The Clinton News-Record, 1910-08-18, Page 61
1
Mayor William J. Gaynor of New
York was shot in the neck and bad-
ly wounded by a discharged employee
of the city.
Mr. Joseph Rogers, Superintendent
of Provincial Police, opened an in-
quest at Midland into the series of
recent fires there..
Extraordinary precautions are be-
ing taken in Germany to prevent in-
vasion by cholera.
emesseseamasnomemssoismemesiaiaromist
LONDON, ONTARIO
Bis ess & Shorthand
SUBJECTS
resident and Mail Courses
Cataleauos Free
J. '7. V'estervca, J. W. Westervelt, Jr.. C.A.,
Prin..ytl• Vice -Principal,
GRAN UTRUNK' s EM
ONLY LINE REACHING ALL TIIE
SUMMER RESORTS.
('harming Muskoka
Beautiful Lake of Bays.
(Iccrgian Bay.
Tenraganri.
Algonquin Park. ' .i
Magan:;tawan Hiver.
French River.
Stoney Lake.
Kawartha Lakes.
Lake C'otiet:iching, Etc.
•Round Trip Tourist 'Pickets on .sale
at low rotes.
SAIL1NCiS OF PASSENGER
iTEAMERS.
From Sarnia to the Soo, Port Ar-
thur and Duluth every Monday, Wed-
nesday and Saturday at 3.30 ptm.,
the Wednesday and Saturday steam-
ers going through to Duluth. Sail-
ings from Collingwood 1.30' p. nr„
and Owen Sound 11.45 p. .m. Wednes-
days and Saturdays for the Seo and
Corgian Bay ports. Sa!lings from
iilidland 1.30 p. m., Pene>tang 3.15 p.
'n. to Parry Sound and way ports
daily c xcept Sunday.
For full information and particulars
apply to
John Ransfcrd; Town Agent,
A. 0. Pattfston, Depot Agent.
1
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News -Record e CLINTON
Ought WrittenEzaininair.1
tions to be Abandoned
Unlet s some way is found -of mak-
ing them much less imperfect . than
• they are now, written exa'lnination4
ought to be abandoned as a means
of tesliibte very immature pupils.
Nothing could be more unscientific
than • the present ordeal by written
examination. The leen who set the
papers do not seem to be kept
within any fixed limits of glue -
timing 'or to any standard. it
is true, the questions asked- on
the papers are supposed to relate
only to the portion of the subject pre-
scribed in the school course, but can-
not questions of all degrees of diffi-
culty be drawn up to search candi-
dates on that subject matter ? The
questions may be altogether beyond
the candidate's grasp, if they are
framed by a man who has not the
pedagogic experience, judgment and
sympathy he ought to have.
-Thing's being as they are, it is. not -1
surprising that papers vary greatly
in difficulty from year to year and,
that papers on different subjects vary .
greatly in dutliculty in the same year. I
The arithmetic paper may be unrea-
sonabiy . hard at an examination in •
which -papers mother subjects are
quite fair, and ' the whole examina-
tion far a given year may be so much
more diffeult than that for. the year
following it or preceding it as; tel re
quire greater maturity of -mind • to
pass it. -Written •examinations must -
always be more or less arbitrary.
The gauging 'of a pupil's knowledge.'
of a set of subjte-'ts will -never become •
a matter of such accuracy as • finding
the temperature of the air. But the
examination paper can be made 'much-
bettor
muchbettor than itis, and if we are •. to
adhere to it as a means of ascertain- I
ing Whether -a pupil is or ;is not fit for
advanecmient, the present haphazard'i
way of giving Out the work of • pre-
paring papers must 'be .departed from.
01 those who are entrusted with this
work very, few are qualified for it.
There :.hould be examination..speeial-
ists as well as specialists in. depart-
ments of teaching. Instead of being
allowed to be used for the "pluck-
ing" of young, candidates. who have
satiefaetarily covered the course,
some of the papers should be accepted
as a convin;sing proof of the uniitnesst •
of the man who set them. Many of
the candidates for entrance to the
high school failed this year, not be:
cause• they were less well prepared
than hundreds who passed last year,
but because the7 had a stiffer , test
to undergo. These rejected ones will
spend another year -in the Public
school, or perhap,e rebel against the
idea of so putting in the time, The
latter alternative is too commonly the
one taken in such cases. Are
the men who set examination pa-
pers .not supposed to think :rt all
of their responsibility for the urea
Of miscalculated paper 'nay lnahe cf
many a young Canadian's educational
career ? leave they no-*rious: consid-
eration for the unsettling a fists . of
examinatiian. failure upon the minds
of boys artd girls just cnterins' their
teens 7 .If the maker of• examination
papers r,flected on the force o; the
blow -failure deals to pupils at that
erft�icrl time in their :elves, if he dwelt
at all on the worry and hear -b; racking
strain of the problem the fteture Irian -
agement of hese exania tLi )rt dere-
licts is for their parents, he we.ulel al-
ways write his questions so that at.
least they could not be ,nisu:uterstood,
and he would be less fond of poser;.
