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The Clinton New Era, 1920-3-18, Page 3SUBSCRWTi ION RATES IN CANADA Three nantbs, ,, ,, .,,,, $ 40. Half year „ ,.,, , e„ ,,,.,,,.. $ '7$' Year .,,,, ,,,.., 1,50 6-1f not paid in advance, $2,09 per annuli}— Ofl'Ice'Phone 30. ihl There to more energy in a. pound or good breadmade in the home with Royal Yeast Cakes than in a pound of meat. Bread making is a simple operation and 'requires no . pre- vious experience. Full instructions in Royal Yeast BakeBoo,1, mailed free on request. E-W.GILLETTCO.LTD. TORONTO 1111 What the Mouth Reveals Full lips suggest: cajolery and flipp- anncy. A mouth which viewer in profile turns up In a curve iudicates a firivolous nature, • A small mouth explains extreme sensitiveness and a narrow-minded out - took on life. An extremely large mouth indicates liberality of mind but a certain coarse- , ness of nature. A mouth of any thickness that droops at the corners denotes one who cannot be. trusted: A close -fitting mouth revealing sharp straight lines, indicates sternness of dis- position. Dullness of apprehension is indicate ed by a•moutb which is exactly twice the vtdtli of the, eye. ' A small mouth coupled with small. nose and nostrils shows an indecisive and cowardly nature. If the angles..atthe corners of the lips point downward it indicates passi,m- ism; if upward, optimism. A large mouth denotes a shameless person with a hasty judgement not al- ways kind, also a good conversational- ist. eine with thin lips drawn down at the corners, rather bloodless and pale, • is extremely obstinate, given to hys- teria and melancholy. SPRING WEATHER HARD ON BABY -The Canadian Spring weather—one _day-• mild and bright; the next raw and blustery is extremely bard on the baby. Conditions are such that the mother cannot take the little one out for We fresh• air so much to be desired He is confined to the hoose which is often over -heated and badly ventilated. 1 -le catches . cold; his little stomack and bowels become disordered and the moth er soon has a• sick baby to look atter. To prevent this an occasional dose of Baby's Own Tablets -should be elven. They regulate the stomach and bowels, thus preventing or relieving colds sire- • pie fevers, colic or any other of the many minor ills of childhrred. The Tab- lets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at -25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine •Go., Brockville Ont. About the only evidences of Spring about.just now is the Spring assizes/ 'Better tell the hens that ].aster is •nn its way, As soon as prices come down, they will sing their "noblest -lays" We have not yet heard, of the arriv- al of the first spring rubbin, but crows are beginning to appear in the neigh- borhood, LFT OFF CORNS! • Apply few drops then litt sore, touchy corns off with fingers Doesn't holt a bit! Drop a „little L'rettznne oe an salting Derry itietarttly •t)tat corn stop* hurting, then you lift it right out. Yes, magiol A tiny bottle oe Freemen: coats but s few cents at any drug store, (sue la sal - deed to emcee every lter'l corn, raft enril, or cute between the .tree, and Ike tnlluws without eoxen ss Cir it :talion, 3.eeeeeee le the naileettt,n'iit diusmnry v+f s Cies:huafi genius, It to wonderful. SP INO CALF 'FUND 1 How to Feed and i•iandle: the Young Arrival.. 'L'hu ))ariirle• Mille the hist hits( Bond --iiIclintnilk' Should (;1'ctdunlly: Replace Whole tilde — Grass, or , Sin bte.for tin Ives? (Con tel es ted by On t,t Pin I Piano rt mens :in. Agriculture, `Toronto.) - - '"HfO calf tliat•cotuea in rhea $pring; conies j,isi at a Mite when. everybodyis ao b busy 1 • 'getting the sPrhlg work donee that.he is' vary liable to .be rag leeted to a certain extent. Yonne calves are very susceptible Laelleease cony -n to rating 'cattle anti a little lack' of attention to spring calves is liable to cause seriotis "trouble to them. There are two menaces to' calves ie'\ spring and summer, and those are extreme -heat and flies. and one' is on a'par with the other. Arrangements should be made wheereby rile paces are kep`, in during he day and al- lowed to run, out in -a paddock at night. By 'this means they are afforded a liberal amount of exercise and good pure fresh air, and also they are allowed to get some of the nice juicy green grass, which is the nearest thing to a complete and bal- anced ration that can be found out- side of milk. When the calf is dropped it may be well to leave it with the dam for a feaw hours In order that it may go: the Ilea milk (or ,solostrum) which !s so necessary on account of its pc• Rens on the digestive tract, Weer the calf ban received sufficient role strum to set up the necessary, act Iain it should be removed 'from its morcel into a separate stal_l,,or it may be pram Seto a stall with other calves of ch'• sante age or nearly -so, ft, by any chance, the cow's udder in inflamed the calf may be left for