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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton New Era, 1908-11-12, Page 6, amousemagoraft.. TUE macros NEW. IRA • KEEP THE BEEF EXTRACT IN THE,. ROAST Keep in the meat 411 the wholesome juices—the real nutriment of. the roast. Use the SOUVENIR Range,. with its Aerated (forceel-air) Oven. It provides. for pure air ••: currents all round the roast, and prevents the burning. out or the frying Out of the whole, meat at rength SOUVENIR .RANGE THE Glit-ANIE.Y-TILD N CO., Er., HAMILTON. oNT. BRANCHES AT VONTRF AL, WINNIPEG, VANCOUVER. Davis&Rowland S We—Agents" at Clinton. Synopsis 01 Canadian North-West . HOMESTEAD REGULATIC1S Any even numbered section of Doinboion Lands in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and AL- erttesecepting 8 and 26, not reserVedeney e homesteaded by any person who is the ole head of al family, or any male over 18 years of age, fs the extent of one :quarter section of 160 sores, more or less -. Application for chivvy mass ba nude in person by the applicant, at a Dominion Lands Agway or Sub.agency for the di - tried in which the land- is situate. Entry by proxy may, however, be made„st an Agenoy on certain. conditions bythe father, mother, son, daughter, brother or stater of an intending homesteader. The homesteader is revtired to perform homestead, duties under one of thefol. wing plans . -(1) At least six months' reaide.nce upon cultivation of the land in est% year for: Eee para. • • . (2) A homesteader. may, if he so desires,' perform the required .residenae duties bk. living on farming land owned solely by him, not less than 80 ecru in .extent, in the vicinity of his homestead.. Joint uwn. erehip in land will not meet this., require-. went. . • . (3) If the father (or mother, if the father is deceased) of the honiesteader lues per. manent residence on farming land owned solely by iiim, no lees than eighty (80) sores in extent, in the vioinity the homestead, or ii ?on s homestead entered - for by hiin in the vioit ity, such homestead- er may perform his own residence duties by living with the father or mother. (4) The terms "vicinity" in the two pre- ceding paragraphs is defi,ael as meaning not mars than nine miles in a direct line. exolnetive of the width el- road allowances esteemed in the mea inrement. . (5) A. Homesteader intendin to perform his residenoe duties in aimordame with the above while living with parents et ,on arming land owned bv himself, must not- fy the Agent for the dietrict of smile inten- . Six months' notice in writine must be given to the commissioner of 'Dominion Lands at Ottawa, of intention eapply for patent. W. W. CORY, eapety of the Minister nf the Iaterior. LB.—Unauthorized publieetion of t ede eeertisernent will not be paid for. . . •._ During the first nine months (AIMS year the immigration 'department has deported 1,011 immigrants as being undesirable citizens. During the same period 1,200 people have been refused entry from the United States. These figures indicete the close supee- yision now being exercised by the department over the new arriyale in the country, and it is said no other country. has ever received a better class of immigrants than the 120.000 who settled in Canada. this yeate Ten - migration for the, year has now pract- ically stopped. A clergyman writes: "Preventics, those little !Dander Cold Cure Tablets are working wonders in my parish." Preven tics surely will check a voidor grippe, in a very few hours. And Pre- ventics are so safe and harmless. No Quinine. nothing harsh not sickening. Fine for feverish, restless children. Box of 48 at 25c. Sold by all de.e21214.