The Clinton News-Record, 1909-11-04, Page 31 aid Its Dangers.
t
always be avoided if possible, and no
matter if built under eircuaisteacei
most favorable, will remain liable to
all the objections to whicb cefespo011i
sire admittedly subjeet."
is Portion td a MeV at the Same time the granular el usti- Rideal, the Well-kleown Englisit
)34 ,L, Ajei a e I , C. .,. intio* of pee vein was safheireetly Cue Authority on Sanitation, nee pretty
11, OulfOre tbe .keseriean to Prevent 4-113,e finest *articles oll well described the resting of barber-
jeeeactors of Phwaleing and flour reaching it. A reactionary storm period is in need not Serprise any reader of thelie
lag a eesspeol. He says, •3/4dul it is pregreaa eal we enter this month. On forecasts iu north and northwest be-
le:we, entitlett "TW It should, then, he quite clear to reeeeuable to believe, that "the soilethe Jt and 2nd falling haronierer will fore the windup of this stortn
its Dangers." I
• the reader that the pessage of ',hater :about cesaPooln heeoraca Water-logged pass eastwardly over the country, ht- period. These storms will be follow -
heat YeV I received a letter through underground vein i is no ass-, with black foetid matter which under- i
tended by cloudiness anesulting ied closely by A rushing high baremet
fro peoneeneat clubman. of the arance of its purity, and neither is Pea little hr no oxidation." I. here 1 rain in. many localities. $tiff, north- er out of the northwest, eauving high,
d rn -
Nortneeeste who wrote : "Our vIss.?? dearness any proof of purity—for, ' wiSh to add that Without oxidatiOn i westerly wieds and sharp changes to gales and unseasonable -cold to push
pools (three latteet, built locally) Says illaSoli : "It is a fatal error jet the seepage of cesspools, 00444 colder will come in promptly on the rapidly far into the east and south.
woe't ,hoeas,' *ad Italie beea useless to funcY that because a water has a:nothing ot the lignids of the ceptie 'heels of these disturbances. Many heavy mean, storms will be en -
and leeposallele for therut four 'bright, sparkling, clear apnearance htask, Parldeatien Of sewage id not A regular storm period covers the countered both on the Atlantic and
years," to whick we made the reply 'and a Pleasant taste, that therefore accomplished. 4th to the 9th, beingcentral on the Neill°, during this and other Nop-
that the .greateet treuble neople find Snell Water is wholesome. Carbonic I Dr. DashOre, tOrnaer insleeetor tor 6th. This Periodis near the centre ember periods. If your farm and ore
- with osespoeds, in our experienee, is acid gas is what causes brilliancy and. the Pennsylvania State 130ard of of the Venus period and eromides to chard and garden products are not
that they do "cm." A cesspool, dee 'refreshing taste of a ground. water. 'Health, rn his little work on the bring very active storm coaditionssafely housed before these MideNove
received fro the word "Cease," is a :When it is norm in mind that carbon-' "Danitation of a Country I -louse," If the barometer fells to low read- ember, Venus stories, you will suffer
. e ,
"?ease" pool—that is it is a quitter; le acid gas is one of the products of says of the oess.P001 : '-htt in A relic ot,ings from about the 6th to the 9th, great discomfort and heavy lose. The
It ee,asee and won't do anythiagIt decompositiontheeinferenoe Ph
!Medieval shiftlessness and carelessness I look for energetic storms of rain and Sailors who dare to brave the open
may, and does, put forth a strangled'to its: posstblehsouree is not a, uleasanti for Which ne eseuset can be offered." wind, with dangerous gales over the lakes will 40 so at peril ot their ships
etfOrt, but nature's forees become so one." Neither is turbid water to be I Prof. lhferriman, in his "Elements law regions, These disturbances will and lives.
fiteltifiget in these ill -designed, erektrite aditidged as dangerous InerelY because ,ot Sanitary Engineering'," says : 17ha---- ' be attended by electrical storms to A reactionary storm period is cen-
. .
ancea that the active natural agents It is MIA& While visiting, a few privy or cesspool is walled up with
*Woo Ws %word
1
Is the Weather Prophet's Pro
phecg Right for November?
