HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1910-11-03, Page 5r 10 tigalir int• ; e
Bi 'ttha Marriagesdt Deaths
�I BORN
i tiller.- Clinton on NOV. 10t,
to Mr. and Mrs. -Robert Miller,�a
eon,
Every 1•a•
Should :.Own a
Business Demands, It
The importance of ,-
time demands it from the
time he gets up .in the
morning until he goes to
bed at night -so long for
this job, so long for the
other ; so long for meals ,
Iso long for recreation; so
long for sleep.
1
MARRIED
rMacCalla--Wifieman.-- &t the
bome of !Rev.brides
. Stewart, .Dr. E. L.
arents, on Oct.
31s`t, y
D. MacCallutn, formerly of Lon-
deebo;co, to Mise Jessie Allen,.
daughter, of Mr• and 'Mrs. J. Witte -
roan, 'Clinton,. .
'' Cogere-'Dobbs.---Ott October 27th
at the residence o fthe bride's mo-
ther, West Nissouri, by Rev. David
ihieRogers, father of th egrpom,,.is-
ted byy iReV. J. Mahan, Sop
D. lgobbs, ito Wm. :'I A. Rogers,P. Se.,
'Toronto.
•
You ought to see our
display of Watches and
you ought to buy here.
We can save you money.
,AT WONDERLAND.
sPercy'BroWn. who was a former
citizen here will be the attraction
at Wonderland, Thursday, Friday
and Sa'turd'ay of this week. 'Mr.
BroWe. has been a member of the
Ringling Circus Band for the past
1 five years. Full houses Will ne
cloeb't 'greet hint:
1 ELY 'H STANDARD SOLD.
'Tuesday of this week Mr. J. V.
Elliott, formerly of the • Theesalon,
' Advocate took possession off ' the
' Blyth Standard formerly run by
• Mr. J. Leslie Kerr of the New Era
IWe wish the new Editor success.
MR. 1VIANNING PRESIDENT.
t • W, N. Manning, of the 'Sherlock-
(Manning Organ Company, was
elected honorary president of the
Canadian Piano . and Organ
Manufacturers' Association at the
annual Meeting held in the Nation -
41 Club.„at 'Toronto, last week. The
association discussed the recipro-
city question and passed a strong
resolution condemning a. lower ta-
riff on musical instruments and
named a committee to wait upon.
the 'Government on the, question.
, Mr, Manning is' too wellknown here
ermarasaamizaromacumusi for us to 'make any further • re-
arlts.
W. H. Helly ar.
Jeweler and Optician,
Clncken9 for Sate
70 Thorobred Barred Rock cockerels
and pullets ill and $1.50 each. Also a
few Thorobred Blue Andalusians cock-
erels and pullets. •
R• HOVEY
THE OLD RELIABLE BUS TifAN-
MINOR LOCALS.
Hear Beugough on Friday even-
ing of this week.
Some of Clintons live merchants
have already contracted for their
Christmas advertising space in the
New Era. How about yours?
Hear :1lengough on Friday even-
ing of•this week.
PASSED AWAY.
My headquarters 'are 'now at the' The late 'George Murray died in
Rattenbury House.• The phone No. London at: his late residence, 439
is 46. Ring gup. if too want
nt a Quebec St., on Oct. 21st, in his 77th
busbaggage
of the town. JOgH COOK. year. The .deceased was born in
Craigianck Village, Dunfriesshire,
Scotland in the year 1834 coming
with his • parents to this country 56
Than :W �,
Single Fare For Round Trip' shire, Scotland„afterwards mov-
ing to 'Hensall where he"conducted
Between all stations in Canada also . general store fora number of
to Detroit and Port Huron, Mich.; Ni- years, When retiring from this he
agars Fails and Buffalo, N.Y. Brood moved with his family to 'Clinton,
living there••about 16 years, then
,moving to .London. He had been a
patient sufferer from asthmafor
a,igood many years and about three
weeks ibefore he died. he ,contract
Bight
Testing
1
saw
Mall Order
$11S1I1P\ .,
Diad love 144. Q'Or that'll'.
Lay me, lay .me.
While the world la raking,
Darn to dream - 'hl+t .baa ,pone
,before i o
Pray ye, PM' ye,.
Lest my heart be breaking,
Glad to bring lies to MY side once
more.
on't Forget
Woinau'sVV4rld
If you have any troub-
le with your eyes -diffi-
cult in seeing distinct or
reading, aching eyes, tir-
ed eyes. If you suffer
from headache, ' if the
child cannot see well at
school or if the child's
eyes soon become tired,.
call' and have them ex-
amined most carefully.
