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The Clinton News Record, 1916-08-17, Page 7A Great Op, ortunity WIRELESS OPERATORS In order to meet a wide -spread demand the Marconi Company has decided to open a SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION at its Head Office, 137 McGill Street, Modtreal, uoder its immediate and authoritative control, the first of its hind in Canada. Unfivalled oppor- tunities for travel are offered to young men with ambition and energy who desire to adopt Wireless Operating as a profession. An experienced Instructor is In charge 'Of the School_ and a Standard . Marconi ship Set is in UR0 for practical inotruotion, Day and evening •classes. Brirol Inonediately for the 'all SesOleo. Write for proSpectOS. MARCONI WIRELESS TELEGRAPH CO. OF CANADA MONTREAL LIMITED ,ree.se. CANADA'S MAPLE SUGAR INDUSTRY PRINCIPALLY LOCATED IN THE PROVINCE OF QUEBEC - 55,000 Makers of Sugar and Syrup in the Dominion, Holding 1,000 •Square Miles. The possible money value to Can- ada of the maple industry is far greater than is generally supposed There are at present no less than 55,- 000 makers of maple sugar and syrup in the Dominion. Allowing a ten - acre bush to each farmer would mean that 550,000 acres, or about 1,000 square miles, are being reserved in their natural wooded state, a most im- portant matter for the conservation of our springs and rivulets. In this large area, no less than two-thirds is situated in the province of Quebec. There are a few sugar bushes in On- tario and a negligible number in the Maritime Provinces. For some inex- plicable reason it Mee never been real- ized that we have in Canada millions of acres of maple bush running from the north of Lake Superior to the shores of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, all standing in their primeval condition, waiting only to be tapped to yield to the world its remarkable wealth. When it is remembered that It is only in the border states of New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine that the sugar mule grows within the Unted States, lind that with this ex- ception we in Canada possess the whole world's supply, the great im- portance of the industry will be real- ized. Two Millions Worth. It is estimated, says the Montreal Journal of Commerce, that in 1915 Canada produced two million dollars worth of maple syrup and sugar. In 1911 the output in the Province of Quebec was valued at $1,680,000, a sum 14 per cent. greater than the production of our small fruits; con- siderably greater in value than the sheep sold, almost equal to the sale of our poultry, exceeding that of our whole outputeof cream, and six times the money obtained from honey and wax. These comparisons serve to show the relative importance of our maple industry, the possibilities 01 which are too great to estimate, if the immense woods of Ontario and the Lower Provinces were cultivated as they should be. • A peculiarity of the situation is that there is practically no demand outside of North Ainerica for this commodity, and for no other reason than that no effort has been made to make it known to the countries be- yond the seas. Needless to say, once the exquisite flavor has been discov- ered by the millione abroad there will be no lack of demand for this essen- tially Canadian product. U. S. Takes All Export. At the present moment our chief export market is in the United States. During the five years from 1908-1912, 20 per cent, of our exported maple sugar went to the Republic and 50 per cent. of the syrup. During these five years we exported altogether 8,- 685,000 lbs. of sugar and 20,000 gal- lons of maple syrup, a inere bagatelle in comparison with our capabilities. In May of this year the Milted States will remove their customs duties upon both our maple products, thereby opening up to us a reaeket that with- out exaggeration may be termed un- limited, for at the present rate of pro- . .. a 1.110.1,00.1e. AINAIRRIIIIMILVI,01.14==.•113031, Do Tea and Coffee DIsairee Many are not aware of the VI eff auto of tea or cof- fee drinking Until a bilions attack, frequent headaches, nervousness, or some other ailment 'Starts them think- ing. Ten days off both tea and coffee and On posTuri --the pure food-drink—Will Show anyone, by the better health that follows, how tea Or Coffee has been treating thorn. "There's a Reason" for POSTUM Sold by Grocers. Canadian Fosturn Cereal Co,, Ltd., Windsor, Ont, duction we could not possibly supply the demand of 100,000,000 people. On April 15, 1915, after our last yield of sugar had been gathered in, an Act was passed at Ottawa to amend the Adulteration Act. This is a simple statement and gives but lit- tle idea of the struggle and contro- versy that has been going on for years before it was possible to per- suade parliament to protect the in- dustry against fraudulent manufac- turers, who never went near a maple bush, have been putting up a mixture of cane, sugar and water flavored either with a smell percentage of maple syrup or with an essence call- ed "Mapleine." These syrups and sugars were labelled with such names as "Maple flavor syrup," • "Maple compound," etc., while many were not labelled at all. From the following table will be seen the extent to which this systematic adulteration has in- jured the maple industry, mcge espe- cially since 1890. Production of Sugar Years. lbs. 1850-60 . 