Of Plerifieatme are, COmPletely smoth-
ered and die, and thereby the ceasing
and eonsequent danger.
YOU ImaY as well exPeet• the average
cesspool to be successfel in disposing
tne a wie in the north- tral on the 23rd, 24th and 35th. This
years ago, the city of Dellanee, Ohio, stone so that the liquid materia, may went sleet aitdsnow will be quite period embraces the Moon's passage
which then derived its water supply leak through them into the aurround-, probable. AR outdoor work that can across the equator on the e3rd and
from the Atiglaizo river, and on drawhiing soil. The result of this is a gradee reasonably be put in order, and all Moon's perigree - on the 25th. Full
ing a glees of water from a faucet in, ually increasing pollution of the soil,IPerishable goods that can be securely Moon, or Moon's oPPosition with
the hotel, 1 was obliged, to wait until 'and often a neighboring spring or well
•of your sewage as te eypeet a ore to the heavier• suspended particles mild becomes contaminated so as tO cause V t
burn iet the nottont of a hale in the
grOund with the top of the .hole cov-
ered,
Tbe Saturday Evening -Post recentty
gave the Merchants' Aseociation iCom-
mittee On Pollution of the State Wat-
ers of New 'York permisSion, to re -
Print some articles for general diStri-
bation regarding the cause and spread
• :of typheicl fever, and contaieed ui
thein ntay be found the following:
"Great eities 'are aeveloping some
sort of. a sanitary conscience.' Farm:.
Ors and country districts have awyet
little or none; Iliad as our titer; water
often is, and - defective as, our systems
e . these Earth and ..Sun, is only a day or two
settle • to the bottom of the , n November, wi be later on the 27th. 'Little considerate
glass be- He then cites an instance great gam, saying -nothing of the tion as has been given to the part the
fore it was sufficiently wholesome to 'where a spring had been previously
,, convenience and comfort of, the peo- Moon plays in our weather, as well
driuk. The water was roilly and me condemned by the board of. health, pip. as other terrestrial' phenomena, pat -
sightly as well as unwholesome, but; but .in spite of the warning the pe0-1 A reaetipnary storm peried is zene lent mid long Observation vial con -
was not regarded- as unsafe at that Pie of the neighbOritood continued to tral on the 12th, 1.3th and 14th, The Vince any .unbiased person that the
season of • the year while the huglaize drink its water, with the result that conjunction of the moon, with the satellite cannot be ignored, or ' that
river was nearly overflowing hen l•tWelve cases OE tYPhold fever .occurr- earth on the 12th naturally indicates- some of the xaost terrific perturba-
banke in consequence of the prevailing I ed,
rains. ol repu nant stu idit can se 1
and two deaths, `Suck an example' that high temperature, for the seasons eions of our Earth' and air Are cloaelly
•
1 recentiy asked a wealthy plentiful-
turer how be disposed ot the sewage
paralleled. Truly we may say storms are probable on and following Conditions of the Moon. B,estless and
. • ge e y mue coo e threatening weather -will niark thin
Y with low barometer and general related to'the periodic phases and
"What fools we mortals be." Thous- th t d • •C
of his summer hoine at one of the lake ands of such cases are recorded in er, with high barometer and, high period. Fitful pets of rain cold
es ' in ' Northern Michigan. "Oh," soese medical journals that never reach the northwesterly gales will bring up the winds and occasional sleet and snow
he, "I_ dig, a cesspool down to the notice of the great groping public... the west and northwest flanks of squalls will be general results,
e Dr. Frank E. Adams of Penna, Ohio, storms, say about the Ihtli:to` the A regular storm period runs from
gravel., encl.-then the stuff runs away.