The • big. boy ,who fails to pass the
examination is averse • ro going tat'ic
•
to. a class of "kids, as tie calls the
draft of pupils promoted to the form
he hoped to leave, Hit . !meccas en-
deavor to have hint do so. i'lie eit''a-
tion becomes in some caws extremely
• serious!' The lad, loathing the school
course, play's • truant and gets 'into
had ways. We ought to be very par -
'tinter' about the cxaMination p� pers
set for .entrance to- the Hight se tools,
The issue of thorn is mmmnentoas for
many a.• young life.Hail and letep;re.
Improve the Public Schools.
Sir James Whitney recently ex-
pressed in tet . courst of an interview
some very eensible opinions as to•tl:e
respective fttrciiors of the public and
the high schools- of this Prov ince and
the tic that binds them into one. sys.-
tenr : the "high sehbol entrance ex=
a•tnirtai ion." The• .. Premier is quite
right in his ccntentfon that the course
of study in the, public a hoofs shunt
be made so complete and that • it
should 'he .so well utilized as to zenke
translation • to any other kind `. of
sohooi unnecessary except forthe
few who intend to acquire a e•oilrge
education or to obtain a . teache'r's
certificate. For these few on eft -
trance test of some sort is a nc es
sity,. but ,for all others it is absolute-
ly superflous and almost • whoLy mis-
chievous. It . tends • to divert . , their
minds from the •real 'public . sx:hnol
work and fix their attention on what
amounts in their case of a sort of
graduation.
The entrance examination is large
ly rccsponsible for the lack of . advan-
ced pupils in the public .schools.
11rn . who prepare for it and try to
pass it either succeed or fail •;. ff they
succeed they are ant,- and their . par-
ents are e- f , to think their education
is sufficiently coniplctc,' and • they
leave school altogether ; if they fall!
tl1cy shrink from' spending' another
yeaa in 'what looks • like a dreary
round• of partly fan' liar work, • and
they turn to • industrial purstrits ' .or
play y trtratit to avoid o. d the prospect of
intolerable monotony. . This is " the
h:sLory• of many' a hay and girl. of
twelve .to ,sixteen, and. the best . way
to -lessen the mischief' is. to limit the
entrance examination to its original
wn,d proper use., to make the promo-
tion. 'Yostfrom the fourth to the ' fifth'
form . bear It rational relation to both
the preparatory training and the
subsequent courses of iestruetio•n,
and to make that course as varied,
as interesting, and as cultural as sir-
c;;mstances' will pertnit.: • . •
In the selection of work for advan-
ced class in .puhliq schools .the Edu
cation Department has wisely :allowed
the hoard, of education a reasonable
amount of freedom, and if in special
cases more •liberty is desired the 1)e-.
partment has authority to grant it;
So fan as flexibility t:! concerned the
system is ideal ; where it , breaks
I down., a little invt stigation wilt gen-
erally shoal that the local boards aro
e sponsible fcr the failure. In ;,oine
. cities " there ;are no•advancrtd elasses
in the public schools•, and the .expect
tation seems to be that elect .pupils
shall either pass into the .high• schools
• or leave :school altogether. Fortunat-
ely for the children 'of Toronto , there
is another tine of procedure open .to
those .in 'charge of their. ,interests ;
there are fifth classes in many of the
public' schools- of this city, and . there
might. be inore of them' if parents'
•were suf deftly ; alert and enteepris-
ing, to, keep their children .longer at
school.'
It is a matter: of the utmost . irn=
portance to determine, solely in the
interest of the children, what courses
of study :hall be provided,. in • thele
advanced 'classes. For many 'years,
past: the only course hasbeen a. con-
meiefal one,. but that has erased to
he regarded as adequate to the• Out.
• cation needs of the young •people, and
something. better '-will now be at-.