it few (lays because of the beneficial. effect that the calf's punching has upon it For a, few days the calf should be ted whole milk, but when it is two to Four weeks old'* change should he made, skimnl•ilk gradually replacing the whole milk, from eight to ten days taken for the change. When the whole milk Is totally replaced the milk may, be increased to eighteer or twenty Pounds icer day for a calf six week* old. The best kind of sklmnttlk for calves is warm, just when it leaves the farm separator. However, everybody may not have a s' pe.rator. and then tide is not pos- sible. in nny event the system start- ed with the coif should be followed as nearly as possible at all times, because .radical ehanges in diet are sure to rause severe digestite trou- bles. Pails and all feeding utenells should he kept very clean to elim- inate any danger of disease from bacteria that might be lurking with- in. Skimmllk feeding may be contin- ued on as long as it is thought ad- visable, rap to eiglst or ten months old. Good thrifty calves may be weaned as early as three months old, Providing good substitutes for the milk are used. , The most frequent trouble in rais- ing calves- is indieest.ion, or common ,scorn's. This trouble is usually caus- ed by overfeeding, feeding milk too cold, feeding milk heavily laden with the disease germs, or by keeping the calves in a dark, dirty, poorly ven- tilated quarter. The calves should be watched carefully, and if they show signs of scours Immediate steps should be taken to effect a cure. The ration should be reduced and a little lime water put into the milk. If immediate action Is needed, about one-half cupful of strong black tea or sonteacastor oil should be given. As for meal for the calves, rolled oats are good, and if they are getting no whole milk a little linseed oil cake should be added. The oll cake bas a laxative property as• ,well as supplying a little fat to the ratiqu. A good meal for calves: 1.00 lbs. of ground oats, 60 -lbs. bran and all cake (nutted) 26 lbs, Good clover hay is essential at all tines, giving enough to, allow the calves to pick put the nice,suecutent parts, and still not be wasteful.-- J, 0. McBeath, O. A.. College, Guelph, Should Calves Go Out to Geese or • - Remain In the Stable? Generally speaking, calves are bet- ter kept in the- stable during tee first summer, except where tii.ttbte conditions are not good, and wilet•e there le not enotteh tabor to 'look af- ter thein and keep them dry and clean. The only tither exception to in the case of calves dropped le the• early winter and Wheel have had •three to els months of matt and more or less dry feed. Such calves .may be all right., if tirrtietl out to grass as soon as the pasture 18 good and the weather warm and pleasant. Par- ticularly Is this the case where milk and other feed its 525.15e on thye farm, The chief advantages of keeping calves in the stable, the tii.•st sutttuter are: 1. TiseY can b5 fed intik and other feed as requtrode which is often neg- lected When calve* run with the cows, or are pass si'llig some distance Grout the barn. 2. Calves in a dean, wallrvettiilat- ad stable are protected from the hot suit, storms and gaits, which often peeverit that good growth Which is essential Roe' a well-nourisbed thrifty calf. 8. et allowed le Ilia with the heed, the older aniinats are likely to ''bods" the Salves and May Mean thein, or deprive them of theft, proper share of feed, 4. Caters of sickness, ante* as indi- gestion or "scours" ere more likely to be noticed. and properly ,treated, if the 051905 arc 1555140. 'where they ars Seen Ri10010041 '. 6. AS it retrad 55i (hie tsettee euro tend fend, better Onwe are exult iikoly to he reared, smith ,nleitn9 larger retttrhts to tilts owners of r ortIe - act, it, lie peen, t?. ae, 4(illagei, Oitr!p)l. SUP,'SCRIP:T RCNS OUTSIDE OF CAN (Advance Only) Great ]Britain , .,,,,:..,...,. United States ,•, , , , , , ,, , , ,, 2. France ,,..,, ,...,..,,,.,. TillZ CLINTON NE'W 1i+RA' vg, that chronic shin dl;,eascs. wbiatt (rave defied al1 other treatments yield to. Zam-Buk 7 It is because Zam-Butt is germi- cidal, and also has such power of penetration that it restates disease in the underlying tissues and oure(i from the "root" up. That le the only way a permanent cure eau he effected. Mr. F1.0, Buckley of 461 111 Broad- way, Portland, Oregon,• says: " For chronic skirt diseases there is nothing 11 rani -Bolt. For fifteen en o g ke. Z Yearn 1 had eczema, and I tried an endless number oT se•called ' eczema cures,' but nothing was capable of curing me permanently tint.