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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton New Era, 1908-12-17, Page 3— • 150 71177 aittb.1n&Rates Ta Oanitdiat Subseribera New nra Nett are red watioehtates leo New ra exte varanr mata Let New re a seweekly sun"tas NewIto one WeealaViimetst t.e$ Now Mat Vermerie Om*, atee Xe* to American irbaeribere,,,**.* 111 09 enewais For the coming year, we are anxious 4 to put our subscription list on an entirely prepaid basis. People who take a city 'Weekly pay for it in advance, and • they •Should do the same for a country weekly. Every subscribe who pays in advance is. to that extent helping the publisher in • his business At $1,00 4 year, it does not pay to keep books for subscription ac- counts, and we will esteem it a great favor if every subscriber will, for the • caming year, endeavor to pay his sub- scription STRICTIS IN ADVANCE. One dollar is not much to each individual 'subscriber, but it meana:a good deal to therpriblisher who has hundreds of "one dollars scattered all over the country, • .On our part, weiare trying to issue a • paper that is every week a• welcome visitor to every home it enters. We are willing to spend all our time and energy in this direction. All we ask in return is that oursubscribers will see to it .that their Subscriptions are paid in advance. We respectfully and earnestly ask the assistance •and co-operation of all our subscriber4. Yours truly, Robt, Holmes Publisher NEW ERA BARGAINS. IN FURNITURE: Carpets Curtains) Rugs Ltholefims ett We have secured for thtilealifiey season an exceptionallflitillot of Hou se Furnishings, such as three-pieeePerlor States, Ladies' Rockers, Morris Chairs, China, Cabinets, Book Casea, Buffets, Parlor Tables, Desks, etc. Pianos, Organs and Sewing Machines. t•Rieh grade goods at low prices. . J. chellew, Blyth IT WOULD MAKE YOU HUNGRY. 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 they• will talk for themselves. Bakers of homemade bread, the best to be had.' While up town come in and try our Ice Cream and Sode„it will refresh you while doing your shopping. We keep a line of first class confec- tionary and fruits in season. Cash or trade fer Butterautd:Eggs. W. W. NIIVIENS Phone 42 Clinton Repeat it; -"Shiloh's Cure will al. ways cure my coughs and colds." IrLOGS Wanted , Stapleton Salt Works . We Want to Land ' 1 yaerlirst (oder, because we know that the satisfaction you. will derive from. that will open your eyes to the fact that you. cannot do better anywhere • else that you can with us. ..You will find that we are not "all at sea" in our 11 • business but thoroughly 'up - to - the minute' and watchful of the intereete of our customersckeowing that by so I .doing, we are really acting for our . towinultimate benefit. ' Q. A DOWN • Merchant ' Tailor, - Clinton • Naw is the time to have • them ta,kert; all•the latest • styles; we guarantee all work satisfactory. , It may be along time be- fore the family is together again. , 'J. Roberts. . Photo Artist, Winton. txj tx1 • , As a gift for Christmas, Chcna is always' ap. t-4 propriate and pleasing, Our. China consists of japan and Saxon manufacture, imported direct. 4 We have some exceptiohally handsome designs. z We shall be pleased to show these when you call A FULL 14:NE QF W.- 116 COI/MIER JEWELER, CLINTON _ . 