The Clinton News Record, 1913-01-23, Page 7NElii13-3.ECORB'S CLUB-
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6LINTON, ONTARIO
Synopsis of Canadian 'Northwest
Land Regulations.
Any person who is the sole head
of a family, 01' any male over 18
years old, may homestead a quart-
er sectron of available Dominion
land in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or
Alberta. The applicant must ap-
pear in person el; the Dominion
Lands Agency or Sub -Agency for
the district. Entry by proxy
may be made at any agency, on cer-
tain conditions by fathermother,
son, daughter, brother or sister of
intending homesteader.
Duties.—Six months residence
upon and -cultivation of the land in
each of three years. A homestead-
er may •live within nine miles of
his homestead on a farm of at
least 80 acres solely owned and oc-
cupied by him or by his father,
mother, son, dau•ghter, brother or
sister.
In certain districts a homestead-
er in good standing may pre-erapt
a quarter -section alongside his
homestead. Price, 3.00 per acre.
Duties. --Must reside upon the
homestead or pre-emption six
months in each of six years from
date of homestead entry (including
the time required to earn home-
stead patent) and cultivate fifty
agree extra.
A homesteader who has exhausted
hirhomesteacl right and cannot ob-
tain a pre-emption may enter for
a purchased homestead in certain
districts. Price, $3.00.
Duties,—Must reside six months
in each of three years, cultivate
fifty acres and erect a house worth
$300.CO.
• W. W. CORY,
Deputy of the Minister of the In-
terior.
N.B.---Unauthorizecl publication
of this adYertisement will not be
paid for. •
DISGRACE TO SOCIETY.
Man Gets Six l'ilouths' Hard Labor
for Neglecting His Children.
A deepatch from Montreal says:
Emery Longpre was sentenced on
Wednesday to six months in jail
with herd labor for neglecting to
support his children, Three little
tots were found lying on straw in
an empty house on Dufferin street.
In pronouncing sentence, the Judge
told the accused that he was a dis,
grime to soCiety.
gtanbart
MONTREAL..
THE STANDARD is the National
iWeekly Newspaper of the Dominion
trf Canada. It is national in all HS
aims.
It uses tho most expensive engrav-
Ing procuring the photographs from
all over the world.
Its articles tire etrefully selected and
Rs editorial policy is thoroughly
independent.
A subscription to The Standard
costs $2.00 per year to any address in
Canada or Great Britain.
TRY IT FOR 1912!
Montreal Standard Publishing CO,.
Limited, Publishers.
Whooping Cough
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BRONCHITIS CATARRH COLDS
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A simple, sate and ofteeklee treatment for In on•
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ALL DRUGGISTE,
ITry CEGGOLENG
A flTIS
SPTi0 •TH RONA'
'TABLETS forthe Irritated
tlTrYnlg.elegie4TIttg
of
,Keta; deliftelstqm from
us, ute. In stanIch.
I Vapo Cresolone Co,
02 Cortland/ St., N.Y.
Mpes,pallaIns
1.110/3II Ca I, „..tif. ,
HOME RULE BILL PASSES'
Majority of ito On the Third Reading Closes a
Memorable Fight
A despatch from London nays;
After a long, stern battle the home
rule bill passed the House of Com-
mons on Thursday night by a ma-
jority of 110. It was later read for
the first time in. the House of
Lords. There were two divisions in
the lower House. Mr. Balfoor's
metion for its rejection was de-
feated by 258 te 368, while the third
reading was carried by a vote of
361 to 257, one member of each stde
having left the House in the inter-
val. The result of the chi/mien was
too much a foregone conclusion for
a tremendous demonstration, but
the Irishmen inside and outside of
the Hotta° did their best, and, as-
sisted by the Liberals and Labor-
ites, gave the measure for which
they had waited and worked so long
a good send-off on its way to the
House of Lords, where its fa,te is
oertainly sealed.
Series of Brilliant Speeches.