135,000,000 1860-70 175,000,000 1870-80. . 190,000,000 1880-90 . 225,000,000 1890-1900 . 212,000,000 1900-10 . 196,000,000 „ Adulteration Stopped. In 1900 the. first steps were taken in protest. In that year, 2,000 sugar makers signed a petition which theY presented to the Hon. Sydney Fisher, then Minister of Agriculture. The difficulty at that.time was the impos- sibility of obtaining chemical tests whereby cane and beet sugar could be detected in the maple product. In 1904 the Agricultural Department of the State of Vermont discovered that by using subacetate of lead they could determine if maple sugar or syrup were adulterated. This was of material assistance to 'our Inland Re- venue Department, and in Feb., 1915, a bulletin was issued giving the re- sults of chemical tests on a number of syrups and sugars. It was found that 76 per cent. of this collection was adulterated and only 24 per cent. pure. The publication evidently had a beneficial effect for in May of the same year a second test was made which showed a decided improvement, only 34 per .zent. being adulterated. From that time the Department has issued annual bulletins, but, finding it impossible to stop adulteration, the act already referred to was placed upon the statute books. A most gra- tifying result is shown in Bulletin • 825, just ream tly -published although dated October, 1915, according to which only 15 per cent, of the sam- ples were found impure. On looking over these pamphlets from year to year the names of the same offenders occur again and again. Evidently the •policy has been to pay the an- nual fine and proceed as before i Prior to April, 1915, the fine was merely nominal, but under the new regulations it is to be hoped that an end will be put to the fraud. The Word "Maple." The amendment of the Adulteration Act prenibits the manufacture and sale of adulterated maple syrup or sugar, and restricts ,the word "Maple" to pure maple sugar or • sprup, imposing a fine of from $50 to $500 and costs for wilful adultera- Hon; and from $50 to $200 and costs for the sale of the adultetatecl article. ;While the fight has apparently been won, it is felt that otily by eternal vigilance will it be possible to pro- tect the honest maker. Those who have been instrumental in bringing about these important reforms are naturally much encouraged and feel that the maple industry stands on • the threshold of a great development, with the unlimited markets of Great Britain and the United States lying before it.—Canadian Forestry Jour- nal. . WHY IS THE SUN HOT? It Is Heated Like a Piece of White 1100 Iron. If we could build up a solid column of ice from the earth to the sun two miles and a half in diameter, spanning the intervening distance ot 03,000,000 miles; and if the sun should conceu,! trate • his entire power upon it, It would disolve in a single second, ac- cordiug to a calculation made by Prof. Young. To produce this enormous amount of , beat would require the hourly bit:ming' of a layer of anthracite coal more than nineteen feet thick over the en- tire surface of the Sun. If the sun! were composed or solid coal and we • derived our heat from the burning of • that coal the sun wbuld burn out in les than spo years. Since the earth • Is millions of years old the sun cannot be burning. Its heat must be genera- ted in some more persistent way. The great physicist Helmholtz was the first to explain satisfactorily what keeps the sun hot. The sun is not burning • .11. is heated to the glowing point, like a vitae of White hot iron. Helmholtz found that if we suppose the sun to be contracting by only 250 feet a year we would receive our pre - emit amount of heat. In other words, heat is being literal- ly soneezed out of the still. Professor Newcomb estimated that whew -the squeezing, process has continued; for about 7,000,000 years the Situ W111 be one-half its present size. • In four years, 1912-16, 3,597,000 people have visited the Canadian Na - Hemel Exhibition. Yet in all that time there has not been an