140.4 Henri Smith WJI1Iam BCD,* VS" Oontinued From Last 4Week. Dr. Sims Woodhead, Prot. of Path,. rendering animals and amen Immune .ology in the vicinity of Cambridge, from certain eontagiousi diseases thro' ss,ya of the effect or alcohol on the inoculation with wattle serums, Dal. heart; "In addition to the fatty degela•1 eardet Writing In Oalumotte's labora- eratIon of the heat that le na frequent.: tory in Lille, thowedlhat aleoholized ly met with in chronic alcoholice.there rabbits are not pr'otd by breads, appeara in some eases to be an Increase tion,ae normal ones are,egainst hydro. OZ flbrotis tame between the intutele phobia. Moreover, he reports the eerie ffbers,accompanied by wasting of Lbw* of an intemperate MBA bitten by a t1851191. Ueari baillter 0110 of the 'nest mud dog. wito died notwithstandiu frequent "causes of death in people of anti-rabie treatmentawhereas a boy o edu t and advancea rare, le often dee thirteen, much more severely bitten to tatty tlegenerationt and a patient by the eatee dog on the mane day, re - who etiffers front ele0h0110degenera- covered tintler -treatment. • Delearde tion necoeqarllv rung a Mach greater strongly advises any one bitten by a load dog to Odultain froin alcohol,- not only during the anti -rabic treatment but for some menthe thereafter, lest the alcohol counteract the effepts of the proteetiee gertrint Similar lahoretore experiments have been made by. Laitenan, who became fellY aeriVitteed that alcohol 'acreages the susceptibility of animals to splenic fever; tubercologlet and diphtheria. Dr A C Abbott,of the Univereity of Penn- sylvania, made art elaborate ponies of experiments to teat the eusceptibility Of rabbits to various miorOtorganisms causing 'pus -formation and blood -pole, oning„ He found that the normal re- sistance of rabbits to infection from thie source Was in most cases "mark- edly diminished through the influence of Alcohol when given daily to a stage of acute ihtexica.tion," "It is interest- ing 00 note," Dr. Abbott adds, °that the results of • inoculation Of the alco- holized rabbits with the erysipelas co- ccus correspond in a way with clinical observationg on human beings addict- iendf ettger jleyitchessisiovregaunseisomf ,tIcohol when Additional confirmation of the dele- terious effects of alcohol in this connec- tion was furnished by the cats and dogs of Professor Hodge's experiments already referred to, All Of theskshow- ed peculiar susceptibitity to infeetioue diseases, not only being attacked earl- ier than their normal companions, but also suffering more severely. This ac- cords with numerous observations on the human subject ; for example, with the claim made some years ago by Mc- Leod and, Milles that Europeans in Shanghai who used alcohol showed in- creased susceptibility to Asiatic °W- ere, And suffered from a more virulent type of the disease. Professor Wood- head points out tliat many of the fore- most authorities now concede the jus- tice of this view, and •unreservedly condemn the giving ot alcohol, even in medicinal apses'to patients suffering from cholera erfroni. various other ac- ute diseases' and intoxications, includ- ing diphtheria, tetanus, snake bite,and pneumonia, as being not merely use- less but positively harmful: . Even when the patient has advanced far to- ward recovery from an acute infectious disease, it is held still to be highly 'un- wise to administer alcohol, mace this may interfere with the beneficent ac-.' tion of the anti -toxins that have devel- oped in the tissues of the body, and in virtue which the disease has been over- come. risk of heart failure during the ofearee of acute fevers or from over -work, ex- halation, and .an overloaded stornach, and the like, than does the man with a strimg, healthy heart, unaffected by • 41091101 or ohnilatpolsone." It muat be oblivrens. that these worths given clue to the agency Of aleohol in shortemng- the lives of tens of thous- 1 ands of persons with whose decease the name of alcohol is never associated in the Minde of their friends or in the death ceetificatea Dr. Woodhead has thie to tray about the •bloodVessele; "In' chronic alcohol- ism in which the mitten is acting con- tinuously, over a long petioth a pecul- iar Ilbeous condition ef the vessels is met with ; this,. apparently, is the re- eult of a slight irritation of the connec- tive tissue of the walls of therm vessels 1 The wall of the Vessel may become thickened throughout