• Cy Warman is back from a. totic over the G T P and says ten million acres of land has been sold along the new route. Most of this has gone to American farmers, who will settle thereon, though a small amount near statiors has been speculative. • , Pain in the head—pain anywhere, has its muse Pain is congestion, pain is blood proastire-,,nOthing else usually. At least, so saw Dr. Shoop, andlo prove It be has created a little pink blet. Thal tabletr-ealled Dr. Shoop's Heade* 0 Tablet, - coaxes blood pressure away from pain eentera its effect Is charming, pleasingly delightful. Gentle, though safely, it •iu oiy equalizes the blood &Or' lation. If you have a headache, it's blond PreRturb. If It's painful periods ivith Woken, same Cense. H you are sleepless, restless, aervous, it's brood congestion—blood pressure That surely Is certainty, for Dr. Shoop's Headache TabletS SOD It in 20 minutes, and the table% simply distribute the unnatural blood pressure. Bruise 'our finger, and dnosn't it get rod, and swell, and pain you? Of Course It doett. It's CORA geStIOS, blood pressure. You'll arid itwhere pain as—always. It's simply Common Sense. Wia sell at 25 cents, and cheerfully recennona Dr. Sho'op's Itleadathe Tablets Sold by "ALL DRUGGISTS" HAM KEPT HIS•HEAD. 6.Pt.1R. Man WO Not Upset by Prise- .tkal doks. Some Of hls newspaper friends put up a Practical joke on George Ham, epecial agent of the C.P:R.,a short tree ago that is being told from coast to coast. Ham had been detailed to conduct a party of fifteen Canadian everaen journalists over the line to Vane...Myer and back. .They traveled iri 4 private car, ere :Soon after the party he'd started, some depraved persons in Montreal conceived the idea that it would be a great joke to send this telegram, pur- pealing to come from L. O. Aria - strong, the colonization agent, to the .Mormon bishop..at Lethbridge, Alber- ta', the centre or. a large Mermen set- tlement "George ham, rich Mormon from Wyoming, with efteen wivesin pri- vate ear, will arrive Lethbridge, on Thursday, loeaking for new location. Advise that be be treated well in hope he may decide to settle. He would. be most valueble acquisition to colony. ' lee 0, Armstrong, ° Colonization Agent, Q.P.R. When the train with•the journal- ists' ear attached ei,rrived at Leth- bridge, the entire Mormon population, attired in its Sunday clothes aeld' headed by the bishop and the elders: was drawn up on the platform to re- ceive .the visitina brother and his 01- " teen wives.• Ham wits much perplex- ed by the unexpected warmth of his greeting, :. Not until some of the brethren be- gan to question him about ,his var- ious marriages, desifing Particularly to ,know just where and hew he had managed to corral such aft all-star connubial galaxy, did it dawn upon hien that somebody had been trying to play a joke. But he was game. He carried •out the role that had been thrust upon him and departed amid the affectionate acliees of the breth- ren, promising to return and buy some land after keeping an important en- gagement at Moose Saw. : - As for the lady journalists, being unenlightened regarding the incident, they .Tesurned their jeurney unenran- tured with the striking example et true western hospitality they had just witnessed. . With. such 'consummate diplomacy (lid Ham Manage his charges that upop their return to Montreal they f ornied . an organize: - tion, elected him an honorary mem- ber, and presented him with a gold - headed umbrella. CANADA LOSES ISLAND. *Small Piece of Land In Passalnee, • qUoddy• Bay Goes to U. S. , The dispute Over the . boundary about Passamaquoddy Bay, an anm. of the ocean between Maine and New Brunswick, which has continued for 124 years, will be settled by papers f ound in Marietta, Ohio, recently in the Marietta:. College library. The. boundary dispute had remained open since 1784,, and the State Department at Washingtonein seeking es settle- ment; called Upon the college Officials there for an examination of the re-. cords known to be among the archives ' in the library, , All the notes and maps made at•the Nine of the survey �f e the boundary' by Rufus. Putnam were found. It is stated that the maps inethe collection cover all disputed:. points. and show that Pope's. Folly Island belongs to the United States. ;Copies will be at once forwarded to the State Depart- ihent.' It is believed that these Papers ance neapOwill settle the international boundary dispute which has hereto- fore caused an expense of hundreds of thousands of dollars in the attempt to reach an agreement. Pope's Folly. Island is a Very smell parcel of land. It is .not merkedon any that): nor .mentioned