HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton New Era, 1908-04-16, Page 6•
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TOR OLDIT'Clq NM ERA
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•
•Paint" °lid Pal?" 14.4"r* CONSTIPATION
• All Mirk gluaranteedi
•Reacee reesonable,
Residence nearly opposite Ole
• Collegiate Institute
JAS. A. Palm
flour and Peed
.A.ORNT FOR
mosseyillarris
Machinery.
• MS, A. FORD,.
Bead idifirelsants
111DES WANTED
Cash paid for aides, Skins
'Ind Tallow.
7 77•7•7•7ry•rf7FWV71
1"Roses Red awlViolets Bine.''
5
By TEMPLE BAILEY
CePrrlsbtridt 1908. by Q. entellne,
11: . _: ° *
1 • Aki.theugb gener•By ataertbed Oil 14
' 2 a theme, OM never exist unthee •
; flOnle Of the organa are deranged, 0
' is Whiett Is generally found to be the a•
• liver:. It consists Of all Inability to ' a
• fegitlerly evriceete the bowels, and *
0
• . as a regular action, of the bowels is •
;
vahesvlolt:,1yrueselsesectnetfd.
a1 to general ;
• health, the leastirregularity should *
-
to
• MILBUittrs OW
• ° .LAXA-LIVER PILLS . •
A
• . 'a ,havr no equal for relieving and . •
•,. curing Constipation, Bilintlaticesi •
• Water Brash Heartburn and all .
• .Liver Troubles. is
! Mx, A: B. Bette', Vancouver, 19.0., e
' writes •-•-ror aome years poet X wets •
• ' _A, A, e
• troubled with ebrPtlie etOleuratioll e
4,t' and bilious headeches. I tried 11/
; nearly everything,- /but only got 'I'
to tenmotaryrelief. A ftiendincluced *
* me to try lama -Liver Pills and 0
-* they cured me completely. •
*
'itPrice 25 cents per box, or 6 bOxsa at
,t, for $1.00, all dealers, or mailed.. 41
; direct 94 receipt of •nriee- e
isTun T. Menton; Co., lamer= •
4.• Toronto, Ont. • .
•
••••••••••••••••••••••••••
How to ()tick sumps.
'Fitzsimmons & S- on- on., remarked the postoffice elerk
.1 who ao
ws ff duty as h
The Myers'
Musialethod
Ida O. Holmes, - Teacher.
..im•m•••••••11.•
•
The Myers' Music Method, for begin
ners, provides a thorough preparatory
course in the rudiments of mum% The
lessons are conducted on Kindergarten
'node's, and inelpde practical Piano
teaching, making the study pleasant
and interesting.
Private lessons also gives, and pupils
prepared for the Conservatory Janior exam
The Very Rest
Materials combined with skill makes
cur Bread, Cages and Pastry the most
lielleious-yorevertasted;-you can save
fuel, time and money by purchasing
all your Bakery produets from usede-
limous in every morsel. Don't forget
our choice line of Confectionery also
fruits of all kinds in seasdn and at lbw -
sat price.
Cash or trade for Butter and Eggs -.7___
W. W. NIMENS
Phone 42 • Clinton.
Fine
Photos.
• Our Photos are the mostflife-
like ,iand artistic that can be
made, and the prices are rea-
sonable for thit-dtass of Work
J. ROBERTS
Photo Artist, - Clinton A
WALL PAPERS
-115° AT e0ST.N.
I am agentior the Consum-
ers' Wall Paper Co., Windsor,
and am. offering these goods
at.cost, in order to introduce
them., The patterns are fnew,
and no old stock. I will hang
them at toc a roll, from now
to:the 1st
Wall and &ening Papers and
Borders all at same price.
0E0. POTTS,
CLINTOk
Reductions in
Wall Paper.
We are offering Bargains in
Wall paper. All stock reduc-
ed in price, and borders'same
price per roll as wall and ceil-
ing. Large stock from which
to select.
We trim all Paper 'FIRM' and do
AU kinds of Painting end
Peeorattna.
Window Sha.des,iROOMMould-
ing, ready -mixed Paint, Var-
nish, stains And Floor Finishes
kept in stock, alsc Floor Oils.
W. T. SMIT
• .
Isaac Se. •
Next door to Niorrisiti 4:Crooka...