Oinked. The Board of -Education.
has appointed. a .promotion board
made up of the. High school prin-
cipals, the public school inspectors,
and a few' public school principals,
witho.it,
tvitose certificate fourth. class•
pupiis will.,not In able to pass into
f:he fifth class. •Naturally and almost.
inevitably thio promotion heard.. will
become a board Of studio's and will
fisc the course to. be .taken prior to
promotion as well as the sequel to
• it in the, fifth classes subsequent . t to
'promotion. It is not likely that mist
takes willl be- avoided, but' it is ' not
ton much to expectthat in a 'board
of , promotion and -studies with e a
membership of 'sixteen the personal
equation will 'practically be eliminat-
ed.—Toronto Globe
•
At • '
the Beginning :of Great
Discoveries.
Invention has no leaving off place.
Mr. Edison tells us that we are only.
at the beginning of great discoveries.
The Gormans aer now making indigo
by synthetic chemistry, 'and it is. driv-
ing the 'natural' product out of the.
market. Rubber is already being made.
yin the same way in the laboratories,.
and it is expected in time to be made
on a coma:0mial basisand to compete
with Para, the Congo, and other rub-
ber fields. It would .not he surprising
to hear before long of wholesale foods
prepared chemically from waste. Wire -
lets communication is another branch
of invention which is only in..lts in-
fancy. Mr. Henry von Kramer, after
four yearsof experiment,. has. 'demon-
strated that wireless teleahone com-
munication between a moving ; train
and a s eaker standing still ins the
easiest thing in the world, This was
demonstrated on the Grand Trunk
Railway years ago, but Mr. von Kra-
mer has forwarded it to the practical,
commercial stage, He calls it 'rat lo -
phoning.' The apparatus consists
of a wire conductor lard between
the rails, but not in eontaet with
the moving train, the speed of which
is no bar to the efficient transmission
of inesr'ages. Describing a recent de-
monstration of the invention. Mr.
Alexander Stewart, of the Westminst-
er Tool and Electrical 'Coinpany, said
that it might *ell be classed among
the fiat of modern marvels. It was 0A -
most uncanny, he considered', to sit
in a signal box, observe,.. the train
steaming out, and yet be enabled to
IJeep in communication with that train'
and annihilate tune and distance. The
invention, Mr. Stewart thinks, will
I snakeit possible for the burliness man
to deal with matters that he 'ntay',
have forgotten, and will •do away.
with the attempts' to catch a travel-
ler. by wiring til the train's first
stopping place. In' eases' ofaccident'
on the line it•' -would prove most val'u-
ahle. Mr, Stewart epnsiders that
there ie really no limit to the pos-
sibilities of the intention. A strong
point in its favor* is that it can
be installed at a cost of about 4:10
per mile. So tho tales of wonder are
addedto from day to. day. Indeed
the crops of wonders are now so pro-
lifts the crops of wonders are now so
prolific that we cease to Wonder at
them.
•
Ulm . the digestion, is all right, the
aetion of the bowels regular, there 19
a natural craving and relish for food.
When this is lacking you may know
that you need a dose of Chambe'rlain's
:Storn•aelr and Liver 'Tablets. They
strengthen the digestive organs, im-
prove the appetite and regulate the
bowels. Sold by all dealers.
Chief Tremblay of the Montreal fire
brigade mentions forty-five persons on
account of special bravery in his re-
port of The Herald fire.
Clinton News•Recof,d August 18th, 1910
The Apple trop of Ontario.
There is no need to assert the im-
portance of the apple lnduutry of• this
Province. • Year by year that impor-
tance has been increasingly recogniz-
ed by tho;'.e who act as middlemen be-
tween the growers and the .consumers
of the fruit. Apple treeshave been
planted in yearly increasing numbers
by those who are farseeing enough to
recognize that the popularity of the
apple is certain to. endure. The pro-
vision of cold -storage facilities by the
Dominion Government has aided in
making the industry more efficient;
and with passing time those facilities
will to made more perfect and more
ubiquitous. Packing is . now more
carefully, if ,not more honestly, done
than it used tobe, thanks to the en-
actment of a fruit inspection law
and the increasingly :drastic character
of its enforcement.