in any gaz- Shoeing the .remily. Families of French-Canadian farm, ors often equally, numerically those of the old New Eng.land settlers. Proof, if any is needed, is given by a writer in a inagazine..in the follow- ing copy of an order received by the prdprietor of a Quebec store: "Yoh will put some shoe on ray family like this, •and send by Sam Jameson, the carrier: One man, Jean St. Jean (me), forty-two Yeaes; one vainan, Sophie St. Sean (she); forty, one years; Hedenecles aria.' Lenore, nineteen years; Honore, eighteen years; Celina, seventeen yetis; Nar- eisse, • Octavio,. and Phyllis, sixteen years; Olivia, -fourteen years.; Philip- pa, thirteen years; Alexandre, twelve years; Rosins., eleven years; Bruno, ten years Pierre, -nine years; Eugene, we loss him; Edouard and Eliza, sev- en years; Adrien, six years; Camille, five yeara; Zed., four years; Joseph, three years; Wise, two years. Mur- iel •one years; Aillaire, he go barefoot. Hew much?" • Stowaway round Bead. The steamer -Benedict, Capt. Rob- erts, arrived the other day from Liver- pool, England, and Capt. Roberts. re- ports that just before arriveng, while the farenien 'were working on the coal in the ship's hold, they discovered the dead body of a StowriWay. The body was. badly decomp,Osed ,and was buried fit sea, the captain. reading the burial service. The identity of the nian could not be made out beyond the feet that let- ters found on hie person were address- ed to Hunter IL Oldham. The decerie- ed was apparently an A.reerican. citi- zen, as one of the letters. addreseed to Oldham wa.s item the United Stales coneular agent at Neweaselo-on-Tyne. Line to Skagway. . President . Hays,, of the Grend Trunk Pacifie, announees in an in- terview that eventtially the G. T. P. will liriVe branch built south to Victoria. He adds that there ate SOlte details yet to be worked out in conneetion with it, so that the exact plans of the corriparly cannot be made public. Hdys says that he expects te able to give a five-day service from Skagiyay to Chicago when the new line as completed, Re expects next year at thiSi time to be able to go up the Skeena. river by his own mil - 1 way., EADIFC Bride Illtili LA. a dr s d you will re. r halve and delve a free etemple 'of stoottirs c0 Nino Wen PENNYItoYeet, TEA. Apowernd but barmiest( vegetable Medicine for eleltiteee peeuliar to weezeri. and all aiseastis arising therefrom wan anuggietir feel ate25e. or poetpeld for price from Dr. le .A. toloeuni, Limited, iipaditia, Aventter) Tore:Ito. HAW TO CUBE A HEADACHE 441.0,14 OMNI BE BEATEN. To ,attenipt to cure a headache. by 'taking "heiteache powder," is like l trying to stop a leak in the root by puttieg a an under the dripping ' wato Ohrortio beadaebes ere canoe fry poleoned blooe. Wee blood, Is pole sorted by -tissue waste, unalgested tootl and other Impurities remaining too long in the, system. These poisons are not promptly eliminated hecastio ot sick liver, bowels, skin or kidrisys. • 'If the bowels do .not move regularly —If there is pain, in the back sh 'wing kidney trouble—if the skin. is sallow or disfigured with pimples—it shows • clearly What Is causing the beadacher, d'IrTnit-a-tivee" cure headaches be- ; Ouse they curer the catiee 01 iea6. ache. . °Ierult-a-tives" net directly on the three great eliminating organs— bowels, ItidneYs and skin. 4'Frult-a- t1ves" keep the system free of poisons. _ "Print -a -Oyes" vorne in Iwo sizes -- 25c and 5Qc. If Your dealer does not • have them wrIte to `a•41t-a.tivea Limited, Ottawa - Geyser in lt Amon, " A geyser: has broken out on Eldor- ado, justbelow Bay Gulch, Yukon, according to advices -erora Dawson, arid es throwing three-fourths of a eluieehead of water, with no promise of er4ispeion. It has been running six weekswithout , diminution, and •tha miners are beginning to predict that it will eontinue and will form an immense •glacier. The origin of. tins glacier is unknown.