its whole extent Or irregularly, and the muscular .coat may waste away as a new fibrous or . sear -like tissue is formed. The wast- ing ninacies marindergo fatter &igen- written, and, in these., lime Baits may he deposited ; the rigid, brittle, so-call- ed pipe -stem vessels are the results." Referring to these regenerated arter- ies, De, Welch gays; "la this. way al- coholic excess may stand in a causative relation to cerebral disordervsuch as apoplexy! and paralysis, and also the i diseases of the heart and kidneys." I From our present standpoint it is I particularly worthy. to remark that Professor Woodhead states that this calculation of tbe blbod-vessele is like- ly to occur in .persons who. have never been either. 'habitual or occasional drurikards.who have never been either habitual or occasional drunkards, but who have taken only "what they are pleased to call 'moderate' quantities of alcohol." Similarly Dr Welch declares that "alcoholic diseases are certainly not limited to persons recognized as drunitards, ' ''Instances . have been re- corded. in increasing lumber. in recent years of the occurrence of diseases of the _circulatory, renal, and nervous systems, Reasonably or positively at: tributable to the use of alcoholic liq- uors,. in persons who never became reay intoxicated and were regarded •by themselves and by others as.anod- orate drinkers.' 'It is well establielied.auide Di Welch "that the general mortality from dis- eases of the liver,' kidney, heart, blood - vessels, and nervous . system is much higher in those following occupations 'which expose them to the temptation of drinking than in others." Strum- pell declares that chronic inflammation of the stomach and bowels is almost' i3xclesively of alcoholic origin ;- and when a Man in the prime of life dies of certain chronic kidney affections, one •may safely infer that he has been a lo- ver of beer and other alcoholic drinks. Similarly, cirrhosis of liver is univers- ally recognized . as being, nine tirnes in ten, of alcoholic origin. The nervous Wreakers of like„oregin are numerous and important, implicating both bride cells and peripheral fibres. • How the Poison Works • Without ping into further details as to the precise changes that act:the' may effect in the various organs of the body, we may note that these pathol- ogical changes are everwhere of the The Alley of Tuhereelosis Not Many physielans,perhaps will go' so far as Dr. Muirlsead, of Edinburgh. who at one time claimed • that he had scarcely known of 'a death in a case of pneumonia uncomplicated by alcohol - tem ; but almost every physician will admit that he . contemplates with in- creased solicitude every ease of pneu. monis thus complicated. Equally po- tent, seemingly, is alcohol in compli- cating that other ever -menacing lung disease,' tubercolosis. Dr. Crothers long ego asserted that inebriety and tuberculosis are practically intercoe- vertible conditions ; a view thee may ' be interpreted in the words ofDr Dick- inson's Baillie Lecture; "We may con- clude, .and that confidently, that alco- hol promotes tubercle, not because it same general type. There is an ever... begets the racial', but because tt.nie- present tendency to destroy the highert paws the tissues,and makes them; ready! form. of/ cells -those that are directly ' to yield to the attacks of the parasites.' sad In varnistaa— saga lasamisiatatbditalum whfeb Dr. boor's itheunuttio Bondi was tia de dable preporiotion. wt. / stieeeesfully tree mew owe of =shun; but now. it _ a fornur core* ourable of tibia Marotot much dreaded ttikeose. Tims. seino.like gran Witgoe.found in arienmittio iooli, seem to Mao vos and -pessOWIT nocier the swoon of this reireff7 ea totelatts emit eueer wheit_addeci to pure w*tor. • And men, when Moivonrea. ;nese vaisonoos wastes buelv um from tne system. an the rause of iTheurnetIsto li gone forever. There is now