Mrs. ,John Bruce Dodd.
pounder of Fathers' Day.
Our Special Prices for
Friday and Saturday
See, our Men's Special Suits and Overcoats at Sic
P °
See our 12Ten s pure wool Underwear at 75c
Special prices in Shoes and 'Rubbers
We Can Save Vou Money on
Your Fall Purchases.
No Charge iarge
1 OR.
Exanhinanion
We have all appli-
ances for careful ex-
amination.. All work
guaranteed satisfac-
tory. ;
}1. J. Grig
Some papers advertise it.
WE DON'T.
sormalimmunsonewom
We know it would hurt
the -home trade.
We would rather have the
ads. of local merchants.
FETCH THEM IN!
LET US DO YOUR
. PRINTING!
GIVE US A TRIAL
The Cheapest. Place in Town
to Buy Your Shoes ,
v
•
if
Stu
Plumsteel Br s.,
SUM PROFITS MORE BUSINESS
Jeweler and Optician.
Issuer' el Marriage Licenses
ed pneumonia which proved fatal
he Was buried in Woodland Ceme-
tery London. Be leaves to.mourn,
his loss his wife, two sons and
five 'daughters. James L. Ridout,
'S't. London; John R. Brooklyn N.Y.
Miss Jane Ellis, La eloure, N. Da-
kota; Mrs. Thomas Lindsay Sum-
merhill On't. Margaret, Brooklyn,
N. Y..• Mrs. Dr. Lindsay, London
and Georgina of Blyth Ont. Also
'twenty Grandchildren and one
brother, Thomas, of. Kinloss Town -
;ship.
yearsago: and settling on a farm 1 -lints
._ in Kinless'Township near Lucknow. -
,where he was married int he year Write ,on
-'�,,,-�,hy. 18SBtz� Eii�abetirLtle-efeikiFl; , .
to Correspondents'
1p F
one side of the paper'
.going Oct. 28th, 29th, '31st. Return
limit Nov. 2od, 1910._ -
Hunters Excursion
• Single Fare for Round Trip
Daily until Nov: I2th, to all points
20th to. Nov. 12th
Oct. I
in lemagami.
to Muskoka and Nipissing Districts,
etc. Return limit Dec. lath, except•to
points reached by steamers, Noy.•15th i.
Secure tickets and full information i
from
A 0 Pattison,. Depot agent•
JOHN ItANSFORD, Town Agent.
Live Poultry Wanted
The fnliowing prices are heing paid
at the Holmesville Poultry Yards: --7=
Hens, 8 cts. a lb. live
Chickens, 9 cts. to 11 cts. a Ib. live
Turkeys, I3c a lb. live -
Ducks, I3c a lb. dressed
Geese, Ilc a -lb. dressed
All poultry to he delivered with
on Monday, crops empty , Tuesday and y
Wednesday mornings.
Buying all the year round. '
N. W. TREWARTHA. -
Phone 4 on 142.
Toronto Markets - -
..90 to .90.
85 to :85'
.89 to .40
.59 to .60
.75 to .76
.70 to .75
54 to .55
$0
22
$17 to .20
27c to 28e
23e to 24c
.60 to .65
$5.30•to 56,25
$4.50 to $5.20
`t7 40 to 7.65
$ 5.10 : •
58.30
$4.50 60
8275tto $300
Fall Wheat
Goose Wheat
Oats
Barley
Peas
Rye
Buckwheat
Bran,
Hay
Eggs
Butter
Potatoes
Cattle, butchers
Cattle, Exporters
Hogs
Sheep
Lambs
Feeders
Horses, drafters
Mail in time to reach us Tues
day of each week, or sooner.
Avoid all items reflecting on per-
solial character, but send ALL the
NEWS.
Check of this list, it .mayassist;
you to reinember an •important
item:
For Sate.
A. g ood coal C:iokstove, a small heat-
er a,bediooai-suit, and other pieces of
furniture, also chicken house enquire
of MRS KAUF MAN. 1
Deaths, Marriages, '
Accidents, ChurchNews,
Suppers or Presentations,.
Removals, Visitors,
Lodge News, Fires, -
Public Improvements,.
Law Cases; The Crops,
School Matters. '
C. C, JAMES: ON TENNYSON.
Ontariia'S Deputy Minister of Agricul-
r
lure Is an Author.