- How: it aseued happen to break out at this time, especially inee no Work 'has been done on the ground, is a nays tery. Were the water to appear 0114 some ground where geed pay exists, and where the miners are prepared for work, it would be considerect a bonanza. As it is, this fine streani is running to waste in, the creek bot- tom. Fivq years ago a gusher broke out on Eldorado, adjoining elain number three, entree/Tied such an immense heed that it ,formecl an ini7 inense glaeier in the winter, ' Americans Investing In B.O. Por the purpose of making invest- ments in timber Grand Rapids, Mich.: men are paying attention to British ,Columbia. • They Lave had agents looking up timber for several months T,hee, say that an enormous amount of American capital will be invested in British Columtria timber within the next year owing to the great like- lihood of the next congress placing Canadian lumber on'the free list. The zemoval of duty is a plenk in the Democratic platform, while' the. seine step is favored bythe leaders ,of.the: Republican -party. - The wholesome, harmless geeen hater - es and tender stems of a, lung healing monntainous shran,give td Di' Shoetree (Jough Remedy its curative prioperfiee Tickling or dry. bronchial coughs quickly and. safely yield to this bighly effective Cough medicine. Dr. Shoop assures mothers • that they • dan with stray give it evert very young bab- ies: No opium, no chlorofornee-4abaol- s 'lately tie ehing harsteor harmful. It c time the distressing cough, and beals the sensitive Membranes. ,Accept no other. Demand 1)r Shoop's. Solo. by W. $, R golraes and W. A. McCon- nell: Historic Forest Fire. ° The • terrible work ol • the flames Whioh • have burned over and destroy- ed Inindrecls of thousands of .ecees ot timber 'property to the value of mil- lions. in the lake states, recalls to memory another great :forest fire which .leas attained histoyie import; That Wee the great Miramiehl, fire of 1825. . It began i s grea es ( e .struction about 1 'o'clock in, the af- teerioon Of Oct. 7 of that year, at. a •place abOtit sixty miles , above tbe town of Newcastle, on the lefirarnichi river, in New Brunswick., Before 10 o'clock at night Wives twenty miles before • Netveastle. In nine hOurs it ' -had destroyed a belt Of •forest eighty miles long.and twenty-five miles wide. Over melee than :two and one-half mil- lion here's', almpet every Jiving thing was killed:: "Even the fish were alter- •whrd found dead in heaps on the river banks. - Five hundred. and ninety baildings were burned, and a number of towns, including Newcastle, °het- et:am and Douglastown, were destroy- sd. One hundred and sixty persons perished and neatly a thoesand head of stocks -- t t t 1 - Combines the pot* healing virtues of the Norway pine tree with other almor:. bent, expectorant and soothing medial:hes of recognized 3vOith, and is. absolutely hermless, prompt and safe for the (sire of couccavoms,ifaoscittrs, , 110A.11,SENESS, CROUP, Sonle • THRoAT,' PAIN or TIGHT - 'NEA" in the CHEST, , end tal throaeand lung troubles. Xt put up in e yellow wrapper, 3 pine trees the trade mark and the price 25 cents. A HAM) tint C011011. Mr. S. 14, Purdy, Millvale' N.S. ", writes:—I have been troubledwith a* hard, dry cough for along titne, especial- ly at night, but after having used Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, for,s, few Weeks, 1 find ray cough has left me, To any person, suffering u 1 did, Von say that this 'remedy it well worth atrial. would not'be Without it in the house.* Edmonton Settler Defied Fate Wirtb. a Piece of a Stove: Not long ago a settler in the &It mouton district, lost everything by prairiefire, says a Writer in 4 west- ern Magazine. His grain and stock, his shaelt and stable, his fences and Implements, all were wiped out, ...A prosperous farm was converted in a few hours into a Sahara of grey asheS, Nvit4 nothing left but the ruins of cook stqve left on the flat prairie floor to elunf that it had once been a hue man habitation. This Edmonton set - tier didn't sit stunned and dazed over the ruins. He walked three miles to a neighbor and borrowed a team and wagon. Then he took, a piece ..of his broke.n stove^ top for a , spade, and driving to 4 neighboring coulee, where hundreds and hundreds of beautiful Alberta ferns grew wild he grubbed out a wagonload of these ferns and teamed them into Edmonton. The people of that