The division was preceded by an-
other sevies of brilliant speeches by
the Political leaders, among whom
were Frederick E. Smith and the
Solicitor -General, Sir John A. Si-.
mon, two of the bleverest among
the younger members, and the vet-
erans John E. Redmond, Timothy
Healy and Augustine Birrell, Chief
Secretary for Ireland.. - -
The House was crowded through-
out the day. The Nationalists
weve only ono short of their hill
strength, Joseph P.. Nannetti being
prevented from Attending by a
paralytic attack which he suffered
on Thursday. Several of the older
Nationalists who are seldom able
to attsAcl came OVEr from irela,nd
t divisiop
The Liberals and Laborites too
turned out in force, and the Union-
ists were not far below their -total
membership. the galleries likewise
were filled to their capaeity, those
occupying seats including many
dignitaries of the Church and the
l3rilgarian peace plenipotentiaries.
Memorable Scene hi House.
When the figures were announced
the Nationalists waved hats, hand-
kerchiefs and papers, and. cheered
luatily for Premier Asquith and
Mr. John Redmond. The latter,
who is usually impassive; Ives car-
ried away by the enthueiasm of his
followers and entered into the spirit
of the demonstrations as effusively
as they.
Scenes in Belfast.
A despatch from Belfast says:
Thousands of Orangemen and mem-
bers of Unionist dribs held demon-
strable/1,s outside the City Hall on
Thursday evening and burned a
„copy of the home rule bill. There
was much firing of revolvers, mostly
Malik cartridges, ,but one man was
siliot in the back and is in a critical
condition. There were no further
disorders, but bands paraded the
etreets until midnight.
NEARLY 400,000 ARRIVED
Of These 145,859 Were British and 140,143 Were
From the United States
A despatch from Ottawa says:
During the nine months, April 1 to
December 31, 1912, 334,083 immi-
grants .arriveed in Canada, 113;798
being from the United States, the
remainder coming in by ocean
ports, from Britain and all other
countries.
These figures' show an increase
of 14 per cent. as compared with
the number of arrivals in the cor-
responding months of 1911, which
were 185,151„ and 107,365 from the
United 'States, making a total for
the nine months period, last year,
of 292,516 persons.
During the month of December
this year there were 13,025 arrivals,
7,202 of them having been at ocean
ports, and 5,703 from the United
States, as against 10,624 for Decem-
ber last year, 4,945 of whom were
at ocean ports, and 5,679 from the
United States.
Varying the comparison, we have
for the same nine months: British,
127,875; United States, 113,798; all
other countries, 92,410; total, 334,-
083. Corresponding months of the
preceding fiscal year: British, 120,-
137; United States, 107,365; all
other countries, 65,014; total, 292,-
516.
Comparing the calendar year
1912 with 1911, immigration figures
are as follows: 1912 --British, 145,-
850; American, 140,143; other coun-
tries, 109,802; total, 3957804. 1911
—British, 144,076 Amerman, 131,-
114; other countries, 75,184; total,
350,374.
PRICES. OF FARM PRONCTS
FEFORTS FROM THE LEAVING THALIA
CENTRES OF AMERICA.
Sr leen of Cattle, eraln, Cheese end Othee
Produce at Herne and Abroad,
Breadstutfe.
Toronto, Jan M.—Manitoba Wheat—Lake
ports, No. 1 northern, 961.4o; No. 2, 933.4;
No. 3, 91 1-40; feed wheat, 66o.
Ontario Wheat—No. 2, 92e to 93c for ear
lots outside, ranging down to 700 for poor
adeS.
Ontario Oats—No, 2 white, 33o to 340 at
western points, 370 to 38e on track, To.
roil to.
Manitoba Oats—No. 2 C. W. oats, 41 1-2c;
track, bay ports; No. 3 C. W., 40,2; No. 1
feed, 40e, for prompt shipment.
Corn—Amerioan No. 3, all rail, Toronto,
December shipments, 675.
Peas—Ne. 2, $1.16 DO 31.20 car lots out-
side.