Ads, in the NEw ilitA pay
men aue
watched a
jitamp
0. •
of an envelope, "why don't you put
those. stamps on horizontally Instead
Of Vertically? Doret.--you know you
would sive a lot of work for us stamp-
• Ors if you put your atones beside each
other instead of under each other? We
always have to make two otrokes when
eanceling vertically pasted stamps by
hand, and they dent worl/ttell -through
m
the *damping itehines el ex."'
"le that so?" Wonted his friend as
he took another envelope andfproceed-
ed to affix two stamps to It in a ver
-
Deal position.. "Then, by the greet •
born spoon, why doesn't the govern-
ment- sell Its. -stamps in,. horizontal..
lines? Leek at _these. ° Here I bought
qo cents' worth of two cent stamps,
end they. , comp to mein vertical lines. •
If I buy five twos, I get them attached
One t6 the bottom • of the other. De
Yon think I'm going to the -trouble-of
tearing each stamp off just to ranee a
goVernment clerk by pasting them eta*
by siete? *Guess ..again." -New York
Press.
. Certainly Would.
City Man (to villager)--Woeldn't.It
• open year eyes if. you Were to leek
across at that lot there And see one of
our. city skyscrapers .covering it? :VS.-
lage Man -Waal, guess I would; see -
;in" as I've got tWenty head o' cattle
" green)" there.-Boheralan... : • •
Wait,; is a hard Word to) the hungry.
• --German Proverb. . •e--.
•
That languid; lifeless feeling that
.comes with spring and early summer
can, be quickly changer:1'0'a feeling of
buoyancraucl egergy by the judicious
use of Dr Sboop's Restorative.
The Restorative is a genuine tonic
-teetiredreutt-down-nerves,=au•
fewdosee is needed to satisfy the user
that De•Shoop's Restorative is actually
-reaching that tired Beet. The indoor
life of winter nearly always leads to
sluggish bowels, and, to sluggish eircu-
Wein in general. The customary lack
of exercise and outdoor itieties up the
'liver, stagnates the kidneys, anct. oft-
• times weakens the Heart's actions.,
Use -Dr Shodpf Resterative and all will
be changed. A few days test will tell
• you that you are using the right rem-
edy. You will easily and surely note
the change from day to day. Sold by
WSIR Solutes, WA' McDonnell.
• : • .
•
.1:sixteenth Century Surgery.
Sergeiy to the sixteenth century was
by no 'means the .refined and gently.
humane. science • of .,the 'prettent dais
Anaesthetics and antisepttee.were un
known, and the Operating theater was
Often just Where- poor patient fell.
In one of the Many battles in which .'
the fightlog Delie of Gialse engaged *he
was knocked .down by an arrow front
the enemy's ranks, _which pierced hie
hoed_ between the nese and one ot„the
eyea Parc, the famous French stir
-
keen,. Was oh•the field; and he immedi-
ately put his foot on the duke's face
and drew the Arrow out by sheet brute”
forte. The operation inconvenienced
the duke Somewhat, but he servived it
end -lived tebe assassinated. • • •
• • • Buying 4 Books. •
ilbrary:16-abinethibg more -than -a
coileetion ef books, •An Imposing ar-
ray gf .sumpttieue and. •untouched vol.
tunei does not niake..one. Your books
should express your own individira1-
•ity, says a writer in the Delineator.
-De not let.rany-ttne-perentide yaw to-
-buy a book you keoW is not your kind
of beak. De not be lured into boring
a handsome library ,edition of eoine
author that yeti do want if the library
edition is heavy and uncorafortable to
hold and Year own preferenceis a
comfortable pocket edition wIth
tile covers. And, above ell, If you are
• betiding tip a hoe library to whtch
the whole family is to have Iree
a� -
ecu do net chooge bindings of sects
delicate col'ors or expenslie texture a*
to destroy all thecomforth of reading. •
Stop That Cold
Te the& early colds or OrIttus,..alth "Sreventict •
means sure defeat for Pneumonia. To stop a ems
with Prevonties is safer than to let It and be,
obliged to eUre it atteretten.. To bo sore. Pro.
verities will cure even a +leerily goatee Ned, but
takett,early-at stmeae stage -they nook, or
.taad Off these early Olds. That's soroly 'bettor*
That's Why they ate ealled Preventim. •
proVoritiesare little Candy Cold Cure. No tluls.