All this is subject for congratula-
tion, and therefore it is unpleasantly
discouraging to be told by an expert
that there has been for fifteen years a
steady decline in the quality of the
fruit .produced. If this statement is.
true it will not be possible to keep
up for this Province a high reputa-
tion for apples, no matter how abwt-
dantly they may be produced. Pro-
fessor Crow of the Ctrelph Model
Farm is reported to have made at a
egnvention at Niagara Falls the as-
sertion that there is a general de-
cline in apple culture, a general in-
crease in the quantity of defective ap-
pies, and a general falling off in the
quantity of good apples that I nd
their way to market. Here and the re
throughout the Province there . has
been a r': vival, but in most localities
the orchards are small, and good
growers in the inland districts, are
few and far between. In the Lake
Erie region some planting of early
varieties is going on with the object
of supplying the West with apples
early in the season; apparent-
ly the growing of winter varieties for
export is failing into abeyance. .Of
eoursc apple treat reaeh maturity and
pass into decay, and unles's orchards
are renewed the industry must de-
cline.
It is doubtful whether the whole
subject of apple production has re-
ceived at farmers' insi;e:tutes the at-
tention
ttention it deserves. That good ap-
ples are grown is tirade manifest by
the specimens shown at the agricul-
tural. exhibitions. We have the soil,
we have the climate, we have the
market ; if the industry declines the
cause must be either want of intelli-
gence on the part of the farmers of
this Province or their inability to
find some means of marketing their
fruit that docs not leave too much of
its market in the hands of the mid-
dleman. In some localities co-opera-
tive marketing has been suceessfully
tried ; probably it would succeed
equally well in districts where the
experiment has never yet been made,
—Toronto Globe:
Too Few Hogs, in Canada.
I would like to. urge the
advisabil-
ity . of giving more attention
to the raising of hogs. It scents'
strange and incomprehensible that the
people of a little country like Den-
mark, which has to import the bulk
of its requirements for feeding and
really purchases them frfrontthe Unit-
ed States aril out selves, should • be
•t
I able to beat the , orld on the Brit-
ish markets in regard to the supply 1
of
bogs, and
in i
,7 ,spite of the high
pr'iees they have to pay for the raw
material are able to do this at a pro-
fit to -themselves ; the killing in Den-
mark for.the British market averages
from 35,000 • to 10,000 per week,
whereas the; total tvtrkly killings of
the principal packers in Canada for
the past. three years,only averaged as
follows
1907. 26,000.
1908 24,000,
1909 19,000. .
- My •company operates. the best
equipped packing house in Canaria
today, for which we are useable to
obtain sufficient hogs to greet :ehe le-
t,uirt'ntents. '1 am often asked why we
built it ; my answer is, I .believe that
the farmers of Canada will w.ii,e up
soine day and realize that there ise
considerable money and pteofit to be
gained in raising more hogs, of which'
two • crops• can be raised each • year
as the tical •hag is one that crus be
'produced • in six Months' time. if
anything stlin:ulate this, it
'ought to be the Ingle prices ;."hat sore
now being paid. Our fathers would
have, danced for joy if they could
have realized for••.their hogs the Urice
es that we are now being offered, but
notwithstanding the indueetnent • of
abnou nall'y high prices, the supply
does not begin to approximate the. de -
Intend, .nor will it until; the aroducer
wakes up to the .importance of 'flus
line of industry., .
I am gofng to venture a •;trop ltesy;
and this is that before a year is .out 1 .
the same ,shortate.• which prevails . in
hogs will be moire apparent ill cattle,
and that beer inst'eacl of eieing a Deily
food • will. become a luiury: Thio
should not be in a country 'where the
farmers are so intelligent, and Where
the Goyernntent. is doing so much - to
educate.
It 'is amusing to see the dtifereet
trades. talking about -boycotting the
dealers• in: meats, product:, •. cte. • % bey,
are commencing at the wrong end,
the seat of°the trouble is with . the
lamer. If be will grow the amennit
Of -stuff he ought. to, a sound, uni-
form and paving price will be ai-ur-
ed,.and peace and plenty, so• far as.
Canadian stomach • are .`concerned,
will be assured. -John A. Gunn, Mer:,
treat.
And yet -the have all those elements.
and conditions in the.way of feed
etc., . that should enable us t"o pro-.
ciuee hogs at a profit ,to ciurseh•es:
• The highest dressed cert of hogs:de
livered et the packing houses, ars near
as can he figured,, during 1907 • was
$1L64 pc r hundred pounds,' in 1908,.