accident gettirig on or off the cars at the main eketratice where practically all the traffic is handle. Iteeene, MEN OF THE GLEN AWAY TO THE WAR BRAVE LASSIES AWAIT FOR LOV- ERS TO RETURN. Maimed and Blinded Relics of Battle- fields Fortune Welcomed Home With Prayers. There is a kindly wind blowing from over the loch, writes a correspondent of the London Times. It comes steal: Ing down from the slopes of Ben Don- ich, ruffles the still water in patches and creeps through the castle policies, telling the great oaks something that keeps them whispering all the morn. The little town seems sleeping. The plash of the brown waters over the weir beneath the castle bridge fillti the ears. A heron stands motionless in the shallow water, surfeited with the full irmal he has just finished. Then from the direction of the town there comes the sound of a deum. If we draw nearer we will see why it ie that the loch -side is deserted. In the the church square some 200 kilted lads are saying a farewell to their sisters and Mothers and other people's sisters and :mothers, for they are marching to the wars, as their forefathers have done before them from time imme- morial. This little hamlet has sent men to every war that Britain has engaged in, and no matter how far back you go, every onfall, siege, leaguer, every brawl between nations has seen-Mac- Cailein Mor's men well in the fore- front of the battle. And so it is that these men have left the loch -side and the brae, have left the fishing boat on the beach and the sheep without a shepherd. .A Chorus of Farewells. The last good-byes are being said, and a girl with eyes as blue as the wa- ters of the loch on a summer's day calls to her brother, a tall piper. "See and no forget to pipe to they Ger- mans," she says, "and look- after Sandy for me. I'm feared he'll be led away. by yon French lassies." A cor- poral answers her, "I'll leok after my - eel' fine," and he kisses the girl and rejoins his ranks: - The officer in charge of the com- pany gives a warning, and the men hoist their web slings over their shoulders. The pipers form up in front of the column and as they move off they toss the drone and the stocs of the pipes on to the hollow of their shoulders. There is a chorus of fare- wells broken into by the wheeze of the filling bags and the buzz of the great drones. The drum beats on the set- ting down„ of each left foot, and away they go with caps fluttering in the breeze, sporrans a -swing to the step. The drum rolls and the glen is waken- ed as it has been many times in the past with the lilt of one of the finest marches that ever burst from the chanter. "Belle Ionaraora" it is, bet- ter known to you as "The Campbells Are Coming." Round the town front and past the old inn and the great stone -arched gates to the castle walls, where the pipers change their tune to the salute, "Failte 'Marcum" By the burying ground they step out to the march once more, and until they are over the hump -backed bridge the tune continues. It stops with a sad little gasp as the bags deflate and are tucked under each oxter with the stoc ribbons to the fore, fluttering their dark blue, yellow -striped tartan rib- bons. The Ghost of a Melody. Suddenly a man in th front four breaks into song. His clear voice echoes back to the listening women by the inn: The Rover o' Lochryan, he's gene Wie his merry men sae brave; Their hearts are o' steel, an' a better keel Ne'er bowl'd owre the back 0' a wave. ft's no when the loch lies dead in its • trough, • When needling disturbs it ava, But the rack and the ride o' the rest- less tide. An' the.splash o' the grey sea -maw. Under the shadow of the hill the wind steals the song and carries it away and up the glen, but as the road crosses a tongue that juts into the lake it is still borne faintly down to the isten ing women. WO dash through the drift and sing - to the lift 0' the wave that heaves us on. From the crags under the beason it is repeated wistfully. The waves that heaves us on." The light goes and the lamps are lit in the cottages along the front. The tall girl who was anxious about Sandy is the last to leave. She shades her eyes with her hand and looks again, listening the while, and down the winding waters, "the trough o' the loch," there comes the ghost of O melody. But the wind is fickle and it stays but a moment. The girl turns and goes into a cottgae near at hand. 