ttie. 116 phYSIO, nothing sibbenitig. wee for f •
ohildren-and thoroughly sate too, it you f
thilly. if l'Ou sneeae, ition nelienll over, Think
1PreVerities. Prornotnesa May Ilse save battling,
ritual ticknoss: And don't forget Slaw Ohba. fi
'Lee) is e•voisheess, hiettor ear, liorbie wet-
Liy lios 1 reventies' greatest eMeteeeSr. BOK 11
• boxeS for the neeket, alsosin 2fle boget rsf 441
'rennet, Insist at goer :druggists givieg ana
reventics
W. A. MatIONNELL#
W.& R. HOIAlinti.
•
The waiting mom in the big depart -
Ment stnre was In a balcony that form-
ed. a, treart of halfway home)betW.***,
the Amf and second floore. From a
Seat in one of the buigiug gornere one
commanded the whelp .sweep oV bu,sy
countere-ell ,the ,sparkle and glitter
and color of attractively displayed
goods.
TO .Tesslea, nineteen, pretty and via*
iting the great city for the first the,.
It seemed like fairyland. ,
"1 want to buy everythibg," she said
to Aunt Theodora Haneock, who bad
brought her there
• Mint Theodora smiled indulgently,
. O*All 'is not gold that atilttere," she '
emiled hacka. "But I. like the
•iglitter," she paid. "I never use ecent;•
• ed soap, but I shall Surely hua Some
because of the pretty hexes.: -and that
pale green -note paper is a dream, al-
though I never write on anything but
wh1fir7Xfid I am awfulir-dfairne- to
those :Strings 40 glass beads, even
though I am. sure that I ihould n4aer
• dare wear them in public." • - ••
• Bat Aunt Theodora after . years of
city • reisidence was • an experienced
shopper, ."Beware of temptation," she
• Warned.. "Come on upstairs and look
at the sensible things."'••
• "I . don't. want te he 'sensible," Jes-
sica pleaded • • "I Want to stay • here
and see people. buying. things that they
don't want for the mere' pleaSure of
Aunt . Theodora hesitated.
"Do you really Want to sit. here for
awhfle Fibeiitiilied;: With" an air- Or're
lief, "I could •leatre-yoU 'and •slip. --up -
to the groeery department'and give an
. order. Butyou mustn't Stir from this
-corner, or X should never find you."
promised.,_
"You -run along, Auet Theo. • I am per-
fectly' happy rigtit bore."' • . .
• Se. Aunt .Theodora ,took her' stateli
Way through the erow.cis, and just as
she disappearedjessiciess eyes fell on
• the valeetines. .1 , • ' '
Therewas it marielous•diatilay: right
in the middle of .the stere, and-stetirig
from . post te _post were plump red
hearts -transfixed "With ' golden darts,
Whilefascinating pink cupids . bobbed
and hawed 'with every tiny Current of
airthat.svpep through the -store.
Jessica's' heart gave .a lIttIe throb ot
delight ;,Sne would buy: one Or Cousin --
He would never know who Sent
tuld she, wOuldake to see .bis eyes
on St Valentine's morning when he
opened his niett at the breakfast table.
• Without a thought of Aunt TheOdera
she hurried downstairs to the crowded
counter. • • • •
• It was'. not easy to make a' Choke
There virere. so many beauties,-exqui--
verses from all the love poets and old
fashioned Valentines frith old fashion-.
ed rhymes. ;
jeesica's eyes rested' iciyingiy• 'On :a.
•gitaint affeli cif lege "peper With e nose-
gay of fat pink roses, and huge .violets
inth7•edtellit'ekb.;• .114"clIvse.*liher like one.
tliatCilir
• Ikas,ti 'little .girL and she had- kept it
among the most ptheirms of her treasf
ures. The 'verse, too, was the same:
. , •Roses red 'tied' violets ewe,
My heart to you isever trud.
. .
sue smiled a • little wistfully as. she
.read. • Probably Cousin Bob had forgot-:
ten that other valentine -had forgotten
the later dais when at twenty-two he
had visited the old farra and had made •
anew Wcirld for little 4essiett of fifteen.