Mr. C. C: James,-. the Deputy Min,
ister of Agriculture for Ontario, who
is credited with - having added 'Mil-
lions to' the rearicultural wealth of
this province by • wheedling farmers
into the gradual adoption of progres-
sive ane!- enlightened •nl<'asures
agriculture; is also well-known as a
bibliophi]e ..: He tuts perhnns. the fin-,
est collection of Canadian volumes
of verso. extant and his eollectirin of
Tonnysonian,i, is • also most complete.
• Mr. J Rues has lately added to the
volume of literature relating... to
• bC
great Laureate a little publication
his own in paitlphlet•'form. contain-
ing two papers, "A Tennyson
grirnane;" • and "Tennyson,- the • lm-
perialist. The first named paps
was • the result of a 'little 7' euriiey ,of
homage to' the poet's English baa the
tt $v j i inti w sem. a.. t°:s i
+, MRH. JOn i DUMB DODD, -
'""No longer Will ".mother's day" have
todo double dutg in honor of mothers
and fathers in Spokane, for Mrs, Join
Dodd f Washington state set
CORNER IN SEWING ROOM w she has nor lug er or glister
, "t on" t any time.
E
The idea of a large screen may ap- i
How a < Practical Woman. Utitizad' • pear to disadvantage as an expensive ,
Small Space Successfully. l article, but there Is a way in which its 1
It is always practical to bare a Coe- cost can be minimized. Prebably one;
nes specially reserved for sewing. In has an old clotheshorse •,which has.,
>Yiost houses the sewing room is Iden• seen so much service that it is no -
tlfied with the bedroom, or even the longer 'useful for its ortt root work,
Pince I)od o living room,: and what would ordina- A roan, or .even a boy. can often -
apart a certain Seedily (last June 19) rily be the distinctive appointments Of
reader it firm with some. binding,
cto celebrate father's day. On this a sewing room are kept under covet• which can be bought for a few cents
;Sunday a rose Was worn, by all: per- a behind' a screen. Inn room, or at any furniture repairer's. i
ns in e tn athy with the movement, • even part of a room, specially allot Cover the horse with some turkey ;
Bo y P
and in the churches there were appro. pilot-
ed to therm such things would give red or a cheap cretonne that will tone
Iiriate sermons, such as "The Influence • an appearance of coziness and prat- 1 with the room and fit the inside with
of Father," in which, one pastor ex- tical comfort, s a uuutber of poeieets, large sues for
slued that the influence of the father A. sewing• machine, a wire dyes patterns and smaller ones for; reels of
tier. a workbasket, a darning bag h wool,scis:;ora, thimbles, tape,
Should be.as great as the mot ! model,cattcl,
Fathers' day is likely to be observed ! and other things which would give a buttons, etc.:
Of the Union next year, eharactertstic air to a Separate little Once tried, rut's a screen will be''
in all the.states o
and as the matter now stands the sew n -g room only serve to give a ` proved to be at it; valuable article; and -
third 'Sunday iu :lune has been'seleeted bedroom oc' othoi ,roam where they aro its cost can be sect iced to a srnall item.
as the day of commemoration,. kept an untidy and crowded app screen
- once. •
ear -A can be bought ready made,'
but it will not be so easy to mare the
"Chantecler".'B.ow. ' Some housekeepers try to make their pockets as on one tbat has been made
The
T wi protest against sub; sewing paraphernalia take As little at home.
rhe folio ng
ectitig lilies to the whim of fashion space as possible, but even to 'lite Another useful article is a sewing'
i p eared recently ,in a New York city • most methodi'eal this is no easy task. aprnn.
dap
daily: An assorted tiiindle 'of clothes; stock -of coarse, every tvomt<n a sew• •
"'Yesterday 1 had occasion tR, visit Ings, flannels anti other things that are ing apron eof, some wom but has a se -
, waiting to be mended before being .'put
' mean is slightly different: Of • some
away1
. is always en ey _wit to those' whitewash material make an t*Alinary
memGer�"'"ii'E-'the•mil•y--�Rgo.-ar "ttt"'rixat�-e-•it
that Mr. James .IYutde in 11109, ne of the department stores and saw
...: of Tennyson's birth, The€10
a er • ea a th a ph'asi -of ° lsyS for sale
theond P paper not generally fami-•
" the•. poets career
liar. `• Tennyson, Mr. James points
out, was one of ',he earliest Imperial--
. ists of the type with .which.„ we tare
familiar to -day. Not the least in-
teresting part of the little brochure
are: the extracts .from' Lady' Tenny-
son's diary showing that' as early a.