$9,91' per hundred •pounds', and during
1909, $11.92 per hundred pounds. It
is worthy of• note, therefore, that as
the price advances -.fewer hogs ,etre,
to be; grown, there being a difference
between the weekly deliveries of. 1909
as.eoritpared to 1908 of 0,000 hogs.
There has beet a great deaf of rims -
paper talk- about packers: being re-
sponsible" for the farmers going out
of raising hogs my answer to this
is the fierce com_pcli tion between the.
die rc nt:::packers for :st.; plies.
..To Stimulate `More Hog Raising..
Mr. Hanna's Work.
I •:is
It • t r. ,.
• s err . 1
not ur s that the
p i gPro-
vincial Secretary has selected Mr.
Downey for the ofce of Superinten-
dent of the Ori:.tIa Asylum. Between
the two ,there is niuclt sympathy. Be-
tween tiinni there has been touch co-
operation. Both are 'eager prison re-
formera. Both have a deep interest
lit tho public institutions of the Pro
vince: There is a curious intensity in
Mr. Hanna's devotion to. his Depart-
ment,. , There seems to be no doubt'
that be is a prudent and economical
adrntnistrator. By reform in methods
he has saved many .thousands of dol-
Iars to the Treasury, and materially
increased -the efficiency of the institu-
tians under :his control. This .is not
said in ..depreciation of his prcdeces=
sors. Most of these Were faithful. ad-
ministrators; and• kept thea institu-
-.tions'• well officered and free from ser-
ious 'scandal.
But Mr. Hanna has a passion ' for
saving and healing; for • rite -methods
which restore diseased minds to heal-
th, and 'wrongdoers to citizenship. He
i:r slow to believe •that the good lies
easily in • human •kind. With boys and
girls, ivitlt men and women, he striv-
es to restore•and recreate, to 'save
rather than to punish. It is too much
to expect that he till always select
the best instruments for the work to
be done, or that inc will not some-
times meet with failure and disap-
pointment', But thus far, both with
girls and boys,. and in the beginnings
of the prison .experiment at ••Guelph,
his faith bas been irnntehsely fortified
by result e.
No public than could talk less of.
what he was doilrg, or more success-
fully eoneeal his deep enthusiasm for,
the work in which he Is engaged. It
is certain, however, that Ile is ehasig
ing the whole spirit of asylum and
prison management in Ontazt'n, and
that his deepest satisfaction is in the
recognition which conies to himself' or.
the Government. It is .in this way
that Governments are made strong,
and, perhaps, the party expertswho
were i o e e rlain that the Provincial
Ministers were "poor 'oliticia-n " be-
gin to see that single -mingled devotion
to duty is the real secret of strength
with . the people.
Mr. Hanna is revealed again in the
administration of the License Depart-
ment. It is not A,retendy.l that there
IS do illegal liquor-sel'tng, or that
every license official does his full
,duty. Birt it is. plain than the' whole
power . of the Department • is • exerted
to secure. law .enforcement, and that
license -:officials and• license comrnis-
sioner:' who prove . lax or - unfaithful •
cannot count upon the- support of the
Government. .No doubt in every De-
partnient the downright character of
the Prime Minister is influential, but
in the Provincial 'Secretary we have.
in the Provincial. Secretary we have
the same' courage and the same indif-
ference to temporary party interests.
No Governmeht under the party sys-
tem could be less subject to financial,
social or mere party::considerations,
and it is manifest that it •enjoys, ff
not an increasing, certainly an ori
diminished degree of pu:slir confidence.
-News.
Leblanc led in the second stage of
the crossecountrytaerial in France.
1 An express . train struck an auto-
mobile near ('ape May, N.J., and five
persons were killed..
ASK W. S. It. HOLM>S.
Parisian Sage, the Hair Grower, is
Now Sold in Canada on Money
Back Plan.
•It's a mighty, good thing for the
women of Canada that Parisian Sage
can now be obtained in every town
of consequence.
No preparation for the hair has
done so much to stop falling hair
and cradieiite dandruff and make
women's hair beautiful. as Parisian
Sage.
Parisian Sage is the only certain
destroyer of the dandruff microbe
whielt is the 'cause of 97 percent ✓ of
hair. ttrorbles,
These pernicious, persistent and de-
structive little devils thrive on the
ordinary hair tonics.
Parisian Sage is such An extraordi-
nary and quick acting rejuvenator
that W. S. ilolmes, who is the agent
in Clinton, guarantees It to cure dan-
druff,fhairitching
stcr alien and
scalin t two weeks o money back.
