HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1906-01-12, Page 6_...,Tr- i,. Q, 7 i+s, fit.11 _....,�
e'9'
TEM OLWONSEW '" ER,
Ahed
Kb 0 MEW
:.r•j•h'•1. S
`"Ee/ONEY, BISCUIT A CANDY LC
fiteATFn:o CAhfDA
rrom the
Ovens b 'You
hridge distance..
our moi +e-proo
packages, Fal;*
and Va ' ouver are
iloug.hfi - :to. - the - (Piga
dm's. 'anus, Atari •sem
oVl!
,11$ are Int. Oft the; samaY,
„plane with the big cities.
Mooney's Perfecto
Cream Sodas
•
ane Peeked in 1:'1r 3 lbw cit dge
ihadaaeit freele crura, de ge"-
anti Pasch Yen In to waw con -
nit Meurer where you live.
AT Af LL:ellertang
1
MELON' OOfRENDENOE.
'That Between beds Hamilten end HIM -
Held by Adrttirel'e Great.
Nephew, peke of Brent's.
Pew people are aware that there is
J still lu ex L.; an immense chest
crammed full- of the prkvate and conic:
dentist correspondence of Lord 1Telson
and of I.nuna, Lady Hamilton. which.
i 'the biographers of these two person-
ages' 'might Imre given their Dyes to
-obtain. especially in connection with
••` the recant centennial of the battle of
Trafalgar. says the Marquise de Foto
' teney. They ere in the possession of
the' eat • Iran's great -grandnephew, the
Zion. Al+ .:.wader •xvelson •. Hood, private
s<eeretary to the Princess of Males,
nail who has inherited the Italiantitle
of Duke of Drente, as well es the ex-
tensive estates in Sicily bestowed by
MOO Ferdinand of Naples upon king-
land'a greatest naval hero.
• The duke --tor he is known as sue
in Italy; .where he spends the greater
.portion et the
yearL--
so far tuts resist-
ed all attempts on the parts of students
of history arid biographers to obtain
even a• glimpse ,of the contents of all
thisoorrespoedence of the, great ad-
mit* and of Emma, LadY Hamilton, . "
Perhaps some day he may see his WLW
to give it to,.tile, world. He is aan.
, of considerable decision of character, of
varied attainments, of business expert-
:, enge, and especially of pluck, which he
.manifested on one memorable occasion
VISITORS FROM THE NORTH.
haraoteristioe of Several Varieties of ^.
• the Owl. Described.
The owl is a ghostly bird, always '
eeggesting some vague association with
"Wooled and uncertain visitors of= ---the
Ight The long, tremulous call of the
IL*eat,horned owl, the mirthless, ques-
'gtoning laugh of the barrel owl„ and the
"timid, wailing whistle of the smalleist
!Itoanber of the family are alike replete
*'wrath the spirit of• shadowy mystery,.
Ing • oeit of the night as voices . of
• 'aim. a' unknown. ' The .lightness of their
+a/lent flight among the close branches
'ore across the open sky win itself sug-
'ai'eative of the unearthly, and in the
'+ttnsness of intellectual twilight they
•'7have helped theactive fancy to peo-
a!
eagle the with th weird and threatening
1
iantom
_ ai s. The snowy owl, ghostly in
eZts arctic plumage, is diurnal in its
e, *bits, and this°ernay have saved the
nitd from many disordered imagin- -
i s. The most dreaded enemies are
eethose we create ourselves, and'the ter- r
ear of a white owl moving silently a
when, having resisted .a demand
tribute by' brigands in Sicily, he w,
subjected by then: to a midnight attac
in force upon his castle of'Mani_
followed by a siege which culminate
in his routing the brigands, .l~iliin
some. and wounding others, -The lett
•
o m � IN :DRBAEA 1�
Add
a little
..-„ xtradt
,of .f,.
Armour's is the heft, to
hot water...-, and you
have a'ep of beef tea
that tones up the system
better than any medi-
cine.
All druggi,Sts and
gvwcers sell
ARP IOILT e'S
1
? xtra,ct of Beef.
=WOW IOWA TORONTO.
Sa3'Oy,Seaasr)0
I8 i;in4s, • ,ML gg'ocers,
WORK DON O IMAGINED W$t E
! Wi8AP.PEla IN dt.UMBEA.
Rorie* et $ubihna Verne That
Barn Barlow tileen- linty to in
the. Waking et tie• Author -41m
That Coleridge Loot,
Iu. Sir Mountstuart DUEL'! ""N
I rr.