no real need -no scow excuse to offer looser with. out hole. We eel. atel In cootleence recommead „ Dr. Shoop' Rheumatic emedy Sold by "ALL, DRUGGISTS" mining into the higtory of 3554 idiotic epileptic,- hysterical, or we* -minded children. in the . institution at Bicetre, Rranceo:Bournevillefoundthat over 41 per cent. had alcoholic parents. . In more than 9 per cent of the Cases, iit was trecatained that one or both par- ents were under the innuenze of alco- bolnat the time of procreation,a. fact of positively terrifying significance, when we reflect how alcohol inflames the passions. while subordinating tbe ,judgment and the ethical scruples by which these nitrations are normally held in check. Of similar import are the ob- servations ofBezzola and of Hartmann that a large 'proportion. Of the idiots and criminalsjnwitzerland were con- ceived during, the 8094011; ' of the year when • the (totems of the cenintry-- "May-feas," etc. -lead to the dispro- portionate consumption of alcohol:" . Experimental evidence of veep strik- ing character is. furnished by the re- , preductive histories of Prof, Hodges .alcoholiZed dogs, - Of 23 .Whelps born in four litters to a pair of tipplers, 9 were born dead, trwere deformed, and only 4 were „viable and seemingly nor. ntal. Meantime, a pair of normal ken- nel -Companions produced 45 Whelps,. of Which 41 were viable and normat.-a percentage of 90;2 against the 17,4 per .cent. of viable alcoholics. Prat:lodge points out that these results are strik- ingly similar tit the observations of Demme on the progeny of ten alcohol- ic as compared with tea norraal fam- ilies of human lettings. Ttie ten 4160- .1i:the families produced 97 children,. of whom 10 were deformed, .0 idiotic, (I. choreic or epileptic, 25 nonviable, and only le or 17 per cent, 0 the. whole Were animal.' The le normal familiee produced 61 children, - two of '' Whom were deformed; a pronounaed "back- ward" 'though . not suffering frora. die- eesaand 3 non-ttiabialentinir Otor .88;5 per cent norMal.• -, ' -• • ' .1 As I am writing this article, the lat. eset report of the OraigOolony forEpi- Reties, at Sonyea,,N.ew. York, Chances . to come to my desk Glancing at the tables Of statistics, I find that the sup- • 'erintendent, Dr. Spratig. reports .a: :history of alcoholism in the parents of , 318 out of 960 recent. paiett .110ie than 22 per cent.' of 'these' unfortunates are . -thus. suffering , from the. mistakes Of ' their parents.. NOV does this . by any means telt the whole. Story, for there.' port. shows that 577 'Ad %lanai •Oeses- • $ more than 60 per cent. the whole,-... suffer from *. neueopa a, heredity'!" ; Windt, means that • their parents were theraselyes the victims of one or anoth- er of those 'neuroses...that:are peculiarly heritable,and that unquestionably tell 'ina, large nuMber'Ofeases. of alcoholic indulgence Ott the part of their progen- itors. Been.: to tha third and -fourth .., • generation," said the wise ileorevi of • old ; and the laws of heredity have not .chanod since then. I cite the data from thie. reportof the Epileptic Wont< not 'because its , record.' is in any way exceptional, but because' it is absolutely.. typical. The, Mental linage' that it beings: up is pre- ciselypomparabieto that whichwould 'arise j were we to 'examine' the What, tories:of the inmates of any institution Whatever 'wnere dependent or delin, • quent children are cared 'for he it idiot. concerned with the vital 'processes.. and lar Brottar'del,.at the Congress for the asylum,' orphanage, hospital, or retor- t° replace them With useful • or halm- ' StudttOtTubettelosis,. in London, was ' matotty.. The same. picture,. With the fel connective tissue"Whether this equally emphatic 40.0 the influence of same insistent mend, would he Indere .scar tissue formation. goes on in the alcohol in preparing the way for tabee- us °maid we visit a clinic where nerv-. heart.' -in the .kidneys. in ' the liver; in colosis, and increasing its virulence le Otis' diseases are treated; t'or-turning the blood -vessels; or . in the nerves,' and. this view has nowbecome general. to the ether 'epd Of the social scale - says Woodhead. "the process is eSaen• '-curiously reversing The POPular lin., 'could we sit in the office of a faehion- tially the saute, amt it must be assoc. .pression;OOPO held, by the Medical Pio-. 