He bad seemed wonderful to her thea,
and, he was. still wonderful, with his
franktdcbad Ways and his pleasant man!
net. But now he was a man Of the
world, and he Might merry all:Reit any
Of -the beautiful women of his set,
• Again • she fingered the valentine.
Why not sentit?
And even while she hesitated into the
balcony Waiting room came Ain't Theo-
dora, escorted by a tall young Man'
with a frank smile. • • .
."Where has that child fletne?ii Aunt
Theodora said blankly to her stepson.
"Itold her not to 'stir., You'll have to•
go 'and look for her, Bob. I'M dead
tired. ' It's luefry 1 met von" '
tonid the palms, and he was so devoted LITERARY BULLS.
that besiege heart beat high. '
. The Week that f011owed• .wati• full
delighto enti: Of attentions from Cons
Both it was on tit ValentiMee0-
tbat dant Theodora came1nt0 JOOSICS
room. end taand that young lady 18
pialt drooping gown braldiag hervitin
inonur. - . . • -
Ana TbeOdora wa 114.°Srey flan110
and her hair was in crimping pine,.
,
For triettonoe, the "-Groan That of irluroiss Pram the shone•
,
hiacePley once 4.01101ved a poem in
vo
,0 which a climax of absurdity wee. reac14
And bear* each groan that gurgles troni,
ed with this line:
• k., ,
, tb;lita4ten.
neoalicense whigh lebf p wean
gurgle freill a Blain Wan la capable of
• ng m we k into • teWn from the
;• itis• • fll toef ittutrle4,11 ythea and
ua nn te of
. . brings o mind tbe
cTipecoltie‘
' hereto warrior of whom it is Oalcl that
• "thrice bestow the slain" and the Irish
h
member of parliament Who convulsed • =
the lime et commons by exclaiming.
1, that he woOld die as a soldier first and
a luau afterward,
But, stran.ge to say, Macaulay himself
,4'.• has tirade a entailer blunder. In his
5 "Battle of Lake* Itagillus" the follow -
•An lines occur:
'• The ehouting of the slarere •
•• And *screeching of the slain.
Did these writera make these slips
in the bent Of Nate or were they
testing the intellectual aeuteneas of
their readers? • There if A story of a•
German ,achoolmaster who used to cell •
out hie class in history and begin to
tell:then' Af the ThirtyYears' war. "Yes,
, Children"' he wouldiay, !antis is a sub -
Jett Wiileb..1 ordreapeeikiYintefelft-
ed, as. my grandfather often told Me '
-about it He wis a. -well to do ion/leen.
er, and one day as he Wats standing in
' his dOorWay a mounted soldier came
• galloping up at a furious ,rete. 'What's .
the matter?" asked my ' grandfather. !
:Metter enough,' answered the drama;
Don t youknow that the Thirty Tears'
War has begun today?" ' At this paint
the, ancient pedagogue would pause and '.
survey his lass., Then a smile *mild
overspread his rubicund countenance if
*Aland was --raisedeirda boyish treble ,
asked howthe dragoon knew the war !
Would last thirty years. • Perhaps our• !
poets, too, would play theschoolmate
ter and smile if we should ask then" '
.hoW it Is pestilble.for the Slain le groan
liereeth.:•:•=0-dieWSiiiherth;piftsbilfg"'"
Grinette-Times. • •-•
. • •
leseica," be Said seltailnly as Ph
sank into a big chair, "if Bob propose
to you, don't accept him the first tim
he Rake,
aespica Stared at her. .
"Oh, Aunt Theodora," oho etammend,
"Collet) Bob len't a bit In, loVe Wit
Me." • 1,
"4'W‘inet11,Tbilee°4hcra Etnrelairilb.eda couditio
very much like it," she informed he
• niece. "It doesn't take Bob very Ion
to Make up lile mind, and be ha
known you for years. But I Imre him,
• and he'll value your love if yea don't
let biro eee it too '
• Attd then ehe went away, Wbte Jes-
sica sat like a crumpled rose leaf on the
foot of the bed and wept-
• For that afternoon she had matted.
the )ace valenthre to Cousin Bob, And
now If he should dis.eoVer that she had,
. Sent .1t, and should • despise .• her oor
ahoWing bei real. feeliegt • •
• She made up ,her•mind that he ohould
not find inikand pen she ,went_to bed
to sleep fitfully, but throliffh bar 00u".
bled dreams ran the comforting hope
that Cousin. Bob really loved her.