opnlent• young north- ern eety may or may net have had en inkling of, what had befallen him. But at any rate, the homeless settler sold his whole. wagon load of fern roots for a dollar apiece, and turned around and bought a tent -and 4 tin stove for 0, from the grandson of an. English .earl win\ refused to live any longer in a country wbere he couldn't buy "Honey -Dewe tobacco; and the shooting was getting worse every sea- son. The fern seller then drove home with a pocketful of money and a de- termination to 'start life over again. You feel that ne ought to have a brass plate on his door when he at least; you , feel that way at first, when you think of him grabbing out those coulee ferns with a broken stove top, , But Oanlida would run out of the sunply if she gave every western- er of kindred spirit a rrionumdbt. for there are thousands of them. they are the men who are making -a% a nation.", : OLDEST PREACHER DIES. ...Nev. Alex. Mens, of London Colored : Baptists, Was 118 Years Old. The oldest Comedian preacher pass- ed quietly away at the Aged People's Home en Lendone Ont., recently; in the person :of Rey. Alexander Mans, o had just attained. the 118th year of his age, and who , was for enemy years minister of the Horton Street • Baptist Church. . The long years of Reir,. Mr. Mans' life have been eventful one •indeed. He has seen the Changeof a great country once his Own. He watched the uniting of the Confederate States of 'America With those of the North, and the freeing of the race to which he belonged. ' , Bern in the snuehern states, of slave parents, Rev. leer. Mans grew Up in, !Itsveiy. After attaining -the age ef manhood, ' Rev. leer, . Manse mestere had to sell then; plantation, and he with the other slaves was 'auctioned off to the 'highest bidder, His new home turned out to be an unhappy. one, and *from that time. Mr.. Mans . began to think about 'escaping. to Canada,. the land of, promise for the slaves. At this time the underground railway was the means adopted to 'kali these unfortunate beings: and one night he stole fienns his cabin and, With the help of those freedom - loving and freedom-abeeting citieens,, reached Canada. This was some siXty, years ago, and ever • since this time EPV., Mr. Arians has resided in -and about, London. . LOng Sealing Trips. ' • To hunt for new sealing grounds in "all the seven seas" is the aniission on which A. J. Bechtel of Victoria, B. C., has just dispatched hie sclloon- er, the Beatrice L. Corkinn, from Helefax. The cruise will last for the next. two veers: , ' . • . • gr.. Bechtel Arrived on the coast re.. Icently fiera.the east, Where he fitted out and prepared the • vessel for her . long cruise. • He has hitherto; in Corn - Mon with all the, ether sealing rhea-. ters, confined his attention .to the seals in the north Pacific Ocean and Behring Sea, anel his new !move , is a .fresh indication that the days of the seal herds in that paft of the world are numbered and new grounds must -be fo:und for the hunters if the very expensive equipment of the sev- poiroa3l,edconipanies is to be kept em - A similar trip to that outlined for the Corkurn will be made by the Ag- -nos G. Donahue, owned by.0apt. Rei- man, of Vitoria. Mr. I3echtel says that the ...schooner will. practicely cruise atenild the World in search of .new sealing grounds. TOE D41NTV DESSERT, Ono Package Sorg*, $1,4 OreCerS 10e:per Patkaqe ourn'S Strong In Austrane. Tommy Burns, the Canadian pugi- list, has made a tremendous' hit in Australia. Immense crowds gather to see him. He is forced to make pub- lic speeches and to bold great "recep- .tions” on the lawn at his training quarters, . The Sydney 1teferee, after printing ealunan or two describing TommY's popularity, adds the following note: "The attention paid to Barns drew a tesiotest, from Rev. J. Welker at Bal- larat during the course of a sermon, ,at $t. Andrew's kirk. Mr. Walker deplored the face that the famous pugilist cut a greater „figure in the nubile eye than eminent theologians or politicians." Fight With Snake. Mr. P. Gaseon of Terreinal Park, Montreal', had a hair-raising experie eneeethe other night near his home, in the •shape et a battle with a make. measuring ten and a half feet. The fight between. Mr. Gascon and the vile, er last over ten and a half minutes, and it was only with the aid of two neighbors, who had come to the shout for help of the terrified Man, that the three succeeded in clubbing the mon- ster to insensibility, Read the pain formula on a. box of Pink Psifl Tablete. .Then ask your doctor if there is a "better one Pain 'means :oti gest ion. bleed 'ermine some where eier leheor s Pink PainTablets check head pains, womanly pains, pain anywhere, Trv one, and see ! 