1,,bi . . • -st in nervoits diseases and fated with the accumulation of pcason- fession as tvell,that alcohel is antagOn-behol4 theireurotics,epileptics,paralYe one or Waste products in the, lymph laic to consumption: tics, and degeneratesnit tome day spaces' „through which the nutrient -Corrtaboratits eVidericeef the. baleful .• fluids pass to the tissues, The'Contraa- alliance. between' alcohol and tubercol• by day Under his observation, :It. is this picture, : ting scar tissue of a wound has itEr err- flies is . furnished by ' the .fact that in 'along with others which the preceding pages may in some meas... set homologue in the contracting soar -France the regions where tuberculosis .ure. aye auggeStedthal conies to Mind User* thetas Met With in the liver,: in itEl mostpeevelentairreepondwith those 1 t : the kidney, and in the brain." • in which consuptton, of. alcohol xs and Will not readily he hattietied when 1: ' s not alteeether pleasant to thim nk greatest. Where the average annual, one hears advocated on "physiological W that one's bodily tient:es-front 'the• consumption Was 12.5 litres per version ,drinks"In moderation." A .yatit num- brain the regular use of alcoholic : . Wain to the retnotest nerve libral,from the death rate. from consumption 'was ho , • the heart to the Minutest aiterioleg- found by Baudroti to be 328 per thous.. of the. reisgeided- individuale, Who wete responsible for all this miserynev- -maY'Perhaps be undergaingday.hyday and: ' Whete alcoholic consumption , ep did use alcohol except in What they such ehanges as these. Yet that is. the rose to 35,4 litres,the death rate freati. possibility, which every habitual dieW consumption ' increased to 107,8 per believed to be stela 'moderation'; and ker of alcoholic beverages -'moderate thousand: %Equally suggestive are facts , of these that did etre it to excess, there were few indeed .ate drinkeethough we be -must put forward .by Guttstadt in regard to ..who could, not have This is an added tolt that 'does not ap. the mutes of death in the Variotis-pall: restrieted their use of alcohol to mod.' pear in the first prise of •the glade of IWO in Prussia. , He found. that tube*. erAte tjuantities,or have abandoried its • We beet (*bottle :of wine, but it is a toll cokais - claimed "100 , tidinnt gs ,-iti :eve. altogether, had net the drug itself . made them its slaves by depriving that may refuse to be overlooked in the thousand. deaths of persons' over ' 25 aaccounting. • , • • . • years of ege: But the nunibee-of deaths . . thorn Of all power of choice. Few Men final nti , . . indeed, are voluntary inebriates,. *-- rOM this disease per .thousand deaths , Alcohol and Acute Infections 1 among gynsbaaluM teachers, physi0.1 Alcohol and the "Moderate" Drinker, In Connection with' experimenting in . , . . . - . . Jens, andProtestant elergyinen,for ex« ••It does not fall • Within the scope of ample, 'amounted eetipeCtively to 126. :my present purpose to dwell upon the 118, and 76 only; Whereas the number familiar aspect of the effeats of alcohol teem for hotelkeepers, to 287, tor brew suggested by the lest sentence, It ro- bes; to 344; and for Waiters., to 50. No quires no scientific experiments to doubt several' 'factors complicate the problem here, but One hazards little in * 4 . suggesting that a difference of habit as • .... totheuse, of alcohol Was the chief de- . -.. teritinent in running un the death AN A N v.,000i0T KnOw rate due to tabercolosia from 76 per A • Distinguished' Specialist ' Give* thousandher. at one- end ofthe scale to 550 : ilEART AprEcTED4'.1 Valuable .Adalcar. . . .