Buckwheat—No. 2, 51c to 520.
Eqe—No, 2, 70c, nominal.
Polled Oats—Per bag of 90 aounde.
221.0; per barrel, 34.70, wholesale. Wind-
sor to Mentreftl.
Barley—Good malting barley, outside,
63e to 65c,
3,111I0eed—Manitobs, bran, 319.00; in bags,
track, Toronto; shorts, $22; Ontario bran,
319.00, in bags; shorts, 322.
Manitoba Flour—Ftrst patents, 36.30 in
jute bags; second patents, 34.80 in jute
bags; stroug bakers', 34.00 in Jute bags.
In cotton bags, ten cents more Dor bar-
rel.
Ontario Flour—Winter wheat flour, 90
per cent.. patents, is onoted at 33.95 to
Country Produce.
The following are the latest prices To.
ronto wholesale men ere asking of the
trade:—
Egge—Cold.etorage eggs, 2.50 to 270 in
case lots; . fresh eggs are selling at Me to
31c; strictly new -laid at 32o to 36o.
Cheese—Twins, new, 14 3.40 to 155, and
large, new, at 14 1.20; old (Meese, twins,
15 Mc to 15 1-2o; large, 15c.
13utter—Oreamery prints, 31c to 32o; de.,
solids, 290 to 30e; dairy prints, 26o to 27c;
Inferior (bakers') 22c to 23c.
Roney—Buckwheat, 9c pound in tole and
8c in barrels; strained clover honey, 12 1:2c
I a 7011110 in 60 -pound tins, 12 3-4o in 10.
pound tins; 13e. in 5 -pound .me; oomb
hollei, No. 1, 52.60 per dozen ; extra. $3
Per dozen; No. 2, $2 40 per dozen.
Poultry --Live chickens, wholesale, 10e to
Ole per pound: fowl, 8c to 1.06; ducks,. 11c
to 13e; live urkeys, Ole to 17e; geme.
to 10e. Dressed poultry, le to 3e shove
live quotations, excepting dressed ttirkeys
Beene--Prhnes, $2.60, and $2.69 for heUd•
picked.
Potatoes—Onterie potatoes. 85e Per bo.gf
Oal. lots, 75c; New 13runswieks, 31 per bag,
out of store; 90c in car iota:
Spouts)) 01110OS—Pet ease, $2.35 to 32.40.
Provisions.
Wholesale dealers are selling to the
trade as follows:—
Smoked and Cry Salted Moats -Rolls--
Smoked, 14 3-4c to 15c: hams, medium, 17e
to 171-0; heavy, 1510,, le 15e; break fast
bncOn, 18e; long clear nacen, tone and
ease,, 14 1.2c to 043'4;'; barks (plain), 51 1-2c;
backs (peantoili), 20e.
60 001 Meats --Out of in; kle, to less tit n
smoked
Perk—Short cut, 326 to $28 per barrel;
mess pork, 321.50 to 322.
Lard—Tierces, 13 1-20 to 133-4o; tube
133.4e to 14e.
Baled Hay and Straw.
llay--No. 1, $13.50 to 314.00; No, 2, 39.50
to 310,50; 3. 30.00 110 39,00. Straw, 39.-
50 to 310,00,
montroal, country .Praduce.
Montreal, ,Tan, 21—Cheese—Fineet • west-
erns, 13e; de., finest easterns, 12 1.2o to
12 3.4e . Butter—Choicest creamery, 29 1.2c
to 29 3.4c; do., seconds, 210 to 27e. Dggs—
Fresh, 46o; do., selected, 29e to 30c; do.,
No. 2 stook, 20c. Potatoes—Per bag, oar
lots, 751 to 850.
United States Markets,
Minneapolis, Jan. 24—Whea1—May,
093-20 to 89 Mc. Corn—No. 3 yellow, 431.20
to 44e; No. 3 white oats, 310 to 31 1.4. BYO,
No. 2, 570 to 600. Bran, 319 to 319.50. Flour
unchanged,
Duluth, Jan, M.—Wheat—NO. 1 hard, 595;
No. 1 northern, 89e; No. 2 northern, 86e;
July, 91 3.8c bid; May, 90o asked,
Live Stook Markets.