( 1 used Zam-Butt. Ten Months' use of Zam- liuk has effecteda'completo'cure." For ulcers, abscesses, boils, ring- worm, blood -poisoning, piles, burns, , scalds and ruts, Zam-Buk,is equally good. All dealers or Zam-Buk Co„ Toronto, 60e, box, 3 for $1,26. The sprint; (raining season is again upon us .Ind still no League of Nations. The Siutcoe Reformer has absorbed the Delhi Reporter, which has followed the example of many other papers in recent years in. ceasingpublicatiolt 1 ' Head Ached Se Bad NAI TO OO TO BEd. When the liver becomes sluggish and inactive it does not manufacture enough bile to thoroughly act on the bowels and carry off the waste matterf ,otn the system, hence the bowels becomd cloggee up, the bile Feta into the blood, con stipation sets in and is followed by sic( and bilious headaches, y'ater beach heartburn, floating specks before the eyes, and painful internal, bleeding of protruding piles. Milburn's Laxa-Irver Pills regulate the flow of bile so that it este properly on the bowels, and stirs• !tie -re -sluggish liver into activity, Mrs. E. Bainbridge, Amherst.? N:at3., writes: --"I take pleasure in writing you of the good I received by using Mil - burn's Laxa-Liver Pills for headaphe. I was so bad I had to go to bed, and could not sit up. A friend told me about your wonderful.medieine, and two vials have made me as well as 1 can be'; ' Milburn's Laxa-Liver Piga are 25s. a vial at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price, by The T. ' Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Thursday, Marph 18th; 1920, '$45,000,000 THEFTS FROM CARS SHOWN, , 013ooty Double.Thgt 1. Aldi PIe�. War Year. whom -al() 1o4timerchandise omerchandisehl trlt•lsit on the railroads at the Uuited States (aimed, tt loss of ap pend ttptoly $45,000,000 in 1919, ae uordit g to lit:; led States itaitroad Act n nistr attoe stall •lice mucte pe'ei:c recently, - This le estimated 10 be. more than donate the lossta !sustained, in etey p-e-waryear, but' it is pointed out tiny ht hu,ri st orf o. the corn tin I a d f modeles stolen, loll hty esti hated 15 ,45,0,45 85 pet -reuse t15n0 Le utkon into considc ratlde when comparing arirg the -looses tri the days of lax priceli • wltp tepees stow, Novc,Lheleae there' has hecto a steadily t ersusing auto her of" pard ares stolen, and thee or geuatzatton . eon:hataing the thieve' ver have tont an inereeeed ingenuity it diverting'' goods from thele' owners, A te: anh;aa of robbery has bee clevelopts so hlt hly that the metjwdss of "mete; Stowage are similar In the Uuited S'".les, 1'J igland, France Italy and Ar„ entina, according to a recent report of the United States Clamber of Commerce in Argentina. Detectives, however, are inclined to discredit that organization's belief (bat a "widespread interua- tional organization" is at work steal- ing merchandise. Substitution is the usual method used by the thieves. Sometimes boxes supposed to contain velvets are Lound at,tliefr destination to be tilled with calico or other cheaper sander of cloth, but se a rule, waste paper to found. These are referred to ne "concealed losses"' by rallway men, an are especially difficult to trace, es the shipment leaves and arrives apparently in good condition, and it to almost irrt'poseible to discover at whet point the theft occurrede • The silk industry Sas been one oe the; most' severely hit in the' last year, and so great has the r^ak be- come that the Railroad Administra- tion ha.s been considering exeludiup raw silks, from the privilege or freight transportation be rail. The :Merchants' Association of Ncw' Yore through les traffic bureau, has erre tested against such an 5.xel2sto5. ad• vocatin some less radical measuret, to mi mize or prevent the theft of silk n transit. / The average married ratan can't un- derstand how Carnegie managed to sate so much money. Prosperity may see that justice is done a man, but he would rather at- tend the trial its person. 1f you are looking for a good man it's pretty safe plan to pick out an ugly one. Girls who indulge in promiscuous kissing aren't likely to catch anything —not even a husband, • - House Phone !five You Ever Thoutr t e = Teas? •--1111t;aC f T2A 'We haven't hSard of a single instance yet, have you, where theGovernment whisky outlasted the flu epidemic? 'rhe reesou that the farmers and the labor folk can't get together is that eine of then wants to work. .The three R's ruts all through life- nfeat 25 you think of romance at 45 you think of rent, and at 65 of your rheumatism, The Germans are said to be import- ing large numbers of skunks from the United States, Strange that any shortage of this animal should be found to exist in the Fatherland. , I ' 1 A Kansas ratan was fined $60 fear kicking a mule, He s4iil insists that it is a good rule never to put off doing today what •the mule might do to you tusnorr- ow. .Many are of the opinion that what Mars wants to ask the U.tited States is whether it Is really true that Mr, Bry- an isn't a candidate: More proof that prunes are health- ful even when applied externally is fur- nished by a dispatch from Philadelphia which tells us that a man saved his roll and probably his life by slamming a stick-up gunman over the head with a bag of the boarding -housekeepers' de- light. w