• . ' PneumaPneumonia,'and' tubeectilosis can:t- blued account fot one.fifth of all deaths, More People Than are Aware °UM 1 .. In the first Weed I always impress in the United States, year by year. In Have Heart Disease. • upon My patients the importance of the light of what has jest been shown, ,* -"V examinstions were made of every: careful living ' and regular habits. it wood appear that ateohol here has a olio, 'people ;meld be surprised at the num- .. • Moderation, in, eating,. keeping the, hand in the- carrying off of ,rother,un. : her of persona welting about idiffering from , feet dry, andwearing plenty of warmtold thousands withwhose:untimely, ' heart clothing are - SOMe of,elems° 1,the.preeautions. demi so _to nettle is not officially wam r- This startling statement Was made by a doctor at a recent inquest. "I should; .not No amount of Mediate will cure, aed. I may add that Certain Clerman or even help, unless attention .is paid authorities. including, for example,Dr like to say thet heart. disease ie as eonimen to these few simple rules.' • Liebe, present evidence -not as yet as this week': imply."' said the expert I have had perfect ' meuttg Where deniongteatiee-to show thet danring about with weak hearettimet be very cee "but 1 am sere that the number of persons patients, foil/5100d these instrecti#5 must .also be added to the liet Of ,dis• eats to Whioh-alcohol predisposes' the of organism.' ' . ' arge." "Rendre& people go. about their daily work on the verge of death, and ytxt do not Pluid Extract Cascara. kw,— k g oz. , Hereditary Effect's of Aleeb01, knew it: hie only when. the shock comet that ki Carriana Compeund ...... : ..,„ t oz. lls them that thou:suepeeted weak. ' If additional evidence Of the alt -per- „ nem of the' heart is made apparent." ' Compound Syrup, Sarsaparilla 6 OZ., vading inlitienee of alcohol is required, ,,But undoubtedly /warp weakness, net Dose:. One teaspoonful after Meals it may be found Iti the thought•eOtra• • climate, is more prevalent nowadays. J. and at bedtime. 0 It is advisable to drink nicety of riling fact that ! the effects are not should think that the street of living, the WWI to the individal who ialbibee weer and rush et modern .1a:itemise life, the alcohol, but may he,.nassed_on to have ',lot to do with heart trouble,," ' his deseendante. The Offspring of rd. 'Thcrte is he dettbt but that this is comet, cottage shoW impaired Vitality of the and wo would strongly Skim any one most deep-seated character. Some. sufferingin any way from hearttroable to times this impaired Vitality. is Mani. try t bourse of MILOURN'S HEART tinted in the boa -viability of the Off, AND .INIZOVE P1101.11, • going :tornetimes in deformity ; very Prise 150 do, per box ors boxes fora* We advise all our readers to keep' frequently in netimses,whieh may take at all &Were or will be mailed &art On I this ,prescription. A The instructions the were forms of eboreh, infantile , rse-pt of prieo by The T. Milbarn•Co.0 • . Are valuable. .......,. . ,......•.,-.0. A, totivuTslons, epilepsytor Idisicy. In eke. Limited, Toronto, Ont, .1 . • PHYSICIAN TEL1.5 110W TREATS RHEUMATIC PATIENTS (Contieued on page 6) • assisted by the following blood tom and •rheureatic spedifie water during the treatment. A prominent local Merchant who has tried this treatment states that it relieves backache, bladder trouble, and urinary troubles almost imine. dieters, and has a gentle but thor- ough action on the kidneys. avingPrice on Furniture' and Muse - Furnishing (loads at- fundlore Slott • The lines we bonne are varied; the: selection Un- equalled in the County. The prices low and quality high. Thestockifl heavy and must be reduced, and 4 `speekil price on