Montreal, Jan. 2L-1010oe beet eteers sold
at 36,25 to $6.50 and the lower grades from
that down to $4, while good butchers*
cows and bulls brought 36.26 to $5.60, me-
dium from $4 to $5, and common $3 to
3376 per 100 pounds. Good demand for
lambs at $7,25 to 57.50, and sheep sold at
from $4 to $5.25 per 100 pounds. Calves
from $3 to 312 each, as to size and quality.
H ogs—$9.25 to 39.50 per 100 lbs. for select-
ed lets, weighed off cars.
Toronto, Jan. 21,—catt1e—Moice butcher
36.50 to 36.90; good medium, $5.15 to 36.40;
common, 32.75 to $3.75; cows, 34,76 to $6.65;
bulls, $3 to 36.25; canners, $2 to 32.76
Calvre—etood veal, $7 to $9; coinmon, $3
to $3.25. Stockers and Veeders--Steers, 700
to 900 pounds, $5.25 to 35.50; feeding bUlls,
600 to 1,000 pounds, $2.75 to 34.25; yearlings,
33.15 to $3.50. Milkers and Springers—
From $50 to 580. sheer. and Lambs—
Light evees, $4.75 to $5.25; heavy ewes, $3
to 33.50; lambs, $8 to $8.75. Hogs—$8.50
fed and watered and 38.15 f.o.b.
FEWER LABOR DISPUTES.
Dec. einber Record Shows Industrial
UnreSt D iminishi
A despatch from Ottawa says:
There was a marked decrease in the
number of labor disputes in exis-
tante in Canada during December
as compared with the preceding
month. The .department of labor's
recordof strikes and lockouts shows
there were thirtee,n disputes its Tie-
censber, and. while the number is
greater by five than that of the cor-
responding period of last year, it
represents only about half as many
as were in existence in November,
when twenty-five were reported to
the department.
Handy
Breakfast
Ready to Serve
Direc: From Package
Post
Toast es'
and crearn
A dainty dish of toast-
ed Indian Corn, brimful of
swet flavorand substan-
tial nourishment.
Post Tonsties in the
pantry mean many deli-
cious breakfasts.
Direct to Your table in
sealed, air - tight pack-
ages.
Sold by Grocers every-
where.
"The Memory Lingers"
nadlan Poetum Cereal Bo., Ltd.
Windsor, Ontario.
.1•1101.1.16•RICOMMIt
Sarsaparilla
Acts directly and .,Peculiarly
On the blood; purifies, enriches
and revitalizes it, and in this
way builds up the whole sys-
tem. Take it.,
There is no "lust -as -good" medicine.
Insist on having Hood's. 5205 11 today.
LIABILITY FOR TITANIC LOSS.
A Flood of Petitions for Damages
are Pouring In.
A despatch from New York Bays:
A flood of petitions for damage
through the loss of the steamer Ti-
tanic, filed n Wednesdb,y, includ-
ed one from Mre, Irene Wallach
Harris, who claims $1,000,000 for
the loss of her husband, Henry B.
ECarris, the theatrical manager.
Thi e is the heaviest of the 279
claims so far filed. Mrs. May Fu-
trelle of Scituate, Mass., asks $300,-
000 compensation for the lose of her
husband, Jacques Futrelle, author.
The claim of Mrs. Lily B. Millet,
widow of Francis D. Millet, the aa•t-
ist, a Titanic victim, is $100,000,
United States Judge Handy ex
tended the time for filing petitions
on claims to February 11. The
claims amount to" more than $10,
000,000, but the White Star Line
contends that its liability is limited
uilder the United States statues to
less than $100,000. the2 value of re-
covered records and pAssage Money.
sy, •
807 MILES OF NEW C.P.R. LINES
--
Big Undertakings for Western
sCanada are Entered Into.