. It was a Pale little Jessica. whocame
down. 'to the -breakfast tante the neat
morning: Mint Theodorawas not there,
lart Comer; Bah was. He was opening
his mail,- and to bide her. agitation jos-
sips. began to cipen hers. On lep" wire
a great, boa,. and within was a: bunch
of Violets' and twO;fragraot American
Beauties, :and on it card was written
a Cousin .Bob's familiar writing:
Roses red and vioietli blue
heart to youis ever true.
' *Rile looked up; and her eyes, met his,
hand-- he • held -the valentine -she
• had. sea. ;But bin eyes were airtthine
Ing. •There was in tirera Instead a very
• tender ..light.
• "Jeselice," he said 'softly-"Jessicie
_aid_you _send me.thier •
ltemembering Aunt ,TheodOre's
warn -
Ing, she tried to +AO "No;" but she,
was a txuthfin little -thing.
. "Yes," she whispered and bent over
her flovirers. Theo isbe. explained' slab.
orately: "tilt of con* valentines don't
•mean 'anything, , • Everybody send e lots
'of them.?' • . • • , •
The brightness Went eut othis face..
sent only mei"- he stated sternly,
"The roses and the violets Spoke to me
ot , you; Jessica, .and took me back fe
the verses. I sent • you! . when I 'was.: a
little lad. And I 'Meant every 'wort% of
It.
Will yeti niarry tee, .Jessiest?"
The .proposal cartie-:so suddenly that.
It feared herall unprepared Her heart
pounded madly .She forgot Aura Thee.
clOra. She forgot everything. but that
he,,y1tvse/dp hilheor. N.sph, •
is:p.:ered• •
as she
beard
her auet's,step upon thinstanas.•,
the beauty' of1t,'was the way
Cousin Bob 'Upset Aunt Tbeodortee•ttne •
their engagement, ,"was herr giellsle
nese A woman of the World . would
fitiVe held the Off, but it was her sweet
sill -render that Won ,me. I' wee sure
•she loved me from the lirtit."
•. •
,-..••• • ,
• ii*u mak ilye. in. the city and buy a.
squash and eat it That IS all be esti
do with a borightensquash„ foe. 'a
smiaah "that he cailitollaise.hw cannot
store • or take delight In outside; of .nle
And can a. man live *here his garden .
isa grocery, his storehouse a grocery,
ins bins, cribs,. ineWs and attics so
many i• pasteboard boxes; bottles and
ilia mins. Tinned squash in • pie may
taste like any eqeash:ple, but it 18 no
longer squash. And iS a squash noth-
ing if not p187 Oh,, but he gets ".a
lithograph •sebash, upon the can to
ehow bitn how the pulp looked 'or God
made. it This is a sop to his higher
sensibilities, It is a- eominercial re- s
minder, too, that life, even in the eity -
should be more than. pie. It 14 also, the
coininereitiF,way ' of preserving the lie
vot of the canned squash, '• ethe he
WI, 4
April leth• SOO
• HER NEWSPAPER DAD.
of WI Aiweys Cron; Sometimes He
• is Positively Jubilant,
liewopaPer daddlea are runny, ;
think; Mine's one. He's funniest at
rburenanityra"ot,Ing 0:1:0yut breakfast,
mow U. lunch, and Allure another
"Where'o sstooratiro paper?" he asks
nmanna the drat thing when he cOnles
downstairs, And then When she •looks
so# of childlohly at him 'cause be's:
g he hurries up and says
.th41414:*ti(xigh mheorntei4itgiind-a 'shamed, of him
everybody," just is
18°4%4 then he won't talk when be go,
• 014 PaPer. Ile just atlas bis noo
into it and looko at one page after an
' other just ,fast aa ?mean, and the
• he begins ell 'over, agate fjpd floo
elower,and koopti .quite avvhile
Then mamma anti I wait for meg:
irlial" he. MO's. "They • .colildif%tSPel
tat' right"-
1 toTahneonthheer agrtata
i :h4ssr1:: nta
illeleti°coane, page
ing to himself; and when he'irgift rea
. mad .he shouts at mamma; "They
• buried it! Se.e, l'he$ buried it back
• there -way- back thereeof course, and
It's.the best Rory In the popery,
;I:li:unge•Mttt:::to4_7:-7L2,.1!t.:likea calm
after a storm, '!Come, dear.. Yeur cot
AMR I
to-sholir our good
go s -
Always obliging to customers
Look to castbiners interests
a
Keep nry up-to-date goods. a
very day a bargain day VI
- Ready for liusiness anytime
t: Attencrpromptly. io business
e". Neglect no details •
t. Devote our time to business
Refund money if not satisfied.'