"Where is your well ?" said .I. has the following to say in the "Ohio 3.5th,
.. the 27th into Member, being . cen-
ot sewage, they cannot for a eminent Abont one hundred" feet away," :was Sanitary Bulletin," : In our own - A regular storm . period is central tral on the 29th. This period enters
compare in deadliness With that most the answer, and then he proceeded to city we have found traces at discolor- on the lath. From Tuesday,the 16th with the full Moon on the 27th. Fall-
unheaweily, , pair el twins; the . shellaw explain tchnie, in -an assuring way,ation, when excavating fore cellars, to Sunday the 21st, is a thee of vast ing barometer and brisk etuninal
well and the vatilt privy. A More in- , that the bowel discharges and siek that were traced to old cesspools °nee stone probablities, especially on the storms of ram and wind, - turning to
genious combination for the .dissemine water that wenhundred feet away, and eo tolling through his cease g oceans and great lakes. This is a sleet and snow,. veill be passing easte
.ation of' typhoid than this precious Peel, Would he entirely puhihed by how far beyond the excavation the period in which Boreal will make a ward during the last 'three days of
couple Valid hardly have been devised. liaising •through the strata ofdiscoloration extended
fine when excavating for a sewer the stubborn aght for nomination in most, November. The 27th le, the center of
.
The. finocenCheuseholder Belittle forth gravel before eeaching 'the well. Now I ' The city. engineer -tells me that
,
parts of the northern - hemisphere. a. prohiable seismic period, extending
and at an appropriate dietance from this man I know to he a gentleman oi y Early blizzards ' of snow and sleet frorm about the 25th to the 29th.
his cot he digs two holes, one about sPlendid intelligence, the mayor of a passed through a discoloration in the
.thirty feet deep, the other. about four. city, and a leading light in his com
, Into the shallowereone he throws his Munity,, but. M spite of. his :intern
excreta while wore -the surface ,of the gence, he was totally ignerant
ground he (liege .abroad blee household what the essential processes are tha
waste" 'OA the' ' haek stoop. *;The gen- Produce ',sewage.' PUrifieatcdn. He .evi
:tieram from heaven waelieS • these dently .had in mind that the sefestrata
various prodecre.„ down into the eoll • of gravel *Mild Alter the ceeseoo
and percolates :.?"-gradually into the eeepage to 'entity. He did not know
deeper hole.. When the Intereating soil-. that puriaeatiOn of euch foul liquid is
eition has accumulated to a sufficient impossible without freshair and the
, depth, it is drawn up by the old oak- action of aerobes • And hero Hee the
en bucket or • modern pump,. and druelc. danger: that the .common .neople, and
Is it • any wonder that in -this pro- 'even the .most intelligent neople, are
gressive .and highly civilized, country . led astray sometimes through . errpn
three hundred and fifty thousand !meet eous information imparted by preten
-of typhoid . occur every year with a ders that know nothing, of the princi
death penalty of 10 per cent. ?" .pies of decay, but try to make folks
Let me cite you an instance to Muse believe they do,. . •
trate the possibilities of water. pollue The opportunity for the' contamina-
tion through underground heiris ' or tion of well water, particularly in
crevices and . its lamentable resultstowns • and villages or in the suburbs
The case is an one to saeitarians, of towns and cities where sewage is
but .new, ncedoubt, to some. A' smell absent, is often very great. It is . no
'village in Switzerland near. Basle, is mkt:minion. practice for the owner ot
etipplied with water from ae. ' spring a •small lot to construct hisi well lend
situated at the foot of a moinitainou4 -a cesspool within a few feet of each
eidge. An epidemic of typhoid broke other.. The contents Of this filth hole
out, which struck down over 17 per soak away and. , with the
cent. of the panic-stricken inhabitants ground waters, • only to reach, the
of the village. The fever Was pr;tittf ; for even the most ordinary can
-well situated through the fillage, 'bet see that as . water is drawn from a
a group of six families .. had entirely well, the goil is replenished by just
escaped the scourge. Suspiciong were so mud' of the. gelled, water sur -
aroused regardingthe purity of the rounding it, and if this groiind water -
waters
of this epring, and an investi- is polluted, health and life of your
cation was made. - family or 'neighbors are jeopagdised.