A despatch from Winnipeg says:
Cuntracts were awarded on Friday
morning by the Canadian Pacific
Railway for 807 miles of new lines
to be constructed in the west dur-
ing the present year. The men to
whom these contracts have been
awarded will not consider the
agreements binding until they have
been formally ratified by the Pre-
sident, Sir Thomas Shaughnessy.
There is but little doubt, however,
that they will receive the Presi-
dent's signature.
Catarrh Brands You
An "Undesirable"
So Loathsome Is the Disease That
Few Will Associate With a
Catarrhal Victim.
Is Your Trouble Catarrh?
Poor remediee have given Catarrh
the reputation of being incurable.
But it is mumble, eaSily and quick-
ly. Snuffing a powder or ointment
up the nose won't eure Catarrh,
neither will tablets, douching, or
stomach medicines cure. These
treatments fail because they only
affect ;local conditions, they do not
remove the cause, which is germ
life, established in the lungs, bron-
ohial tubes, and nasal passages.
Ordinary remedies do not reach
these. remote parts, but Catarrho-
zone does, for it is breathed through
the inhaler into every air cell in
the lungs, into every air passage in
the head and throat. No matter
where the Catarrh is Catarrhosone
will reach it. It kills the germs,
heals sore spots, clears the nose and
throat instantly, Universally used;
pleasant and clean; guaranteed to
cure or money refunded,
Don't be an object of aversion to
everyone you meet—get Catarrho-
zone to -day and use it regularly,. it
will cure your Catarrh, Bronchitis,
Throat trouble, .epitting and gag-
ging. Large size 50c. All dealers
or the, Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo,
N.Y., and Kingston, Canada.
$10,000,000 TO AID FARMING.
Minister of :Agriculture Moves A.p-
ProPriation for Ten Years.
A despatch from Ottawa says:
Hon. Martin Burrel on Tuesday
moved the following resolution.:
"That it is expedient to provide
that a sum net exceeding ten Mil-
lion dollege be apptopmeted and
paid out Of the consolidated ren-
°nue fund of Canada during the
period (if ten yeao•s,beginning with
the year eliding March 31, 1914, for
tli e p p Se 1 aiding 070 el ad van c-
ing the farming indtmlry bY instruc-
tion 11 egriculture, ineludieg the
work carried on by veterinary col-
leges,"
111110 LIVES WERE LOST.
Crushed in House in a Bad Fire at
Edmonton .
A despatch from Edmonton, Al-
laerta, says : Fire in the wholesale
&arid, on Thursday night took
the lives ef several Italians. The
blaze started after midnight 'from
an unknown cause in the five -story
brick block of the Canada Rubber
Company, which was completely
destroyed in less than an hour.
Two bodies have been recovered
from the ruins of all Italian board-
ing-house, 00113210 0000 01 ushed by
falling walls, One is that of a wo-
man, probably the wife of the pro-
prietor, and the other that of a
child. It is believed that there are
aesessesasee two more bodies in the ruins,
THE NEWS IN A PARAGRAPH
DAPPENINGS FROM. ALL OVED
THE GLOBE IN A
IS I/ TSAFILL.
Canada, the Empire and the World
In General Before You
Eves.
Canada.
The Home Bank of Teronto takes
over La Banque Internationale. of
Montreal.
Ontario butter brings a higher
price in Toronto than New Zealand
.butter does in Vancouver,
The nineteen cadets just gradu-
ated from the Naval College are to
be trained aboard II,M.S. Berwick.
The annual militia, report says
that the general aoherne of inbbili-
zation when needed is progressing
favorably.
Postmaster -General Pelletier, in
the COMMOT1S, promised early ac-
tion in the matter of introduction
of parcels post.
Hon. Thomas Ashburnham •of
Fredericton'N.B., succeeds to the
title and estaters of his father, the
Earl of Ashburnha,m, who has just
died.