870 the laureate was an advocate o
1
colonial. conferences in England and .
declared "How strange England can-
not see her • true policy lies in a,
closer union with the colonies." His
indignation over an. editorial in T
London Times, published in 1872, .sug-
gesting the probability of the se.para
tion of Canada'from Great Britain,.
as a . not . undesirable contingency,
was' intense. . He . stopped the p
reas
to include a :reference' to. it in the..
in
I{
1s of the Ring,".,
dedication. of Idy •
Vwhich was ic-
toria. The allusionrrant Quash Vic '
`And 'that true North, whereof we
lately heard
A strain to' shame us -`keep you to
yourselves, : -
So loyal is too costly ! : friends, your
:blut ''break .the bonds
Is but a burden► �; .
and -go!' (rt.= Here.the
Is• this the tone of E>ofi
faith• •-'
That made ue rulers?. This indeed
her voicewhom- the'roar, o1
And' meaning,,
•Hougomotit..
•
Left mightiest of all.nations 'under
Heaven?
What shock has fooled her sine that
she should. speak
So feebly? Wealthier -wealthier-
hour by hour! •
The voice of Britain, or a sulking
land,
Some' third rate isle half lost among'
the seas?
There rang her voice; when the' f J •'
city peal'd
Thee and Thy Prince; The loyal' to
their crown
Are loyal to their own far sons, who .
Our Ocean Empire with her bound: -
love
• less homes."
•
CENTRAL
Clinton Market Report
80 to 0 80
o 30 to 0 30
040 to 045
070 to 075
025 to 026.
020 to 021
$7.75
0 85 to 0 40
Wheit, (new)
Oats,
Barley
Peas
Egs
Butter
Hogs
Potatoes
Canadian Verse
THE MEN. OF THE NORTH.
By William Talbot. Allison. •
EWilliam. Talbot Allison was born
4 He
is a
'le
Ont., 187.
it
at U
n
ioi�V , OI
graduate .of • Victoria • University, and
has written occasional verse for the
magazines. He lives in Toronto.)
vSTRATFORD. ONT..
From out the cold''llouee. of the north
Thor's • stalwart children hurtled,
forth. '
Forsook their sullen seas;
Southward the 'Gothic wagons rolled,
While bards foretold a realm of gold;
And . fame, and boundless ease.
Loud rang the shields •with sounding
blows'.
The furious din of war arose
Adown the dreary land;
But Woden held them in his ken,
And •safely. passed the Teuton. men
By every hostile. band.
'This
eecl eetpraaial training ho oWestern On
It is the largest as• well as the best. Our
coacr5es are practical. our. teachers experi-
enced instructors, our graduates. succeed,
Throe departments.' 0 0 51 511111' C T A L.
SHORTHAND and un%EGRA-,
P H Y. We•llave scores of. anPliaations W0
oarering Minn?al,cl
$60 per mon un
our free. catalogue .and commence your
course at once. •• ,
•D. A. McLachlin
PRINCIPAL
canna. Inca. Galls
th ere
remwantng aed: Get
.At length, • one day,,the host was
thrilled
At that .glad cry the foremost 'shrill-
ed, -
"The seal A southern seal"
As breathless stood the northmen:
there,
The wind swept through their yellow
hair,
And sang of empery.
Rome's doom was written . in tlieii
eyes,
Fell tumult tinder sunny skies,
Death on the G -olden Horn:
Now, by` the rood. what southern
slaves,
Or lazed that any south sea laves,
Can face the northern born?
-p 'something new
'ladies' • neck -wear' -2-Er 'O auteci
how, the name evidently suggested by
Rostand's animal play.' A technical
description of this -silken; fluted crea-
tion is' quite beyond': my knowledge
'of; such matters, but what 1 did ..nn-
derstaud was the little, brown bird's
bead- which stood out from the center.
of .the bow. • l could hardly. believe my,
eyes, and l looked again to Make
sure
the,
that it was nothing less''.
bead of 'that world famous songster
t uro an' skylark:
its
lie
'Sail to thee., btythe .spirit •
(Btrtl thou never wert) •
• : That rrotn heaven or:uear it .
l'ourest thY full heart. ,•
"Sheltey •s ..lines ' . ran . mockingly
through. my head as 1 looked' at. that ••
pathetic tiny bunch of brown feathers.
with • Its staring glass eyes -and shriv-
eled bill, all that Was left of the most.
jay giving bird that•ever sprinkled the
air with its song. .
