocean to wan as the Most
Useful and pra-ctical weekly for the
agriculturist, and is also valued alike
in town and country as the proper
paper for the borne.
April 28th 10/0
There Should be no CamblIng111
Film Products*
At a COSt of $15,000s year the United
States Congrees can put en aflrw foot-
ing an enterprise that Is designed to
stop gambling in sgriculturalproducte.
The triOney is asked to help pay the
ei is
ek ne ;ye ot of tbbeesIank; .nda et oannagl el; twi thuet:
of Agriculture iit Rome, whose work
David Lubin relinemebes his connec,
triallwartahl It.boveStrittei liegthheef9ortehtehredtyg.*
Mie Lubin .quietly informed tbe mem.
tiers that Imbed not more than a year
to- live. His doctor had 'pronounced
-his doom, and now he wished to make
arrangement for the future welfare of
the inetitute which will be his monu-
ment. He explaided that as long as
be lived there WOM OP lleCeSeity to call
as
upon Conroe, tv
oe, for be is 4 ealtby
man, and given his work for no-
thing. The time has come however,
when skilled and necessarily highly
paid eervicee are required if the Inter-
national Institute is to continue the
important work it has begun,
FIXING TOE rarog
The purpose Orethe inatitufe is to
stop gambling On agricultural products
by spreading broadonst the informa-
tion that has Itithereo intern made use
of by the speculator, .who secures it at
fabulous price. The demand for
agricultural products can be pretty
well determined by • past statistical
data. There is not much chance of
tagairighbaetriess tothaetqteu:nfOtirt,Liesetu°1°atelhg
er.
is the supply which is determined by
taking account of the supply on hand
and the'condition of the growing crop.
A study of the known demand and
the probable supply fixes the price.
The work of the International testi-
. tuto is to gather from all over th'e
world the earliest official information
about the condition of the growing
crop. ..This information, spreid broad-
cast, should make garnblin on crop
reports out of the question.
OFFICIAL CROP, REPORTS
Nearly fifty' years age the United
States government preceived the den -
ger of permitting information concern-
ing its agricultural.products to remain
a private monopoly. • Thereupon it
established its crop reporting bureau
in the face of strenuous opposition.
But the pr ice.ot agricultural prod nets
is a world price. No one country cut
set it. The most accurate crop infor-
mation from any particular nation is
not in itseleaufficient data upon which
to oirculate price. This is where the
internationsd bureau comes in. Its
aim isto induce all governmens .to
collect crop informations, which will
be forwarded to Rome, there to be re-
issued by telegraphic bulletins to all
parts of the world. This bureau will
be, in effect, an editorial office. and
t,he nations its reporters. It, will in-
terpret the independent reports, the
factors will be wired to it from Chicago
and Winnipeg and Irkutsk and Singa-
pore. It will telegraph the product
Lo the ends of Os earth..
THE GREATEST CRIME
At the present time the world's
summary of supply is produced by the
private interests which blend the offi.
mat • and the unofficial crop reports.
giving the world the characteristically
_conflicting reports which go to make
the imnecesearv fluctuations and thus
disturb the capital and labor of tite
land and of the factory the world ove),,,
These unofficial. reports disturb the.
relation of the things of exchange
fully as much as unsecured paper
_money formerle dicl the meditun of
c enge. secured MeneY. Omennent-
ing on this situation, Mr. Lubin mid
the other day: "Surely in all the your-
ces of crime there errn be none greater
than thee Of a nation that deliberately
permits this' evil monopoly to remain
in the ham% of private intereete un-
checked, uncontrolled. To permit this
a nation must Out its eyee to the
great 'series of mange which must
f011OW AVM such it vouree, wrongs
which, in:winging from this hidden
source, permeate downward in every
direction, until the entire body politic,.
the ettemach, as it were, of the nation,
becomes deranged, and with the Stom-
ach the heart and head."
A SICK MAN'S WORK
It is due to an aceident, that the
headquarters of the institute are at
Rome. In search of health, David
Lubin same years ago, Aft California,
and remained in Italy, where his tail -
Ing strength seemed for a while to re-
turn. A successful, energetic business
man for a generation,. he found it
e
impossible with increasing health, to
remain inactive. So he began to glob
Lire. air atk3nin tuenrcineaPtiohnililcetrie iti
t
potting ageneere He interested Freels
dent Roosevelt, and was given same
official statue, and gradually he spread
hipropagandaamong other nations.
Great Britain. Germany, Itaty,4.ustria
And Belgium have fallen in line, and
will organise govern:neat crop 're-
porting bureaus. The necesaary in-
ternational treaty establishing the in-
stitute has been ratified by 49 different
Governments. A grant of $15,000 a
year from the United States Govern-
ment would, according to Mr. Lubin,
guarantee the pernaanency of the
Work.
AT THIS
TIME OF
•THE YEAR
Everyone needs something
•to create and maintain
• strength. ar the • daily
round of duties.
• There is nothing better
• than an Ale or Porter, the
, pulity and merit of which
• has been attested by
,chemists, phySicians and
experts at the great exhib-
. hitions. . •
itstr row'
(Iptiootti
We will lend you money
on your farm or ..city
tfroperty., ' The, interest will be at . the
• lowest current rates. No charge for ap- • •
plkation forms,' land inspection or renewals. If you '
cannot call, your*. letter will receive prompt and,
courteous attention, All business transactions
strictly confidential. ' •
HURON AND . ERIE
• LOAN AND SAVINGS .'CO.
• , Richmond St., LondOn,
366 Talbot St., St. Thomas.
InCorporated 1864 - Assets over $xX,5,30,000
•
That Necessary .51agazhie
--for the thinking man-forthe professional man--
- for the busy business man --and .his
family; in short, it's for You
r 25 cents
per copy
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111164E liteliriielimIr of Reirievvis
first, because it is a tiecessity-s:that ia
the tule in magazine buying of Am-
erica's intellectual aristocracy. It is
indispensabie to the busy busincss
Man, who Must keep abreast of the
times, because it gives him the rcai
news of the day in concise, readable.
form; it is invaluable to the thinking
man, who demands only the truth
and then draws his own concfutions,
because it gives him just plain,
straight facts.
It is Want to the whole family,
In it you will find a monthly picture
of men and affairs by Dr. ▪ Albert
Shaw, in his donnotchensive
" Progress of the World;" aclever
cartoon history of the month; book
reviews; the gist of the best which
has appeared in the other Magaeinet
and newspapers of the world; pithy
character shetcheaf ISnd interesting
intielet on the all-important topics of
the day. Atithoritative, non-partissr4
timely and very Much to the point,
it's a liberal education,* is the way
subscribers express it.
• OM 1909-10 CATALOGUE
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