Wm. Gauthier, a farmer, aged 65
years, inflicted :terrible injuries up-
on his wife land then committed sui-
cide at Orient, Russell eounty, on
Friday.
•
Great Britisin.
Sir J. 1, Thomson of Cambridge,.
Eng., announced the discovery of
a new gas.
The. Marquis of Anglesey was
present on Thursday at the mar-
riage of his brother, Lord Victor
'
Paeet, with Olive May, a Gayety
actress. The Marquis' wedding
gift is understood to be the settlement of one thousand pounds a
year on the bride and groom.
, United States.
The Carnegie Hero Fund Com-
mission announced two awards for
brave Canadians.
G enema.
M. Poincare was elected Presi-
dent of the French Republic.
The interior of Mexico is cut off
from the capital by the rebels.
The Czar's brother was deprived
of the Regency -designate on ac-
count of his morganatic marriage.
DEFENCE IN MURDER CHARGE
Brutalities of Husband Drove Wife
to Desperation.
A despatch from Paris, France,
says: A wife's right th shoot her
husband in self-defence after he had
made her life a torture was success-
fully raised on Tuesday as the de-
fence In the Seine Assize Court to
the charge of murder brought
against Madame Lhoste, a hand-
some woman, who described her
married existence in bitter words
to the jury. Daily brntalities, said
Madame Lhoete, were followed by
his proposal to give herself up •to
O shameful life. The jury acquit-
ted her in spite of the declaration
of the public prosecute,' that "no
woman possesses the right to kill
her husband Whatever his faults."
Forty years in use, 20 years the
standard, preseribed and recons
mended by physieians. For Wo.
man's Ailments, Dr. Martel's
Female Pills, a tyour druggist.
Death by Boiling.
In old England, before the law
wa,s passed which. prohibited "cruel
and unusual forms of punishment,"
murderers were often condemned
to death by boiling. In such cases
the victims were -chained in large
kettles. of -cold water, which were
gradually heated until it caused
the flesh to drop from the bones.
The last English vietim of the "boil-
ing death" was one Rouse, a cook,
who, it was alleged, had killed sev-
ente,en persons,
FOR —Z E(
Stops Pain at Once
This is the verdict of all who have
tried Zam-Bult. The woman in the
home knows best its value. A Infra
from the stove, from a flatiron, or a
hot .pan, is instantly soothed by Zeal.
Bak. When the little ones all aud
cut or scratch themselves, zeal -Buis
stops the pain and, incidontally, their
crying. The best proof of this is the
fact that children who have once had
Zam-Buk applied come for it again.
For more serious burns, too, it is
unequalled.. Kr. John Johnston, of'
784 South Marks Street, Fort William,
a moulder in Copp's Foundry, says:
"Some time ago I burned the top of
ray ieo' esversly by dropping some
molloo iron from a ladle I was carry-
ing. large hole was burned through
my si,ne and into the top of my foot.
O ',Kau in ken home, and Zain-Duk was
applied to the burn directly. It was
surprising What r elf ef this balm
afforded. The burn W006 ti 0 deep and
so serious that it required eareinl
attention, but Zem-Buk pretented
other compllcations arising, and as
It was dany aDpiied, seethed the pains
aud allayed the inflammation. In the
course of two weeks thOhole burned
in my Coot had been quite hetded."
Mr. W. B. Gibson, of Selleville,
writv5: "lAro have tried Zam.,Enk
Often on cuts and soree, and I think
therede nothing that can equel it."
zismr.Buk will also be found a sure
cure for cold 50113, thepped
groat bite,culeers,. bloompoisou, v
cose sores,. piles, settle sores 0 ring-
worm, inflamed leateaes, babiee' orlon
Lions and chapped places, ana akin in.
Serial generally. All druensisto and
otores sell at 50e. box or test free
train Zara-Bisa Co., Toronto, for 96120.
4
svvErtA.L MEMO CHOKED.
. The Third Big Fire itit Montreal itt
Fifteen Hours.