Prean a Diary It is related the
date Lord Lytton, waren vicere
India, bad repeated to his guests!
one accaeloli a poem winch be pr..
ed_to bare composed ben asleep;
1 There are boating and sailing
And fishing for grayling'
'Where the blue waves roll ,nigbtl
deep Galilee.
• But sweeter the places,
Where aldernien's bracer!,
Are sold for boot -1400s in bdnnie
dee.,
The diaris ventured to
#ured douTat wh
er the viceroy was not trying to lin
po
on the credulity of bis friends,. a
picion which will be. shared by
readers.
i But, whether these lines were dre
ed or not, there can be no doubt
'one of the most curious -sections
whole subject of dream work is
wbich'relates to the comparative -va
of work done or imagined fn, sleep,
eliun, 12i i n,
P'I,AYiitf� Tll�4 Wi1'H A 1lllly8a�', j�%`��{�''�]']� ..
Aug iruilaw ;haw Hhn and. Things DJ�41 #r, J�tB" #'1R .EVERYBODY
Loeitsd Rorie" ill .•
Jahax Wl<ddingphain of Trolling taiii
N. B<, Mad an experience recentll- with
'Wee a mole, arid' Ie thankful that the ant-
Mal A >Itrm al did not linger longer in his vioiuy
trent. its, au things were looking a trifle blue
for him lust as the monarch of the for -
eat entertained it new thought, says.
eteca The Ot, Joint -Bun,
t •the a'r. 'waddinghain wag working in
y 0f is wood lot, Johan, following a .
ea •crashing. in tate bushes, a big moose
pro suddenly appeared ,before Nina. lillr,
Waddingham decided that a retreat
was right in hta. line about that biota,
• as his Drily weapon. was an arca-'but
e.I
y 0 v dently the moose had a grudge
against some
person. and was deter
mated to vent it upon the. tient one
he met, for no sooner did Mr..' Wad-
Dun• dingham start to get out of the way
than the Moose made a rush at him.
A blow .low with the. axe for:an instant
made the big bull halt and shake b
sem, head, but he didn't atop to Consider
most this indignity verylong, and in .an*
other instant was upon the man
again.
- tag,. "you're• it," said the fanner as
that he swatted the moose once again with
othe the axe, and the pair began' a game of
at • chase around a convenient tree in
nue which the chaser seemed to have more
N • fun than the chased, as 'things were
beginning to look serious for the tat -
e • ter, who was not, it the best form
cam' for:sprinting; •
of et) axex at thnally emoose,ldingham threw his
whic1 •-vf wed his
eat,' fleeing Playmate, for a second or two,.
lY then turned in- disgust towards •• the
•
or • Longed/ow•
an Error. .
as .The little I have seen of the world
k ' teaches' me to look upon the errors
.1 others in sorrow, not in :anger,. When
I . take the history of one poor• heart
e that has sinned and suffered and repre,•r/
t 'scent to myself the struggles and temp -
e did not turn .over to the police bu
s, tatione it bas passed through, the brief
had their Wounds' cared for at the ea
m ..pulsations of.. joy, the' feverish �.
a 1- quietude of hope and fear, the pressure
h ' of • want, the desertion .,,of friends, I
n would fain leave the erring soul of my
n' 'fellow mandv'ith him. from whose band
rd ft came.
tle, where they were treated by hi
with the, utmost kindness and hospit
ity until their, recovery, . since whic
time' all Sicilian brigands have give
him; a;owide berth, regarding hhn with
good -will and respect, This inoide
has been' utilized, . by Marion Crawfq
and several' other novelists as th
theme" of some of 'their most popular
books.
The castl ,�
e'i a grand oldplace on
the *slopes' of Etna, and was built some
thousand yes ,sea by the Greek Gen,
Maniacses w. 6 qq
, �qh Harold a rad
$ �•d er
and--:the...latter's..11T.orehmen,. d ove_'i"h�e
Saracens lydm atL that art tl the is-
land
It w
occupied
a8 .
r a i
m
e b
WiIliam,11., grandson of .the great' King
Roger of Sicily, from whom nearly e .
ery keigning house of the old world is
descended; and , it was there . that t his
mother, Queen iVfargnerite, founded a
monastery in 1174 for the• preservation
of. a sacred painting brought back by
ne of the nobles of Constantine :the
Great from Constantinople, end' which,
epresenting the Virgin and Child; was
lleged to have "been painted by St.
uke. e The i
et
ur
e ,which o
, h the . present
..p
et
e �}•
Deseh*rstgl n e.