"And theprihe of it, bow rind• ail,. was
'50. cents -4n another •store it was 40-
aijd for a tithe. then, of this paltry ry
sum. there had been • destroyed sucould
beauty. such poetry, such joy,
as not be'replaced by •a syndicate of bil-
lionaires.' sp :ed so in the world per -
1 .
haps has Inspired
k She
herd' sang: •
'EttriC D
"Bird of tthe wilderness. •
Blytheaorne and cumberiess,
$weal be thymatin o'er moorland and tea.
"And here we find the mirmmled
head of the modest little bird
for
rx rde
on a piece of cheap ribbn tales. Couldli
and babel et departmentfurther? And
degradation -be carried each
there were scores of such bows,
bearing. the head. of -a fttrylarit.
:‘,‘Appeals to. se'ntt't are good
When there is any eentiment to appeal
to, but, tlitnk of'teytng to• appy
l to
the sentiment o.f a Woman who will
Wear a `Chantecler' bowl She wouldn't
understand your language.' . If we are'
to preserve our birds . we must have
more good..farreachtng isms and see
Oaf' they are enforced. The Audubon
tiocleties know what laws are needed
.land know how to drays them' up and,
present them. Triose societies are
Working for us. Let us. stand behind
theta and baric 'them up."
OF GENERAL FARM ;INTEREST.
A neat farm ho e s of value to the
children because it will instill in them
an admiration for the farm. • .
1f you expect the hired man's• con-
fidence you must put confidence in
him. You. will find' that it pays to
tail: matters over with him. -
The best bank is the sots, In It one
may deposit his energy and his seed.,
and be sure to have both returned with
more than compound interest.
'For the first time in its history of
forty-eight. years the Kansas State
Agricultural college has created a de-
partment of instruction which will be
devoted entirely to farm . mechanics.
Ever figure out what 'percentage' of
profit you are receiving 'from the.
money and labor invested in the farm?
The business man of the city' knows
this about his business, and the busi-
ness man on the (arra should do so,
5
n � -mueb-longezethan.. • -
sent for the greater part of the day, . Your dress, and, if possible; with the
•
and should the housewife decide •, it , el•nedge at the bottom.
provide for herself some space, be . Turn up the hent about halfway in
the' -front; stitch it firmly at each'side,
and by. sitchtng this pocket down in,
too or three plates a. useful apron
will be the remit. In the several pock-
ets- small pieces o C work can be kept
ever so small, *here these articles can
be kept, ,the idea .is , sure to . be fa-
vorably accepted by. every one.
.Sometimes the machine is wedged
into the remote corner .of. a Cupboard.
but even' when this is the case .it is .
a great nuisance to drag out when it t.woteosnt danger of loss; says Houle
N.
As the 'sewing machine is a. piece of
furniture that suffers .much wear and
tear_ through even ordinary use, :nanny .
women .beileve in peeping a cover tot
it.' This is Most essential wold
with.
machine, . where the wheel work and
much of the rneclzanism• • ;are eposed -
to' the .dust. A cover of print .or tur-
a
.
•� t,
key ..red. should be: ma de to f3v6iah
deep bounce, and .this *111 look_ nice
in 'a room' wherethe macUine. bks b51n•
previously an eyes are. '.
•
• Egg Snow, For Invalids.
Some patients ct ry much dislilto••tak- `
ing: raw eggs, alt tough this .form of
Nourishment is frequently recommend
ed by thein doctor. Prepared la this
way the .egb*, 1s. transformed .into a.
dainty `which is Headilyy taken. ' Sep-.
arato theyolk frcm the white of the
egg and
., .beat the 1 after to a alis froth;
add 'to the 'yolks. iia teaspoonful :of pew
milk; sugar to tar' e.; add a suspicion . .
orange dor lemon :Mice orthe juice o!°
fresh garden fruit, Stir in the white
and pout all into • 1 tumbler,..
is wanted. , •-
It is the easiest thing to .improvise
a sewing room in your own w
nb
bedroom
with the aid of a folding screen, .be-
hind . which, the . sewing machine, a
chair, a small table and the baskets
and begs tbat accumulate • in such.
numbers Can be kept
• A dress stand •may: be added,•' but ; -
this is not necessary unless one. dries
r
The Choicest Woods
are used in the making of our
Furniture, hence its beauty and.
durability. It is artistically de•
signed, too, and beautifully' up-
holstered. The workmanslitp
throughout is
Positively Perfect $ (:etc?ii
WHEN DORA DIED.