On the other side' of the ridge • be: The question' that might arise as to
fore alluded to wee a little . -valley; the eadviselillity of.' using a cesspool
which when irrigated; alWays increase- where city water, 'mains were aeta.il-
ed the flow of the spring on the other able, but we answer 'that if we live
side of the mountain. It was hound . up to the standard of righteousness
that .a peasant, living in the 'valley,' and. of Model :citizenship, • • :then it
had •returned from a distant city, idch he :ea example of the geese*
with -a fever and that the water in' 'a selfishitese on. one's Part not to have
little brook: in which his clothes had an • interest 'in ewelfare and health
'been wasbed and into which the slops of one's neighbors who might yet. be
:of the house had. bee e cot had. been tieing - wells, for through such selfish
-used to irrigate the .• meadows: Of .indifferettee to the health and welfare
course, the. :Polluted water filtered, of the .neighborhood we Might be
through the surface of the soil „and rightly' regarded e as. undesiraole
cittz-
jorned 'the underground water to to ge ees. . •
' no one knew where.. ? Mason also says that '"It. is hope -
In order to determine if „it coact' be less to depend upen the Purifying
possible this spring was fed . by the fluence of the intervening soil to pre -
underground -watees; of the :valley over teet the Wells from privy' and cesse
a mile away, experinients Were made . pool fouling, because pod filtration
A large quantity of salt was ihrewe M order to be effective,hmust: be inter-.
into a hole in -the valley. to • a water- mittent. With , a constant flow „pi
bearing vein of sand and gravel. In pollution on or thretigh zoils;•the
a few hours the waters of the spring purifying peeved Of the soil quickly
became very ealty, • • cease to act. Intermittent flow as ate,
They now mixed two and cite -half soldtely essential to admit ale „to
tons of flour with water arta' poured the aerobic .bacteria where present, if
this mixture into the hole, but after purification -is it? be effected:
much waiting and close exarai.nation . Bailey -Denton, in one of his
not e trace of the flonr could he found-cOterse of lectures delivered to " the
carried salt in solutten to the spring, students of the Royal Wgriculturel
in the Waters in the spring. College, England, said of :the Cess-
Thi's proved 'conclusively that, pool as a Means Of'sewage disposal :
through the, water7,-bearing ". Nein "It is a system. of disposal which' I
through whiclethis water had to nisi') do not recommend, and which. should
.. soil that extended forty deet in width
_ I the odor arising from it almost com-
pelling the laborers to eease wedeln . - - - - • -
e ,Fle said they were about nine feet
I ' "TO BA C CO IN CANADA cheering • and. cut smoking tobaccos.
prusespwuy 711 tne- mantreeezure of
'deep and had passea throu h on foot
• •
•
- g °
of this stuff ; how much deeper it ex-•
II tended he clid not know, as 'they were %VESTE RN ONTAR 10 LEADS IN
i,then at the sewer bottom, nor the ,
length of it, but that there was ' no PROFITABLE INDUSTRY.
ecesspool nearer than 'forty feet."
I Mr, Thomas N.' .Ainge sanitary en-
gineer .for the Michigan State Board
of Health, and a member of this soc.
,,iety, in his recent work on the "San-
_ itery Sewage of Buildings,'! says
_ that smaller cities and villages re-;
sorting to Cesspeols endanger the
'water in private Wells and create arl
'unwholesome condi tioa cif the sub-
.
soil in the immediate -vicinity, and
that ,atteh. a, practice is inexausable,
yet often permitted for years. That
boards of health, even to the present
• day, have 'a misunderstanding of the
relative inefficiency end dangers crea-
ted. by the.. uee leaching cesspools.