'You'll no' be wantin' the light yet awhile, mither," she'says, and the old woman agrees. The seasons have changed the leaves in the glen as the yellow St. John's wort changes the wool for the tartan of the Lachlans. There are no young men left in the town. There are but old men and women, ansI, the sturdy youngsters fretting that they might too, be allowed to go to the wars. The blue-eyed girl waits on the jetty for a steamship that is as yet 10 miles down the loch. She knows this, but she must wait here. At last a puff of ernoke heralds the approach of the little boat that soon afterward creeps round the promontory. As it ties up at the jetty the girl sees Two Kilted Figures on the Deck, She sees them through a mist of tears for one Mart, her brother, has an etneity sleeve. And yet he is the luokier el the tivo, for he helps the other man to the kitlelay, imittiAg his hands on the side reels. "Dye Steps, Sandy," he warns him, but the blind man is safe at last, and softet hands have helpecl him on to the quay% • "I &Ina' see moth o' the lereech lassies, Alison," gays he bravely, "for It was dark when they took us through to the front, and when I came haek it was dark, too, leastways, ft was for me." "Oh, Sandy, Sandy/' cries the girl, and Sandy knows that the splaeh of wet on his hand is not froni the ram that has been threatening for the last hour. So these three go up the little street to the cottage where a very old lady meets them. "Come ben the hoose, and we'll just.- have prayers," is all she says when she has stepped from the one-armed em- brace of her son. And the four of them kneel and offer thanks. Put the scene back 100 years to the "45," or back further still, and there is nothing new in it. Think it out for yourself, and ask what it is that brings these men of the heather ancl the glen to fight for England. They have been treated as outlaws, hunted and slain. Their dress and their mu- sic was forbidden them, their very language was proscribed so that it was a crime to Epeak of it. And yet —and yet the rnasic of the piob-mohr echoes over the fields of Flanders and the deserts of Egypt, through the ruined colonnades of Grecian temples, and is even heard in the African jun- gle. FAMOUS POET HAS ENLISTED. Alfred Noyes, English Verse Writer, Joins the Army. Not content to sing in many noble poems of the glories of Britain's might, Mr. Alfred Noyes, the English poet, has returned to the Old Country from the United States in order to take up military duties, In doing this he sacrifices a distinguished poeition, for only two months ego he was ap- pointed professor of English literature at Yale. Mr. Noyes, who went to the United States in February, 1914, when he ac- cepted a professorship at Phinceton University, is 36 years of age. Not long ago he confessed that, unlike the majority of poets, he was able to live on the proceeds of his muse, on which Americans promptly dubbed him the Prosperous Poet. For some time, however, before he left the United States, Mr. Noyes had been Working strenuously in the cause of the allies. He has read his poems and given readings in more than 200 American cities and sixty or seventy colleges and educational In- stitutions, and thereby raised thou- sands of dollars for war funds. ' "The impression I have," he says, "about the American point of view, is that the whole nation is anxious to do whatever it can to help the cause of the allies." Mr. Noyes emphasizes, however, the German influence in the educational institutions of the United States. "A. very large proportion or the staffs of the colleges and universi- ties," he says, "has received all its educational training, or, at any rate, its post -graduate training, in Ger- many." "These universities," says Mr. Noyes, "are turning out thousands or students every year on a certain sys- tem, and the great majority of cases emanates from Germany, which does everything she can to capture and en- courage American studenta, This is where we fail, for, owing to the re- gulations existing at our universities, American students are discouraged from coming over here." In appearance Mr. Noyes bears no resemblance to the traditional poet. He might be mistaken for a college athlete, and, as an American observer bas said, "he gives the impression of being a man as keenly aware of the sidewalk as. et the stars." Mr. Noyes, who is a Staffordshire man by birth, married in 1007 a daugh- ter of the late Cal. 13. G. Daniels, of the United States army, and enjoys as great a popularity in America as In England. THE LARGEST BUDDHA. One Hundred and Ninety Feet Long and Forty Feet 'High. The bronze Buddha of Yokohama is commonly thought to be the largest statue of that god in the world ; but there Is one in Burma that exceeds it In at least one dimension and gives an impresion of far greater size. When the Thiel& were building the railway from Raugeon to Mandalay in 1881, they searched the vicinity of Pegu for stone with which to make the embankment through the great swamps. In the whole area