"No, my little girl, I can't lend your
mother any flour or on or butter or
flatirons. or .lamps, or potatoes or any -
.Wing else that she gent. you over for,
but go baekaand tell ber,I have: a lot of
'trotzlile she call
•
v ,Tbe•world generally gives its admira-
tion not to the man who does wbat no-
body
alae tt '
y a em
t"
do,
pts obut to the
man who does best what multitudes do,
well-Macaula•,y'"
When Kid •
Kidneys Fail
llealtf
lI Declines.
-lemons the dark evergreens would make L
• Ake 'woods at night a place- abhorred:•
3rrature in her eternal adjustments has h
•` "r a the snowy owl diurnal, the white 0
-"rtllat would warp the crouching spar e
a'sroess and skurrying rodents in the night o
- 'Dieing an .easy concealment among the 0
lummocics of snow in the open north- •
. Assn .day. . I
The Island sand bar and Marshes v
'3ba're been visited by a small party of di
Lowy 'owls this. winter, and they have• _ veh
afoot shown the innocent confidence' in
• *1 n peculiar to other strangers from-Sh'a far north, says a writer in The .t
-4'Ilobe. The. herring gulls are scarcely • p
-snore alert in discerning the proximity in
•• At guns :or more accurate in estimating th
/their range. They have moved' about Y
aneasily, with steady night, freely tra- th
Yersing the Island and marshes. Mice, ▪ s
-Rats, sparrows, and other pests, have a
Isar ned of the new danger, and are d
fetid to
seek cover th
y e on the first appear- _
woe of expanding white wings in the t
• _" Hafer atr. The snowy owl likes a
Vammanding perch, where he can sit
• oittuot and turn his round white head in
fitfully, from side to side, search- u
' : the a'reuad with his wonderfully..111,
'- 1 cerasins vision. From such a parch ti
Duke.. of_ Bronte found in the castle,
angs ,over the altar in the adjacent
hutch.: It is crudely drawn and paint,
d, the infant Jesus having a distinctly
Mental appearance and, a dark,' copper-
olored compiexlon., •
At the time when . the castleof Van*
ace, the monastery; -and the 1 ds and
ineYe,rds Were bestowed by ng Per,
nand upon Lord Nelson, ' along With
;;eternity 01'$20,000 a year, a pities
was in a shocking. condition ` repair:
and remained so until . it p ed into
he. possession. of the late L Brid-
ort as .grandnephew' of; Lo Nelson
1868.,: 'At. -that, time nomember of
e .family had visited •it.. f forty-
ears. Lord _ Bridport, howe r,' took
e estate in hand,' spent a con derable
um of money in reatoring t castle
nd the monastery': buildings; and in
eveloping the property, tarn g over
e entire, management thereofin 1876
o. Itis •third son, Alexander Nelson
Hood, the present Duke o nte.
To -day the castle;h'as been converted
to a most commodious and even lux-,
nous abode crammed'aimost om, cel-
to roof with Nelson relics. he en=
re estate, Which is of vast 'extent; is
an
Ki
th
of
ass
Lord
Lord
for
.however,
si
ha
n
f"-Bronte.
On
v
it
T
nowit .as $route, taking its name from
e rumbling of ti►e: volcano on the
can drop down with startling sod- k
'•Seniles on any mouse or squirrel that th
p On the Island slope, of. which it is situated. For
Byonte means thunder, •
nt out of cover.
'elle Ljdinge that are associated with
""e 'a y hilarity of summer are se-
" ted by the snowy ow3s as points of
eibitervetion. One bird fell a' victim
• 'Dull, Achis;^,' Back Pains, Scanty
and lili1y Colored Urine;:
•! : ��'it+tclit'3 il,iid Insomnia,. In,
�.. ea: Diseased 'Kidneys.
1 ftee • �
A egppe�rimenting'.,for nearly .0
years. Dr; 1-Iahrailtori discoyered an ab-
solute specific' for weak kidneys. ' His
pills of mandrake and butternut cure
perraneitiy. ,
Can' you afford. to• delay P No, your
interest compels you co use this cer-
tain'cure -now to -day. Only take. Dr.
` I3amiltdn's .Phis, and an absolute re-
covers is.guaranteed. In thousands of:
eases relief . has been', instantaneous.`
Such was. the experience of: James G.