, While ,M Madison, S. Dakota, last
summer, a remarkable instance of
the dangerous availjbility • of a cease
pool as a deathtrap was related to
me. The filth • hie° in.question was
some four or ihee feet in diameter, and
about tea or fifteen feet deep, reach-
ing a gravel bed, which was eapposed.
• to absorb the fifth, but did not, and
ithis death trap was full of u.nfermente
ed human --excrement and Other foul
matters, covered with. boards and:
earth. As a child • of.the proprietor
was passing above 'and upon the top
of it, the top gave way and the child
sank into the filth up to her arms.'
Screaming and sinking she, was only
rescued in time to save her life, and'.
just when her head and chin *ere
reaching the surface of the core*. '
tion. We leave you the mental 'Met-
.
ure to contemplate.
1.
AN ENGLISH AUTHOR WROTE.
"No shade, no shine,no fruit, no
floWers, leaves-hdovendteer." Many;
Americans would add no freedom
from catarrh, which is so aggravated
during this month that it becomes
constantly, troublesome. There ie ab-
undane proof that catarrh is a con-
stitutional disease: it is related to
scrofula and consumption, being one
of the wasting diseases. Hood's Sar-
saparilla has shown that what is gape
able of- eradicating scrofula, complete
e1y cures catarrh; and takenin t'
prevents consumption. We eantiot see
hoW any sufferer can put Off taking
this medicine in view of the. widely
published record of its radical and
permanent cures: It is undoubtedly
America's Oreateet Medicine for Asn-
erica's Greatest Disease—Catarrh
OWSMIMint.
•
•
Successful •Rasing •of a Binder Leaf
For Cigars Has Given Impetus to
. What Promises to Be. One of the
Dorninion's Best Products --O'Brien
Plantation Established About Fif-
teen 'Years Ago.
A new impetus to the development
of the tobacco-geowing industry le
Canada is lent by the success now be-
ing atteined in the pehduetion of
superior grades of binder -leaf tobac-
eos used in the manufacture Of cigars
'and high-grade out smoking varieties.,
hhcperim.ents along the line of the
cultivation of these grades have been
carried on for some years,. and with
such. • rnarked. success' that there no
,longer remains any doubt as to the
immense possibilities in the develop:-
ment of - this line of agrieultute, if it
may be so termed.
Although tobacco leaf has been stic-
cessfully 'grown in various parts of
Canada for some years, farmers in the
Counties of Kent and aSex, in On-
tario, may be said to have advanced
11.e :industry te a higher plane of per-
fection than elsewhere in the Derain -
'ion, so much so that the value of the
production, in these countiesalthough
even yet only izi its infancy, outrivals
that of any ether branch. of agricul-
ture.. The possibilities are so great
and its suodessful production now so
well established in these counties and
elsewhere in the '. Dominion that it
may be well assumed, that in other
districts within the country. where its
cultivation has net yet been attempt-
ed it may be successfulgrown, and
thus another branch of agriculture de-
veloped, confirming the proud distine-
tion which Canada holds of beingthe
peer of all nations in the variety and
quality. of her farm products.
! A newspaperman a few • days ago
'visited the plantation bf O'Brien
Bros.. in the Township of Harwich, in
the 0ountY of Kent, where a large
force were at work harvesting .the
year's 'record-breaking crop. The
plantation may be said to be one -of
the ois
and largest in the district
and s indeed claimed to be the larg-
est on the continent. Throughthe
eourtesy of ;Mr. hefty O'Brien he was,
enabled to gather Much information:
oonoerning the cultdre, care. harvest,
ing and curing. the leaf and of its im-
pedance as at agricultural product
OC gieee districts.