20 for 25 . Sold hv all dealers. • • Probably oerudterVtoZoinvnid possible disputes in rernete districts, the Gov-' eminent has. receisied a request from the Imperial Gevernment. to reserve a strip sixty feet vide on the British Colunibia side of the int,ernational boundary. The request•cemes* from • the British Ambassador throtigh. the , Ottawa Government; which has agre- ed, to reserVe a similar strip along the heundery wherever," thepublics iands' belong to the Dominion. The :United States is doing the same thing, President, Rooseirelt having issued a • proclamation declaring that all pnblie larldi for sixtye.et, on the Americau side of the line will in future be re-. served from sale,: settlement or lease, . Of 'Course• in all cases where land has aetually been alienhted ;right up • to the botindary,,:the proprietors,will not be disturbed, but no such grants • will be made iri the. future. Mining locations, farms and soe forth on, the boundary line have,•in the past proved e to he a fruitful source af dispute, and not ;infrequently, owing to .careless eurveying, owner, has • found out later that part of his posseseions in the. United States, or in .0:made, as the .case may be, with the result *that he loses title 14 part Of his land. THEIR HOPE, THE PEOPLE Nov. 1 21h JIM Good Reading forLittielittoney THIE NW ERA AND THE eekill Globe will be sent to new Subscribers for the balance of the year for otitis THE ERA AND THE the en year to new Su scribers for Cents ubscribe 1 Muskoka's*Brave-BOttie for Needy Pushing Northward. C The shack of the settler is appear- ing farther and farther north In On- tario, and the last (Ownsita to be sur- , veyed into lots is where the National Transcontinental .Railway crosses the. Abitibi river. It is seven miles east of Cochrane,' the junction xbint of the T. St N. 0. Railway 'aricl the Trans- continental. Mr. W. H. Whieson of the Ontario Survey Department has re- tailed from planning out the town - site, and he believes that the. settle- ment there, which will probably be tailed' Abitibi, has great For a hundred miles up the Abitibi and for some distance along the Black river there are valueble areas of pulp and :timber, and in the iminediate vicinity of the townsita there- is good farming land. The Transcontinental bridge at the point is, 840 feet long and 04 foot above the water. They ex. pe: to de have trains rinming from Abitibi lorederick HOUSS .by tn • , Jeered the Bishop. As he was leaving the synod meet- ing at Christ Church Cathedral the other day, Dishop Dumoulin was sur- rounded by a crowd of street Urchins, Who jeered his, knickers and gaiters. The bishop referred.to the ineident at a reception held that evening at the close of the synod, and laughingly ,•'retnarlted that he would havo boxed their ears had he not been a bishop, He Mentioned the suhteet, in connec- tion with , a report Int made on his visit to the Pan -Anglican conference, and remarked that the children of England did not seem to be as irre- Want as the ehildren of Canada. 