anal properly infused, is one of Nature's greatest blessings as a harmless stimulating beverage. • A frozen pototo, comes the report, nearly caused the death of a cow at Barryton this week. That's nothing. A peck of them, when already delivered and paid for, has been known almost to kill Pathe}, it takes Unele Sam just as long to get out of the war as it took him to get into it.' Cheap Greenbacks. Ttauo was in. Toronto whoa the American dollar, to -da>) worth $1.17 in our,. Canadian' money, could be picked up. fol' 40 cents, Those were the far-off days of 150 American Civil War, before most o'f Toronto money' magna lesirad entered the'world. and I when Sir Edmned Walker, president ! of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, -t was a youth in his uncle's private banking office al: Hamilton, where to handle the great influx of depreciated I American money, separate ledgers were kept for it and our own Cana- i Ilan currency. The flnaifcial situation of the Northern States at that time has no parallel to that of Britain and Canada to -day. The"North had not borrowed money abroad to secure the sinews of war. Uncle Satn had merely expended his currency to an enormous extent. Early in the'war most of the gold and silveQr in the States had been sent abroad .10 pay for supplies. There was nothing but paper in the country and with that and the uncertain for- tunes of war, from early in the cam- paign American notes were at a big discount over here. During a con- siderable portion of the period be- tween 1861 and 1'866 the American dollar brought 50 cents and even 40 cents. At one time things looked so black for the North that in Quebec the American greenback fell to 40 cents, whereas the Confederate dol- lar, which hardly passed current at gil in Canada, brought 35 cents. Not until about 1879 dict. the American dollar get to par. Ole the hear. Ole the Bear (A. R. Westerberg), roan carrier between Revelstoke, B,C., and Downie Creek, forty-five miles up the Big Bend, succeeded in accomplishing a feat that establishes a new record in. this district. The great depth of snow up the Big Bend, together with the heavy crust caused by raining and [redoing, niacle It practically impossible fora horse to travel' the roads, but Ole conceived the idea of making snowshoes for his horse, which he diel out of birch, constructing tineas circular In shape assn more titan a 1.00t across. lror protection lie covered the hor'se's seg with blankets, and thus Ise succeed- ed in makflig Revelstoke in three days without harm to himself or horse. February Has Five Sundays. For the first time in forty years there,r is Ave Sundays In February. Ordinarily the sequence of lire Sun- days in February recuts once In each twenty-eight years, but awing to the fact that 1900 was not a leap year the calendar "slipped a cog," and Sunday, being shunted out of place in numerical' orddt', It did nut get back into position to become the first and last day of the - month from 1880 until this year. cotes' Cottoi gloat Cr"F",i 4O14911K • .4 ants:, ,'Yiiahf/ er,F4tptf/ i medusae, ...id it three de' areae of streeste--40. ].1111 No. a tilt; No. 3, S5 per boa • Soldby f desolate, enreempt pct of price. lros pamphlet. Addreean THE COOK WIEDICIIIE'CO, • 11150810. OW (Fairest* Wh 4ar) Pointed Paragraphs Other people roust die in order that the undertaker may live, Men whose only books are women's looks are students of folly, When a man is down his enerni•et stop kicking him and his friends' be: gin.; A woman will pardon lack of sense quicker than she will lack of manners: Practical Hints re Production and iVlarketirig Eggs.. t—Feed liens on clean wholesome food, and provide plenty of puce wader in clean utensils. 2—Keep poultry house dean. nsanitary and free from vermin. Provide plen- ty of clean dry nests in darkened places, 3—Gather eggs at least once a day in cool weather and twice n day in hot weather, 4 ---Do not sell eggs known to be bed,. it is dishonest. 5—Do not wash eggs. 6—Sell eggs as regularly and frequen- tly as possible; at least twice a week in the Summer and once in the win- ter. i ---Never expose eggs to direct 'sun- light, rain or to extreme heat, 8—Always keep eggs to a cool dry pla- ce and theft have them covered with a cloth or other means to pre- vent evaporation. Do not keep eggs near keresene, onions, fish or Otho" strong smelling substance; the readily absorb odours, twill -Lia lois & Ca, , t)iitc0 The up-to-date Firm rumen Branatl Phone 100 A. W. Trev--rtha, Manager or llottitesville 4 on 14S. PI Os' Before purchasing your new piano or organ let us show you the newest de- signs in several well- known and old establish- ed snakes. INSTRUMENTS RENT- ED AT MODERATE PRICES PHONOGRAPHS See our stylish cabinet designs in the best »issltes. Ca .t' c't Op( nitag of tht Nov P liamnent Ruili4ditws,•q' ttarva, by the Aute; of Detopt stee 11' ti .e.,Seet.t:yet e'•4 .. ,550