there was only one elevation ot any importance ; the engineers thought that this hill might previda the necessary material ; so they dug into its base, and were surprised to find some artistic brick- work. On clearing away the earth farther they found an enormous stone Oaths that represented Buddha in a reclinieg position, The statue is about one hundred and ninety feet long, and, including the brick base, it IS MOM than forty feet high, The Yokohama Buddha is fifty-five feet high and one hundred and ten feet in circumference. Although the 'Burmese statue is not so artistic as the Japanese, it is a won- derful piccc of work. Not the least remarkable thing about It is the way in which so huge a mona! merit has disappeared a.bsolutely from Burmese history and legend. The news of the discovery at once brought numberless Buddhists to the place, who gilded and decorated the gigantic image as a work of devotion. The soles of its huge feet were ornamented at great cost with an elaborate glass mosaic, and each toe was embellished with a separate decoration How it Happened. First Woman (angrily)—Your Johnny gave my Willie the measles. Second Woman—No such ' thing! Your Willie came over where my Johnny.was and took 'ern, "It conies so near to what the people want they come annually," is Hon. James Duff's brief descriptiorc of the Canadian National Exhibition. Stopping your advertising when business is dull is like tearing out a dam because the water is low, Storage Batteries Generators Magnetos Starters Send them tor prompt Bonaire to CANADIAN STORAGE EAU/TEEM 00,, LIIIIIITED 117 Simms Bt., Toronto. Willard Agents. Are You For. "Pre. paredness"? The best preparedness for man or WOMan Is the preparedness that comes from living in harmony with law. In Sum- mer cut out the heavy foods that tax bodily strength and vigor. Eat Shredded Wheat Biscuit. the food that con- tains all the body-building material in the whole wheat grain in a digestible form. For breakfast or luncheon with berries or other fruits. Made in. Canada HITTING THE TRAIL. — - Rarest of Sport in the Rockies or Selldrks. Canada is a land of trails. Trails over mountains and hills across prairies and through forests, by the banks of rivers beyond num- ber and across country toward a dis- tant sky line. Trails madeeby red men, and by nature. But the mountain trails are the most alluring of them all, and hitting trails is the rarest of sport in Rock- ies on Selldrks, all the way from the Kananaskasis Pass on the east to the Yale gateway on the west. Hundreds of miles of excellent, trails have been made in the Canad- ian mountain ranges by the- Canad- ian Pacific Railway and the National Parks department of the Canadian Government. Most of them are made for pony use,•and mounted on one of these sure-footed little beasties of the west, you carnbe an explorer of the wilds and revel in the experience. Every mile of the devious way id a way of varying charm, every turn of the trail reveals new wonders. Many trail trips are now made in loops. There is the one from Glacier station up the Cougar Valley to the caves and back by a loop route and over a pass that brings to view some of the sublimest scenery in the Sel- kirks. The literal ups and downs of this unique scenic route, as the rail- ways would say, add to the interest, now in the bed' of the valley, closed in by trees and huge plants like the De- vil's Club, now climbing a thousand feet from, which superb views are had of the kingly peaks eike Sir Donald. The trail traveller will find another region of infinite variety and attrac- tiveness in the series of trails radiat- ing from Field and leading up the Yoho Valley to the Yoho Glacier field as its sipper end. Lake Louise will also provide de- lecbable trail paths, especially that leading to Paradise Valley ancl its circle of giant summits, and Sentinel Pass, leading to the valley of the Ten Peaks, while in the Rocky Mountain Park and Banff, the routes are multi. plying year by year. 'Yes, trail hitting is rare sport, I repeat, and no country in the world affords greater facilities for 'its en- joyment, than our own Canadian mountains.