17100(1,'S VICOhOdi.1104 The Ghvoi goad& ,flensechr Too mat ineigotetee the weak nervous system, makes looditi old voinet_theree Me Wilily; Mental and liraio won% feetdenee, Satuo,11VealozeRo, Ontooksta. loto,,, anal Afeeto ofelbaso or, ti per box, sixfor $5. One %anise cure. Sold by all drnitesiate or ma .pitg. on raceint cl priee._,Nettria fro, Th. Wood Niatialittiort Ora. TPU4son ' tolittiM144110 Consumptives. It is poor consolation to *needy con-' sumptives tcesay that the Governmenb should make provision for the thous- ands who suffer and die from tuber- culosis in Canada every year. The Government shoekt.do a great deal more than they haveyet- dreanaed of doing. But they are not doing it, and in the meantime twelve thousand die annually in the Dominion, fr0t1i this dread disease. As ,the situation is to -day, what would be the fate of many- consump- tives in Canada were it net for the two Homes for Consumptives in Muskoka that • duringthe past • eleven ' years, 'against many odds, have cared for upwards of three. thonsand patients iii the earlier stages of the disease, whilst in the two sister institutions, on the banks of the Humber, those in ,the.more advanced stages aretreated. . This work in Muskoka is one of pure philanthropy. From the day the first patient was admitted to the Muskoka Free Hospital for Consumptives in Aprile1002, not a single applicant has ever been refused admission because of his or her inallility to pay. The Government contribute $1.50 per week per.patient. The cost of maintenance is $9.25 a week. The clifferencein the cost of maintenance of all needy patients has through these years been made up by private philan- thropy. • The Secretary -Treasurer of the Association, Me. J. S. Robertson, eV Xing Street West, Toronto, writes u$ that, with the financial depression of the past year, the funds Of the Muskoka Tree hospital 'for Consumptives have suffered greatly. At the commence - 'merle of the 'winter Season the Trustees have to face Iteheavil y overdrawn bank account and have many -obligations to Meet. Despite these (banditti worries every applicant is receiving careful consider- ation arid patients are admitted as promptly as beds are made vacant. through theseyears the institu- tion has been maintained, not by any, rich endowment, for such does not sextet, but by the generous contributions of the masses of the people—the small emus rather than the large ones. We frankly say that we do not know, in our experience, of a more worthy and deserving charity, and our hope is that the readers of these lines Will respond to the appeal that is now made for funds for the IthiskokaPree Hospi- otal for Oonstmiptivea. Contributions maybe sent to Mr. W. S. Gage, 84 Spadinit Ave., Chairinari of the Executive Committee, or to 3. S. Robertson, Secretary -Treasurer of the National Sanitarium Association 841 Ring Street West, Toronto, Ontkrie, ease__ sse—e-eeeeeee • • es..e-e-e° • , We Want to Land your first order, because we know that the satisfaction you •vvill derive from that will open your *eyes to thefact that you cannot do better anywhere else that you can with us. You will find that we are not "all at seal hi our business, but thoroughly "up- to:, the minute" and watchful of the interests of our customers, knowing that. by so doing, • we are really acting for our own ultimate benefit. 1,X• WOULD MAKE YOU HUNGIff to .see our fine assortment of Cakes al- ways on hand. Why bake at home when you have such an assortment to choose from, give us a trial and their' will talk for themselves. Bakers of homemade bread, the best to be had. Wtiile up town come in and try cue. Ice Cream and Soda.it will refresh yOu while doing your ehopping. We keep a line of first class confec- ,tionary and fruits ineseason. 12 /A. DONIINS . Caili or trade for tatter and Eggs. ,Merchant - Clinton, VV. VV. 14IMENS Phone 42 . elinteta 4 PAINTING AND TRIMMING. We can paint your liOuse or paint and trim your buggy; and make them look like new. All work guaranteed, and our price § are right. McMATI1 (Se OVERBURY Lealie'sCarriage Shop, Clinton a Ladies College ST. THOMAS4. 0 de ONTARIO 28th year • "A leading Canadian College." Enc1wment Allows ex- ceptionally reasonable tato. A tull. year's tuition with board, $ *** 168 i'r:07;e761:4614,1(eu:dvez 2 and upwards •-.411 Apples Wanted The Clinton Evaporator is now open and will pay S 11 For any quantity of apples. ,Town AND Case VamisiamitmettiMitaisosiamiir Something New ••••••••,.........1 • Now is the time to Once your Order for a • NEW. WIREt„,PENCE beiferethe ni1,rnce n wire. AS ("oiled Spring With used. Also agent for theitleiebrated Ileiritzman piano Prank W., Evans Agent 04000 Fence Co., 4.01.30911ftlitamilegiall5M.01111111 A.