Open evening!
I. I See C -Ur- prices' before' buying
. ,
•
Satisfaction guarantied:
rs-to•datein all -branches ,
Never a ISSa. rs cus omer
• But he's more like a bear than •a
• dear, And he doetnet Conte, but he
keeps on growlinget the old paper. I
guess he filially' gets tired Of himself,
too, and then he lumps up, throws.the
paper on the chair and ttlesto
mamma's funny smile.
Mamma's awfuily patient, • I Mit*,
•and she never gets mad, but just smiles
and smiles at daddy when begets emu
• at things.' fipmetinlea :Me asks him
why he wants to keep on being thnewe
• paper .man If it's so awful. One time
he answered and said It was beeause
If he kepton working sixteen hours a
day maybe tile office Would setae time
:giire-him•elit nnich as thentereotyper•
gets for -working eight hour's a day.
idamme.said that was sarcasm. I geese
• 1 he thinks sararism mast be a good thing
i for the office, "eatise .he most always
talks -that way atiout it • •
But newspaper eadatee aren't always
'cross. Sometimes Mine hurries down!:
stairs • a whole lot- earlier, and the!'
when he grabs the paper , he smilesell
oyer and thou* at mamma: '•
• "See thetstory? That's & °leen seelip,'
and a belly. one!. • That's worth. living •
for! • And, say, won't the renewal on
the old Bugle feet sore, thought
," he says then, one day
like that•ls worth a bicycle of Cathay,'"
whatever that la. • , ,
And then mainma• loolts • at me and •
sinnes, 'causewe both think ,hes fun-
ny ,sometimes. -Des ••,31ohleis (Ia.) Reg;
!stet „ •• • .
' . . • -
A -arm* Cawyerlo Melhod.
Writing of "Civilian, Leader* of tho• ,
Confederacy". in, the • Lonisville Courier-
ournal, John, Goode mos a judab, P.'
Benjamia: ••
"The .firsethrie 1 :Met him 'we die
ussed the practice, of law, and in the
•
THE STUPID SWAN.
Gi•ieerel and ,Beautiful, the Bird
; Nincompoop.'" •
• To. the Mind 'of the average *teethe
.fiething whieh walke , on • two legs a
quite so. Stupid as a hen. Re is mis- •
taken'though, for there stillasinains •
-alai beautiful;graceffil ,nincoinpoop, 1
the common sWan. the swan is so
stupid that.it Wilt Stand in the-shalloW
part of a pond and allow the water to
• freeze roend. its legs till the ice is so
thick that it canhotlift 'its feet and it
le stuck test , Not infrequently owners
et these handsome but witless birds
are toinpelled to phop 'away sufficient
lee to make it possible for them to
.withdraw their imprisoned feet. ' ,
-7The atupicllty of tbe ovran-le'thii
respect is emphasized by the intelli-
gence exhibited. by Ornamental ducks
When the weather turns aold. As j
flight mimes on and the water begins .
to -freeze. the . ducks begin swimming
well defined circle:: Beene 1c
d--roirad-ther-gtelditring'-the'entl
keening all the Witter within
thatcircle free frerifiCe, so that when
the day dawns they can float 'about
ad 'doze in the sae._ Yineks are al
'Ways most itetive dirring banI2ht and
&lapse the day for sleeping. •••
te . return- -to the- swan. • if :yeti
. fine one . of -these birds seine distanoe.
troirillieykter and startle, it, the swan ,
will rush a few feet toward the pond
and the drop down on the ground and
try to go through the motions ofewim-
ming, apparently linable in its fright
to realize . that it has not yet reached
the Water... . .,• • ' •
Neither is, the tiammOn• swan a .good
fighter. The •hlacic swan,although
ene-half ler size; is Invarlitey the Vic-
tor in the. Combats which are Some
times engaged in Mid generally kills
Its antagonist :The black swan usually
provokes the light, -too, ferit is rather
e quarrelsome, bird. --Washington Star.
would not -know :whether heavere eat-
ing eqUash or pumpkin or sweet pots, -
to But, then,. It maks lIttle differ
-
Mee, All things taste the same in the
city -all taste Of tin. ••-•'• Dallas ;Loire
'Sharp in Atlantic • .