. By Amos Henry Chandler.
[Dr, Amos Henry Chandler, son of '
the late Lieutenant -Governor Chand•
ler, was born in Dorohester, N.l3., in
1837. Coniointly with the late Rev.
0. P. Mulvaney he publish Lyrics,
Songs and Sonnets," in 1880.1
Dreary, dreary:
Fundy's mists are sweeping
Up the stricken vales of Westmore-
land:
Weary, x weary.
Is my heart and weeping,
While the cold waves. dash 'poliglia
strand.
Filled, filled
s'the land with sortow,
wailing roars the angry sea:
Stilled, stilled
Will they he to-morrow--
Summet notes, and murmurs to the
lea.
and • will satisfy: the most refined
and artistic tastes. When you
note the quality, also compare
our prices with those &eked else-
where.
The hcnpest Spot tit Haton to buy e11 ki#ds of Ftttniture.
OO
i+'HR1'�ITUR'1� A,NI.1
OOV1+ R % BAL D N� �Rx��
of life our Classified Want Ads,
will help you. '
If you want's positioneyousatt
reach the best employers, •
d if you want, f ielp yea can -stet 'ibe
most efficient.•
Money toleirw-'or;'°,'mone to hots
nee'Want Adeecover the Bunte 5dd
e,,,,ri11rrltfiefaa#/M
In 1
Coldly, coldly
$lettb wrath erlrttimn themistsbTiills
Eva'a dark shadow 'pon
i Boldly, boldly,
f •• Tele a,.,rr»r ri4 nantra.J:�a wr .
sewing for outsidi
er will perhaps., '
the company of s
Venice Fashions.
xtie tees of Venice have formed, a
league to discourage Parts' fashions
and bring back the mediaeval; Italian
styles, They bold that the vision of a
Venetian woman atth'ed In the latest "
Paris creation• and seated in a gondola
in one of the picturesque canals of the.
city is a eight so tidiCalous:as! o o
conte pathetic.- Beaded1ty S
Rasa Genoui. the novelist, these daugh-
ters of Venice have started a crusade
that eternises to bring renaissance
�t
styles. back to Maly. I+ortuttately c
Paris, American women do not cake
for our aboriginal cost:M es.
•
How to Water -Plants When:Away.
Rouse plants can be. kept well wa-
tered during a week's' absence of the
housekeeper, according to aningenious
wellr a
tcb device. t above the levet of the plant to it bowl of be
watered by cleans of a box or pile of
books. Twist several strands of cern-
Mee darning wool together or braid,
theta to form a long wick slid soak
twin in water. if one enol of the wick
reaches to the bOttbm *toe bowl and
the' other hangs over the plant* n.
steady drip wilt ep,atitee l the bowl
is
SAVED FROM.
THE KNIFE
Appendicitis Cured By "Fruit -a -lives"
•
VEWBVRGti, ONT., Peb.• 12th. 1910.
'' Just about a year ago, our•daughter E11a, (fourteen years), was taken with
terrible pains in the right side. The pain was so severe that we had to cony her
to bed. We at once put her under the care of a first-class doctor, who pronounce
it a case of Appendicitis and advised an operation.
We took her to a hospital in gingston where
d eshe was
must be apes examined
by al
an
eminent specialist. Ile said she had Appe
once if o we,wanted rd save o r d,au hter wass we aafraid mid cried andd takee het to tbegg begged this done, we were ready, but our g pitifully, that we postponed
it for that day. Luckily for
us and for her an uncle came
in with, some 'Bruit-a-tives'
and insisted on eElia taking
ak g
Good them. Go
apparent, almost from the
first dose, and the continuous
treatment cured her. •
'bruit-a-tives', saved our
daughter front the stir eon's
knife i and the best fhealth."
she is
enjoying
J. W. PDX, (Father).
L,IIiLIAN FOX, (Mother).
Words eannot express the
gratitude of Mr. and Mrs,
Pox. And Miss Ella will
always remember "Pritit-a-
tives"--the discovery of an
eminent physician, and the -
onl medicine tit the world
made of fruit. soe. a 136x, fs
for $2.5o, or trial boxy aa5c.
At dealers, or sent,postpaid,
on receipt of price byPruit e.
rives Limited, Ottatwa.