It is a magnificent dreesidng .. for
women who desire luxuriant, lustrous
hair that compels admiration.
And a targe bottle of Parisian. Sage
costs only 50 (cuts at W. S. It.
Mimes' and all over Canada.
Albert Roc•hon, who uncoupled a lo-
comotive from a G.T.R. passenger
train at Montreal during the strike,
was sent to jail for six months.
Mrs. Albert Iloiriies of Cardinal,
Ont., whose 1ltin.,band is accused of mur-
dering Nathan Bolton, is dead of :a
broken heart.
Dysentery is a dangerous discard but
can bo cured. C'hamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea, Remedy has
been successfully used in nine epidemm
JIcs of dysentery. It has never been
known to fail. It is equally valu-
able for children and adults, and when
• reduced with water and sweetened,' it
is pleasant to take. Sold by all
dealers.
Many dope fiends contracted
the drughabit in the cradle
radle
Certain dangerous *drugs were given to them in
their baby days in the form of "Soothing Syrups;'
-"colic cures" and "infant.:' friends." Theharmful
:effect of "soothers" containing opium, morphine,
chloroform, chloral, etc., cannot be too strongly
stated. Do not give baby a "soother" unless.
you positively must. Then give it
stir
• S4C1THING SYRUP.
•
and rest contented. Nyai's. Soothing Syrup con-
tains no opiates. It induces natural, health
sleep—gives immediate relief to baby, calming
the mother's tired nerves—does not put on soft,
flabby flesh, making the little folks easy victims
of childish diseases.
We wouldn't think of recommendingN' al's
Soothing Syrup if we were not certaiof its
beneficial effects.
Anything y o u
buy
with the name
1
willgive you
entire
satiafactaon.
Sold and guaranteed by
W. S. R. Holcnes,'W. A. McConnell, J, E Hovey
CLINTON, - Ont
Canadian National Eih•miti�n
--TORONTU
AUGUST 27
th to SEPTEMBER 12111, # 9 910
Improved Grounds, New Buildings, International Live Stock Show,
Exhibits by all the Provinces, Magnificent . Art Loan Exhibit. •
BY PERMISSION OF HIS MAJESTY
BAND. OFT:HE GRENADIER
GUARDS
KING GEORGE'S HOUSEHOLD''BAND
1
400
MUSICIANS
Model Military Camp.
Tattoo every night.
• Everything new in attractions.
Wonderful Firework Spectacles,
' THE .NAVAL. REVIEW AT •SPITHEAD
BATTLE BETWEEN DREADNOUGHT ANS AiRSHIP
WATCH FOR REDUCED HATES • AND EXCURSIONS.
For all .information write Manager,. J. 0, ORR, City Hall, Toronto: •
1,000
PERFORMERS
ESTERNFAiR
LONDON, CANADA
Sept. 9th to 17th, 1910
•
..-..$25,000.00 in • Prizes and., Attractions
OPEN TO ALL
THE GREAT LIVE STOCK EXHIBITION
Speed Events: 1 ' Dog Show Athletic.t
r Day.
Every Day r Cat Show Monday
Music by the Jist 'Highlanders
and7th Fusiliers .,
ATTRACTIONS
DON't
't
,FIREWORKS
Better Than Ever MISS IT!
:..Each .Night
Reduced Rates .over all Roads.
Visit Loudo.i's Exhibition. .
Prize Lists, Entry Forms, and all information, from
W, J. REID, President A. M. HUNT, Seor'etar
y.
1
STIs a general "nuisance
and causes sickness,
but it can be :avoided
by using
1)51
BANE
•
on sweeping day; Dustbane moreover, disinfects the room
and restore): 'tugs to their original freshness. The women
swear by Dustbane when once they have used it.
Don't have another dusty sweeping
i.. da
but get 'a 35c package of Dustbane�
.
We ate authorized by the manufacturers of Dustbane to
send you a 33e can of their Sweeping Oompound. Ws want
yonto use this on trial for one week. At the end of this
period, if not found satiefaetory, we will take it hack, and
there will be no charge for quantity used.
It does away with Dust on Sweeping P ng DaY
YOU VVANT 1T,
Sold in barreIs, half barrels and quarter barrels,for
stores, schools, churches,hospitals, banks,
buildings. , and public
•
s -r/
AND Sa
DISTRIBUTORS POR CLINTON
Canadian Pactoriet—St. John, N. B. Winnipeg jyan,
M