•
a,Aitiroite;-"•- he tuivisell
"She can't have gene -feel' •' ' •
Anil even as he spoke Jessica hove le
eight, eyes shining,. her cheeks as red
as rives and in her heed a paper pack.•
age •
•:"ItY JO Wrote a'; Charming lift/6
thing," . said Cousin' 13ob, noting with
appreciation the ripple Of her hair, the
delicate °Val of her face above her soft
gray furs, the beetenifieness of the vio-
lets In her hat.
Aunt Theodora leoked at lihn re-
PreachfUlly, '
"Well, have you last diseereredher
attradions ,she asked. "I breirght
her down here beeritiee•sbe ia the sWeet-
est little gentlewoman I /rev° ever mot
and / wanted te -show yeti another type
froth the gay yhting mates that .you
tneet in society. And you have hardly
noticed her."
• Cotisin BOh laughed.
"You're ••• matchmaker," teased.
"Do you really'. %rant 'tee to toarrY les-.
slear • • • .
'Aunt tboodorit lOok.cd at hith Scorn-
. fully. "1 love yon Wile", she said
"and I'd like-, to leave my trinnoV to
hotli'llf" ;volt - • nut yoleve been se slow.,
yoor mind that some ime
ear.- lave goe in ahead of you."
Oh," herein Cousin. nob. Slid fOElt
then lossfett Joined...there, and tourat
Ito!) insisted on taking tbein to a Won-
derful restatirant r where ' they ; had
lunch tO the sound Of music played
-
Wooitliiihogi/hodinej
Oui Great libtrOvt
toned and invigorates the'w
nervous system, makes
loedin oid Veins
ene 1 gity ettat mut Brain&
• •NkMtTitag Weaker,* Einfeettrate
Fara. rind Affect* ef.abuseee
urn
Miro. Sold 1)74 11 Wm
pe$1 net boy,, sixfor gos2sir or win 01
a. oe fIrdIPS of e etem Belo pa
flee Th. P,3O8 Mdiena 00,'
Wituliior) TorOnto$014
Common Cold
• ECT IT BECOMES A SERIBUS
SATtER IF PIEGian °TED. -
• PNECMONIA,BR�Ndflfl
01411149 CATARRH or CON-
SUMPTION' IS THE BRAWL •
Get rid of it at Owe by taking
Dr. Wood's
Norway
.P ine.g yr u p
Obstinate eought yield to its grateful
goothing soden, and in the racking, per-
sistent cough, often present in Consumptive
eases, it gives proiept and sure reliefs in
',Asthma and trotiehithi it is a auctesitsful
remedo, tendering breathing easy and
natural, enabling the seilerer to enjoy re-
freshing •sloop, and often effecting e per.
nienent °ere. Y
. We do not claim that it will cure Con4
sumption in the advaaced stage/41'1"dt if
taken bilinte it will prevent it reaching
Shat stage, and will, give the greatest relief
to the poor sufferer from this „terrible
malady.
Be careful when purchasing to see that
you
get the gentiinti Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Sant?, Pet up in 4 yellow *tapper,
three pine trees the trade mark.
'Mr. Wm. O. Jenkins, Spring IM..
Alta.,_ writes: "7 had a vary baa aim
aottiod on iny lungs. I bought two hailed
of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. but It i
only required ono to o
e, hot
*Ter met with any othermedieine at goat'. .
Pried 23 Ms., et all dealers,
• .„. _
' Do Fish Fedi Pain? ,
Ho* eensitive to Pain are fish?,.: .6.