every article we handle will be Wen,. Chairs, arm Rockers, Mrass Beds, Brass . Poles, Book Cases, Book Shelves,.Bed Springs, Buf- fets, Baking Cabinets, China bluets, Couches, Carpets, Cribs, Cradles, Cots, Curtains, Carpet Sweepers, Curtain Poles, "Dining Room Chairs, Dressers and Stands 'Divans, Masois, Etchings, Xlurniture Covering;Feather Pillows, Frames, Floor Coverings Fringe, arand-fathers' Chairs, all Chairs, Mirrors, • Hall Racks, High Chairs, Ingrain Rugs, Inlaid Linoleum% . Interior Decora- tions, Iron Beds, aardineet Stirids, Japanese Mate tings, Mitchell Cabinets, Kitchen. Tables, "lounges, , Linoleums, Morris Chairs, Mirror Plates, Mat - .tresses, Mouldings, 1•Teedles for all makes of Sew- ing Machines Organs, 04,Cloth, Office Furniture, Odd Piece Machines, Parlor Suites, Parlor Cabinets, Parlor Tables, Pictures, Quality Beds, IRjugs, Ratan Chairs, Sideboards, Stair Oilcloth, Secre- taries, Sewing Machines, Students' Chairs,- Stools 'Tables, Toy Sets, Tr miertaking—everything the best and prices low, Velvet Rugs,, 'Writing Desks, Willow Chairs, tension Tables. our money cheerfully refunded if goods' not satisfactory. AlIkinds of 'Upholster* done: covering in a big variety of colors carried ill stock. • • Pictures while you wait. Satisfaction guaranteed. We are bound to please our customers. Chairs and Tables for Rent. We will also rent our Sanitary Carpet Cleaner:, the ' DUS-KOT: 250 Pictures—prices noarly cut in half. See our window for Saturday and next week. They won't last long: regular 50e at 10c, regular *1.00 at 35c. ' We could not have pet this sate on in a better time to suit Our customers.: as Christraaaas Only a few days in the distance, and to get nice,' clean, new, !up-to-clate goods at the priced they are selling. is it rare chance. We. lay 'aside, and deliver when you Want the goods, any article, by. paying a ' _small deposit.. Every article will have a special price. ;Come and see through our establishment, it will make y our heart bound With undescribahle joy.and satisfaction. A pleasure to show the goods. ' • Furniture Dealer and Undertaker, Clinton. Phone 2.• -Dal! Day or Night 11111/11=111111P. IS Tit 'EINE TO BUY CHRISTMAS GIFTS There is nothing more suitable .for Christmas gifts than.a pair of Shoes or warm Slippers We hive them at all prices and styles : FOR THE LADIES. Fide Patent Bluchers at $8.50 to $4.60. Fine Kid Bluchers at $2,00, $2.50 up to $4.00. Nice warm Slippers at 60tx, 75o, $1.00 and (M25 • FOR THE MEN. The Hart Shoe. in Velour and Patent, at $4,50 and $5.00 Sho;i4ioliAli.Voelsottwo and andBoxCalf at $2,00, $2.50, Slippers 'at .7.5c,'$1.60, $1.25, i1,50 and. $2.00, Boys', Misses' and Youths at $1 25, $1.50. $1.75 and, $2.00 For the little tots, Slippers at 35e, all Felt 03als.; tritattled with fur a.t 40e; rad, all -felt Bals, wenn and nice, 850. CALL AND INSPECT Ont. GOODS: •MUSIC GIFTS. Newcombe Pianos, Sherlock -Manning Pianos and Org Violins at $7, $8 and $10; . Harmonicae at 25c, 50c and $100 Coluntbia Gram.o-phones. Music Koller, 50e, 75e, $1, $1.75, os TOTH DOLLAR WILL DO ITS DETY, 'WOES STOPPING FOR CITRISTITAS AT Music • • C HOARE Emporium Shoe Parlor BUSINESS IMPROVINOL, Our Millinery is so superb and so cheap that thas is an itteitense demand. If you have not seen it, Do .not delay, .1roo4WatIt A nide bat as well as thet other lady. This IsIthe place, .We can give you good value in Dress GOOdlt, Wrapperettea, Flannelettes, Lining, Underwear, Hosiery, Itandkerchie Prints, etc. Our stock of Boom and Shoes and Rubbers is very large and good • value. We httV0 a goad variety Of Hardware, See our Robe, Ruge, HMSO Blankets. Whips, Snaps; Harness Blacking, Soap and. 011. We have Coal 00 Linseed 011, Separator 011, (only 10e it pint) machine oil, etc. Produce taken la clonal:Igo °rtes.,* paid for itfif desired. Oct, dth, 1008 R.111)11MSc Lo.ndesbore • . ., • ail Suttscribe for the New 1