—F. Y. A Pertinent Query. A man who had made a huge for- tune WaS speaking a few words to a class ab a business college. Of course, the main theme of his address was himself. "All my success in life, all my fin- ancial prestige " he said proudly, "I owe to ono thing alone—pluck. Just take that for your motto—Pluck, pluck, pluck!' " He made an impressive pause here, but the effect was ruined by one stu- dent, who asked impressively: "Yes, sir, but please tell us how and whom to pluck?" Anxious to Qualify The recruit was being sworn in, Everything went swimmingly until the question was asked: "Have you ever been in prison'l" "No, sir," was the reply. "Pee nev- er been in jail, bub don't mind doing a few days if you think it necessary." Like many other seceeesful institu- tions, the Canadian Netional Exhibi- tion was in financial straits. many. times early in its career. On one occasion one of the Directors gave his personal note for $10,000 before the gates could be opened. Now it pays all annual surplus to the City of Toronto. Pretty nearly every man remembers that he was once a boy. The trouble is that so few of ns recall the kind of boys we were, Miners's Liniment mice' bY PhYnlciana A Talented Father. A father had decided that he must administer a stern lecture to his youthful son. Father spoke judiciously, but sev- erely; he recounted the boy's mis- deeds, and duly explained the whys and wherefores of his solmen rebuke, his wife the while standing by, duly impressed. Finelly, when the father ceased for breath and incidentally to heae the culprit's acknowledgement of error, the boy, his face beaming with admir- ation tuxuecl to his mother and said: "Mother, isn't dad interesting?" A Rising Concern. "So you've invested your money in a new airship company." "Yes, If our airship goes menthe stock will go up." "13ut suppose it deesn't?" "Then the company will go up." MleleleiNTS I4 ElIBLES. Some Famous Errore In Early English Print. The "Breeches" 13ible. "Then the eies of them both were opened, an4 they knew that they were naked, and they „sewed figge leavetogether and made themselvea Breeehefee (Gen. 3 7). Printed in 1560. The "bug" Bible. "So that then :shalt not node to be afraid for any Hennes by nighte, nor for the arrow that iiyeth by day" (Psalm 91 t 6). Printed in 1661. The "Treacle" Bible. "Is there not treacle at Gilead ? Is there no Phesi- Man there ?" (Jer, 8 : 22). Printed in 1568. The "Rosin" Bible. "Is there no rosin in Gilead 7 Is there no physi- cian there ? (Jer. 8 : 22). Printed in 1609. The "Place -makers" Bible. "Blessed are the place -makers ; for they shall Ole called the children of Clod." (Matt : 9). Printed 1561-2. The "Vinegar" 'Bible. "'rhe Parable of the Vinegar," fhstead of "The Par- able of the Vineyard," appears in the chapter -heading to Luke 20, in an Ox- ford edition of the Authorized Version, which was published in 1717. The "Wicked" Bible. Thia extra. ordinary name has been given to an edition of the Authorized Bible, Drint- ed in London by Robert Barker and Martin Lucas in 1631. The negative was left out m t of the Seventh Comand- ment ; and William Kilburne, writ- ing in 1669, says that owing to the zeal of Dr. Usher, the printer was fined 2,0001. or 3,0001. The "Bars -To -Bar" Bible. "Who hath ears to ear, let him hear." (Matt. la : 43). Printed in 1810, The "Standing -Fishes" Bible. "And it shall come to pass that the fishes will stand upon it," etc. (Beek, 47 : 10). Printed in 1806. The "Discharge" Bible, "1 discharge thee before God." (1 Tim. 5 : 21). Printed in 1806. "Rebekah's-Camels" Bible. "And Rebekah arose, and her camels." (Gen. 24: 61). Printed in 1823. The "Wife -Hater" Bible. "It any man come to me, and hate not his father,....yea, and his own wife also." etc. (Luke 14 : 26). Printed in 1810. "To -Remain" Bible. "Persecuted him that was born after the apirlt to remain, even so it is nOW." (Gal. 4: 29). This typographical error, which was perpetuated in the first 8vo Bible printed for the Bible Society, takes its chief importance from the curious circumstances under which it arose A 12mo Bible was being printed at Cam- bridge in 1805, and the proof-reader being in doubt as to whether or not he should remove a comma, applied to his superior, and the reply, Penciled on the margin, "to remain," was trans- ferred to the body of the text, and re- peated in the Bible Society's 8vo edi- tion of 1805-06, and also in another 32mo edition of 1819. SUMMER COMPLAINTS KILL LITTLE ONES. At the first sign of illness during the ikot weather give the little ones Baby's Own Tablets, or in a few hours he may be beyond cure. These Tab- lets will prevent summer complaints if given occasionally to the well child and will promptly cure these troubles if they come on suddenly. Baby's Ovrn Tablets should always be' kept In every home where there are young children. e There is no other medicine as good and the mother has the guar- antee of a government analyst that they are absolutely safe. The Tab lets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. Conversational Dieappointment. "I understand that your new servant is a disappointment." "Yes," replied Mrs. Gaddington Prye. "The last family she worked for doesn't seem to be at all interest- ing." -- The Dog Show at the Canadian Na- tional Exhibition has been run for 21 years, and is the second largest on the Continent. A woman may not believe in mili- tary preparedness, but she can al- ways look daggers at a man when she wants to, Eeep ilitinard,o Liniment In Dm house Nothing to His Credit. "It's been ten years since I've had my salary.raised." "You ought to be ashamed of your- self." . "I ought to be ashamed, Why?" ."To think that in ten years you couldn't prove yourself to be worth more money -to your employer." Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemere—I bave used MIN - ARM'S LINIMENT on my vessel and in my family for years and for the every -day ills and accidents of life I consider it has no equal. I would net start on a voyage without it, if it cost a dollar a bottle. CAPT. le. R. DESJARDIN. Schr. Storke, St. Andre, Karnouraska. Poor, But Honest. She was an heiress, and he was poor, but otherwise holiest. "How much do you love me, dear?" she asked after the manner of her kind. "I love you," he replied in a tone replete with candor, "for all you are worth," ED. 4. ISSUE, 34.—'16. SHOES Colony ond Corn ortal)le WORN BY EVER MEMBER OF THE FAMILY SOLD BY ALL goon SHOE DEALERS tegoisfuesiamateseannes=034118 The Hurd -Hearted Bose. "Pm. geeing to get married, and I wonderer if you wouldn't raise My salary on that account." "Do you think that getting marrieA is going to make you worth more to this firm ?" "I don'b know, sir, but I'm sure I shall need :um money." "All right, but just remember if we give more- money we'll need more work from you. iffinarePs Liniment Zuni/m=84w attend Less Than Nothing. "I don't think I degerve zero on this examination," said the, pupil, as he book his geometry papers. "No, I do not either, John, but that was the lowest I could give you," said the teacher. ore Granulated Eyelids'. Eyes inflamed by expo- sure to Sun, Dust and Mad quickly relieved by Marine ye sEye Remedy. No Smarting, Just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Marine Ey, alveinTubes25e. ForBook ollhayefreeask Druggists or Murloe Eye Remedy Co., Chicago A woman can get more pleasure out of a good cry than a man can extract from a good laugh. Ask for 211.nard,s and take no strum The fellow who waits for good luck to come along and help him out it apt to find that bad luck is the only thing travelling his way. Samos SEED POTATOES SEED POTATOES, MIMI COB. biers, Deleware, Carman. Order at once. Supply limited, Write for Quo. tattoos. Ff. W. Dawson, Brampton. NEWSPAPERS poz SALE PROPIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB °ffgs rays sate In Sol! ?ntarlo towns. e t esting of all businesses, Pull information on application to Wilson Publishing Conf. pany, 79 West Adelaide Street, Toront0, IIIISOEILLANEOUS CANCER, TUMORS, LIMPS, ET04 internal and externalcured wIth. oUt pain by our home treatment. Write es before too late. Dr, Bellman niemeas Ca, Limited, Collingwood, Ont. !Become o Rogistorred Nuree, and receive pay while learning The Beth Israel hospital of Nerw York QAT Pounded 2890 Aoarrallied by theleevr York atato Foltioablon Dept. Offer. a 48oitud•ono-holl your couroo1. training tor 1211nell with allow.° Anpltoonts mot /um ono pow Molt sobool W111 M06-011 oduoatinnal equfvOent, For pariaulAre oilareee Beth Teruel Roopltitl, 06 Tqforiton BE., Now 'York. nee_ Arne dca's Pioneer 11. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. Dag Rainotiles 118 West 31st Street, New York 1100)K ON DOG DISEASES And Ilow to Feed free to Any oddrenn by the Author OntariVeterinary College Under the Control of the Depart- I =out of Agriculture of Ontario ESTABLISHED 1862 o Affiliated with the Univer- sity of Toronto. College will re -open on IldondaY. the Stul of October, 1910. 110 University Ave., Toronto, Can, CAEIINDAS ON APPLICATION E. A. A, Gag, V.$., MS,, RICO palp3.1.0mier-,00110•10199,2,-, 1 A Gold Mine On Your Farm . You can double your profits by storing UP good green fend in a BISSELL SILO sunimer Peed all Winter X•ong" Scientifically built to keep silage fresh, sweet and good to the last. Built of select- ed timber treated with wood 0100801•I'ati 000 that prevent decay. The 13185ELL SILO has strong, rigid walls, air -tight doors, hoops of heavy steel. Sold by dealers or address us direct. Get free folder, Write T. Bissell Co., Ltd. Dept, TJ Elora, Ontario. M.A.muar.anse.0.1030101.1au,01610M. iVh3ry For Sole Wheelock Engine, 150. HP., 18 x 42, with double main driving belt 24 ins. wicie,ancl Dynamo 30 W bcit driven. All in first class condition, Would be sold together or separate- ly; also a lot of shafting • at a verysreat bargain 0 room Is required immedI4 ately, 8. Frank Wilson & Sons 73 Adelaide Street Wist, Toronto.