A despotch from Montreal says:
Several firemen were carried out,
choked into unconscieusnees by
smoke, District Chief Mann es-
caped death by inches when a great
plank came crashing down upon a
ladder on which he was standing,
and damage aggregating nearly
$100,000 was +mused bya fire which
breke out on Thursday morning on
Deviscer Street The premises are
occupied by the Canadian Tung-
sten Lamp Company, and the Mc-
Cormick Biscuit Co., of Louden,
Ont., the plant and stock of both
of which concerns were iejered by
fire, smoke ancl water. This was
the third big fire in the city within
fifteen hours, most of the foremen
having been on clutys for 24 hours.
They got a much-needed ineal from
the biscuits 'found in the MeCor-
mick Company's factoey.
CROWN PRINCE ALEXANDER
OF SERVIA.
King Peter's second son, who was
the nominal head of the vietorious
army.
.
Advising Her.
"My .dear, I must advise you
never to marry a man for money."
"No mother "
.
"No, my dear. That is a terrible
mistake. Many younp girls have
made it, and I don't want to see
you ruin yOUr life that way."
"Well, what ought 1 to do?"
"Give your hand and heart to a
man who is worthy of it in every
way. Choose first a ma.n vvho is
kind, courteems, honorable and
temperate."
"Are these th be found only
among the poor young men?"
"Not al all. That is just my
point. Never marry a man for
money, but use all your efforts th
win the affections of a young man,
who has all the qualities I have
named, and money,"
Don't Cut Your Corns,
This Way Better
it's a fool trick to gouge out .corns,
and dangerous too. Don't wear loose
boots—remove the corn by applying
Putnam'e Corn Extractor.
The result is magical, This
remedy works wonders,
eases the pain, lifts out the
corn, brings comfort and
sound feet at once. You
buy a 25e. bottle of Put
nasn's Painless Corn Extractor, recom.
mended by druggists.
EllVi011S.
Johnnie—"I wish I could be
Tommy Jones."
lVfother--"Why? You are strona
ger than he is, you have itb better,
home, more toys and more pocked
money."
Johnnie—"Yes; I know, but Iva
can wiggle his ears,"
Her Hearing Good.
Gibbs—So your wife quarrelle4,
with you. I thought you said she
was blind to your faults.
Dibbs—She was blind to them all
right, but she wasn't deaf, and the
neighbors posted her.
BUSINESS AND
SHORTHAND
Subjects taught abtthe
by expert instructors
toldekeelYeirl
Y, 05.0. A. BLDG..
LONDON, ONT.
Students assisted to positions. College
M session from Sept. 3rd. Catalogue
free. Enter any time.
Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Ms
Principal 16 CiarteredAccountant
Vicc-PrIncipal
INVESTMENT
vs.
SPECULATION
Speculation means risking or
gambling your money, while
investment is defined by safe-
ty of principal, combined with
a fair interest yield.
When we try to interest you in
bonds, we offer you the highest
class of investment, where
safety of principal is assured—
and 6% earned on your money.
We offer bonds in $100, $500.
and 51,000 denominations.
J. A. IVIACKAY & COMPANY
LIMITED
Guardian Bldg, Royal Bank Biel,
MONTREAL TORONTO
mama=
NT
1....4.435=7MISZELTZZZ:r
SmonroonateminvielOoteMevamveoortmora'
Put your savican in ele safest
d form of investment you con find ---
q the 4"/s debentures isseed by this
:oodbmi prosperous. co:pany-----
eviabilshed 1864.
Issued for $too and upwards.
Interest payable half -yearly at
Oise rate of
D-positors and Debenture -hold-
er- have the first charge on the
ensive assets of the company.
Since incorporation over five
million dollars in interest alone
have beenaid t De o 'tors
o p
and Dehenture-holders.
Reserve fund equal to paid-up
capital of $1,ecio,000.00 and assets
over thirteen millions.
25
OVER
ASS'ETO,
.Coaq 4
Savings Co.
...cv5-3a0,7 4 St. anonies.
• %WO