Correspondent Writee:'-'"1 _have a etnall
pond which is stocked' With 'trent
keep. en aceUrate account of those I
catch had note when. I lose any.. One
Morning a big rainbow .trOut broke the
worm hook with which, I had booked
btm, That evening I booked and land
ed a kOod trout, also.witli-worm litekIe,
which proved to be, my friend or the
inerntag, as right dOwn in•his stoifiach
Wair-thebroken gut asid.--hOolgend, -be- -
elide this, in his lip *as a March brown
fly heok,which, according to my fish-
ing book, must have been there niany
Weeks. A nab With a fly her& in his
Month, 4 wormhook in his Stomach
atiti•tready tce gulp down bait -must be
/mite linpervious• to wentWO mortals
eSit pain:"
•
m.../0 everything tight .
13 very customer a.satisfiedOne •
Reliable, not rich.
The best outfit in the county
And priCes,:low •
Keep thepriceS in reach of all
Everything new f,gz up-to-date .
efuse:no• :one. accommodaen .
accpss inbusiness fori4 yrs
•
pme to stay with it •
Leniencyin ail our transactions
Intend a square deal to ag
• Nothing.left undone
pri
T0 deal as we'd be dealt with
Our. prices open to comparison
• .
•
. 0 trouble to show through
Our 'phone is 28
0w the time to. buy
To 'come 2o• mu
•
•
iles will pay yo
• • -
Walker .Ross
•FITRNFTETRE DEALERS
• And 117NDKRTAXERS
ouiwrox
what we considered a good fee 'in my
part of the country, to wbleA I =Pile&
that we considered $50114 eery respect-
able fee. no! smiled. and said: "Whew
T. practiced •lttiv 18 .Neer :Orleans if a
man emplOyed me 1ehargea hint a. ree,
tether. If he came about the office
pinch 1 charged lilts a setahider,' When
I had done seine work In the . cage. I,
charged bim a refresher, ittid when It.
. *as all Over 1 charged. Istin a linisher..."
,•
. ,
Test For • HyciroChierie Acid.
•-•A eurious n3Ishap gave us a very del-
icate teat for hydroehlerie acid la the .
atmosphere.• a north of .aingland
Alocality Many houses have .cartains of
• the .cream Color produeeteby metanit;
popularly knovin, ; as "deny"
'cream dyenod to, setence as "the so-
diem'dale f t mid su -
• phonia aeidiezo-ilipbenylfareine," Some
of these • creaint-colored, :curtains Bud-
. denly changed to tient:drone.; Investi-
gation. 'showed. that an accidental
cape-of•bydrochlorleaeld frOm a-neigh-
-boring-algelr,platit"hircr. drstolore -the
curtalus . and the dye beeams a moot.
:useful thst.
•
•
' Anepisode in Court.:
... "You. ere An -
with snatching e
Woman's poeketbOolt."- . •
"11 know It, judge But I wouldn't do
:sue& a thingAungry and broke as I.,
arre - .•
-o 'ConsciunticuS,1 sup. pose?" • •
"No:. Irdoret pretend that; But why
should. 1 snatch • a Woman's pocket- •
book? Whet would 1 want With scan.ple of ear tickets, a. nowcier ,ing, a
piece Of.eheyilpg gum and a arcistenk-
--er.o-adcitees?" -.• •..
Once more a Shrewd criminal over-
shot410-Mark. 1110 familiarity. with
.the contents :convicted him,
Before placing goer' orders for
year peasooar supply of Coal, get
our pages; The very best goods'
teemed in etc.& and sold at the
lowest possible price. .
Ceders may be left at Danis
& Rowland'a Hardware store or
W. J. Stevenson,.
• Atillsetrle, LlightPlant.
I. Fitzs,inions,at Soh.
We are still in the But-
chering business, and are
in a position to fill all or-
ders for seasonable meats,
intrusted to cu.. care,
Our -new- business -stand -
is in the Combe Block,
IPNC 76 - Clinton rituimons &Son
ffirosisassma mum sr
h e
:JOB DERARtrmgm,
Always -keeps in...toupy with e*eryihing. th,a?'S ,
new—not only in style of type,: but typographical
•typograp4i0t1
arrangement: ;.. ° : . . • .
If you are particular about' your Stationery, or
any other printed matter you require, send your
copy ,tothis offiee, Where the •vork,i11 be done
' by paricuar artistS.:. •
. .
atisfaction.Guaranteed
SUBSCRIBE FOR
he New E r a
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