Questioned, Mr. O'Brien said that
he commenced the growing of tobae-
eos here some fifteenyears ago. The
varieties grown consisted principallr
of those known ;as the Burley. Zinn
nah.r, ARO Prior. and Twist Budused
The product of these now amount to
many millions of pounds annually
and the value per acre of the precluet
is nneeh greater than that of any oth-
er line of agriculture.
Mr. O'Briens success in growing
these heavy grades led him to the be-
lief that the highest grades of Con-
necticut Havana. seed binders might.
.groade and some years ago he be-
gan experimenting • along these lines.
His expectations have been more than
justified by the magnificent crop just
harvested, and confirmed by. three
years' successive crepe of this variety,
each rivaling its predecessor in qual-
ity and quantity. • •
This year's product ' will average
over' 1,500 pounds to the acre of ma-
tured „and cured tobacco, land of mag-
nincent quality. .
. Asked ea to the theory that the
growth of tobacco caused a deteriora-
tion in the quality of the soil, Mr.
O'Brien stated that his experience
did not justify such a claim, as the
crop he was now harvesting was the
sixth 'successive one off of the same
land, and each year showed an im-
provement in quality and yield. Mr.
O'Brien's claims are well Justified' by
the pleats we saw beinggathered, the
leaves measuring in size to 15 x 30
inches, or an average of over three
square feet in area. The cultivation
and enrichment of the soli requires
great caro, and in this Mr. O'Brien
stated that he used no artificial, ma-
nure. The grower is well rewarded
for the care he gives to the land:
The harveeting, of a tobacco crop
ire. however, :no child's play, nor is
the husbandman rewarded with re-
turns from his industry as quiekly
as in othef branches of agrieUlthre.
The tobacco, after being , cut in the
field, is left for about a week on the
ground, until' the leaf becomes with-
ered and flexible, an otherwise it
would split and break . if housed
green, each Plant is strung on long
pieces of wood and hung head down,
or "ranked," an it is called, and is
thus lett for a period Offour months,
after which it. is stripped from the
stein, stated as to sizes and oonformity
of colors, and packed .in cases and
thus left till. nature ferments it and
evens the colors, which takes abont
a year and a half, when it is ready for
manufacturing. '
•
Asked as to the comparative yield
of the higher grades of tobacco they
are now growing with the 'heavy
grades previously grown. Mr.
O'Brien said they were quite equal
yield, as they could plant 1,500 more
plants of these to the acre than the
other grades, which- More than coun-
terbalanced the weight of the heavy
grades. When properly cured Mr.
O'Brien said the Ctuentlien grown
binder was superior to the Connecti-
cut, York State or Wisconsin binders
in' every resfeeet, and inburningqual-
ity and holding fire was euperier to
ariy, :
011
Have you on soine part of your body a sore, or eruption,
or ulcer, or eczemous patch which, hidden from the gaze of
others, yet causes you hours and hours of pain and incon-
venience? iliave you tried this, and that, ihnd the other
remedy in vain, and are you feeing disheartened and discouraged? If sd read the following instances at' Zam-
Bak's healing power, and applsr it to your case
"1 had an uleerated log for several years, The ulcers Behead all round tho limb,
which was swollen to nearly twice its normal size. Several doctor e treated MO.
Ono suggested amputation. None did me any good. • Za.ni-13uk healed the sorea
So says eles. Gilmour, of Prineess St. Kingston. Or, real this
" hly mother tried many things ;or abscesses and eruptions, but in vain. In
Le,m.13iik she found a complete cure." So eels Ali8E1 A4 Coggill, of Watson& (Sask.).
Sufferers from these " Ridden Skin Troublee" of any nature should profit by
melt experiences as this. Zam.Buic is teen at its best when applied to cases whieh
have defied ordinary treatment. Write for trial box, and test 15
it at our expense '
Free 8x
Send the coupon
and le stamp to
Zam-link Co.. Tor-
onto, with hams et
this iiiiner,and free
trial box will be
mailed req.
ZA24.10.111 AND A MiltA.CLE
05' HIBA./.4111 G
Over and over again Zam-Buk has per.
formed a miracle of healing when applied to
sores and skin injuries whieh hese refused
to heal under any other forth -of treatment.
Why not let it heal your trouble?
Immeth-
atoly Zam-Buk is applied to a sore or wound
or diseased portion of flesh it eommences its
work in two directions. It anoints the ex.
terior, and its afitiseptio properties prevent
any germs and &wait from creating trouble.
Then the herbal essences and juices so finely
purified and concentrated, penetrate the
subjacent layers and stimulate the weakened
or diseased cells to active, healthy operation.
These cells then put forth their " Building h
products and replace the diseased miler
layer with fresh and healthy tissue. By
dogrekiii the whole discoed isurface is thus
replaced by new healthy skin.
In this way Zenelluk curee cuts burns,
bruises, ulcers, abstessee, itch,eczema,
eruptions, pustules, scurvy, salt rheum,
bloodpoison, and other forms of akin trouble.
ham.Bulc also mires piles varicose ulcers,
etc. All druggists and stores sell at 500 per
bee, or from Zane:110k Co., 'reroute, for
price. II boxes $2.50.
1
1
oney
Salo ,
or Mont,
Commencing Monday, Nov. ist
Continuing Right Through
the Month.
RANGES
REDUCTION FOR CASH FOR
moms OF NpVEMBER
. •
Happy Thought Range square $3.00
d
with reservoir 3.00
with reservoir and high shelf:
916 Pandora and reservoir
'
reservoir and high shelf
918 ,, and reservoir
- reservoir and hie], ihelf
Huron Corona
Kitchen Range and Reservoir
•
..cpA17,4 HEATERs
3.00
2.00
2.00 ,
3.00.
-2.00-
2,00
No, 5 Rndiant Home 2.00
•
, with even 2,00
No. 113 MeClary's Famous •• 3 00
' No: 114 i, : 3.00
and 5 percent. -discount offal]: small Coal Heaters
,
HARDWARE
. Bell faced Steel Hammers reg. 750 for 40c
•. .50e for 38c
5c and 10c
• 30c
75e
25c .
256 •
lbc
Wrenches
Fire Shovels
3 -ft English Rules
'Handled Axes
A fine quality Shaving Brush
Razor Strops, good
Spe.,cial prices ou Razors
Glass Cutters • •
'See the new Self -wringing Mops only 75a
A good Storni Door complete withf.ittings $1,25
GRANITEWARE
Just received a large assortment one-third eft
the regular Price.
$1-.25 Doubledookers for.
1.00 • " , • .
300 Wash Bowls for
• 800 Water Pails for .
30c Tea Steepers for
35c Chambers' for
40c "
50c
• $1.50 Preserving Kettles for
1;25 , "
1.00 "
.75
'..60 "
.30 Dippers. for
84c
66c
20c
530
20c
23c '
27c
211c
$1.00
84c
66e ,
50e
40e
20c
DUSTBANE
Why You Should Use Dustbane
. It saves labor in sweeping.
'It saves one half your dusting.
It saves your carpets and rugs.
It saves yonr health.
It is sanitary as it contains, an anteseptic fluid
which kills germ. The evaporation of this fluid .while
sweeping thoroughly 'disinfects the room. Try it once
and you will continually use it.
A List of Second -Hand Stoves in GoOd Repair
, .
1 Acme,.Coal Heater $10
1 Expert Goal Heater $8
1 Radiant Horne with qven $18
1 Princess Acorn $14
1 Imperial Jewell $15
1 :Vesta Pearl $7
1 McClary Belle $1
. 1 Parlor Cuok for wood. $4
.2 Box Stoves for wood $2 •
1 Honor Bright wood cock $15
Try Wyandotte Cleaner and Cleanser— a full
5 lb, Bag for 25c. The Cheapestand Best
Cleansing Compound In Use.
Hatlandl Bros-..
STOVES AND HARDWARE CLINTON
towneemea