Gordon, of Marysville. �y
i TWENTY YEAR! A SC'EFEREit. '
I `'My kidneys bothered me for twenty.
yearn. T bad gnawing pains, in the.
back and my limbs ached .With: weari
i nese ail the time. My digestion was
poor and" I had specks before my eyes;;;
1' "Dr. Hamilton's Pills helped' me
'r from the frs,t day: Relief , was im=
• mediate. They restored tree and nay
health's better than ever." •
Alt complaints
.kin r
kindred :to kidney
disease are prevented by• Dr. Rama.
ton's• Pilin.• • Their use 'insures you h3
against Diabetes, Bright's disease and
experience is more general thhan.
waking from a parti'eplariy vivid dr
only to find that in the very process
'waking the whole vision, apparently
real and strong for a brief mom
Yanisbes beyond recall. This ,lasso
fe' is place, from whence he. Dame- Mr.
tug touch of psychical or dream li
ons Waddingharliawas pretty well winded
like the contact 'of the air with a
entombed, weIt preserved human body
suddenly eziosed to the light. of day.
While the tomb openers gaze upon -the
features so strangely preserved from
a long past day the touch of the air
docs its work; and the relic .of
inanity crumbles to dust, .: .
A strange point about,,,the dllfc
hi keeping In 'mental grip of a. dream
its that,'• although lio detail can be re;
membered,' an faipression .' remains
which in cases that have been tested
has often tarred out to be quite More
--rest: -lit is related by-lMiokie, the -Sent=
Usti poet, beat known as the translator
GP the Portuguese, epic, .the "'Lusiad"
of Camoeos, that .be .always regretted
het .
co not .
cid relnem '
her t8
o . poetry'
h
w Ich e.
h composed p ed !n • his sleep.: Yt`
was, ire said, so Infinitely, superior to
enytbing he could produce in •his waif -
bag boors. One morning.on waking be
Was. lamenting, as he had:so often done
before, that he should be conscious of
baying composed such sublime poetry
.a
yetbe
ndu b .
le to
ire recall a ,word
it. 'iWhatr' said his wife, who hap
ed to be awake: "Were you . writhe
.poems, p" •, «Tri." he replied,. "and su
poetry tlat.I'•ivould give the world
remember, it." "Well, then," said oh
-"'I. did luckily. bear:tbe. last lines, and
am sure . T remembered these .' exactly
They were
"By heaven, I'll wreak rises woes: s-
Vpoe, the cowslip: and the:pale .prlinr
Mr: Miekle Was-probably'cured of
habit of lamentation; '
tile -late Lewis, Carroll noted in
"Diary" that he once heard .Tennyriari
relate that he bad often dreamed l
paissages of poetry"and believed .
to be good at the time, butecould nev
remember any of . theta en' waking ex
sept, four Imes. ;which he dreanned at •
en years .old, •and these were! the Mov
tug verses: )
May a coon sparrow •
Write tea barrow?
I. hope p you'll excuse
illy infantile muse.
This, as the' diarist rein-li i --ae an
unpublished: fragment of
hu,
when he broke from the circle .and
'struck for home, and, had the. !noose
chosen to follow him, would have over-
taken him with ease. The animal was
a monster, judging from 'the big hoof
prints . made,n. the soft earth while
playing• tag around the tree,'
4117 . Treed by Wolves.
Jack. Wilkins, 'an employe of a -.A`t,
Booth on .the Egan estate, was in Ot-
tawa Saturday, , Tde was pursued anis`
treed by wolves about a fortnight ago
and had a narrow:eacajie, Re got off
with a painful bite' on the left hand,
and -would ---likely -have-been killed 1f
some of his companions had net gone
to his assistance, says The .Ottawa.
Citizen. .. •
Wilkins, a sturdy old Canadian, born,
•an
br
d brought u h up
gin
the .wilds:, of the.
Parry. Sound, wears a buckskin suit
>and cap; heavy feather leggings, and
generally : carries a rifle, He `has been
employed by the 1. R. Booth Co. for.
years, and was tramping from the rail-
way station to his 'home .near the moun-
tains to s when four 'wolves began to Pol-
low whim:.. Wilkins eluded 'theist'for
.
hours, thinking that:a stray pack was
behind him; and' was within a mile of
g . his. home when ..the ferocious animals.
ch caught sight of` him. Wilkins shot.one,
to. but had' very little ammunition; and.
sought safety in'a' tree. . His compan-
ions, attracted by :his shouts and'fir-
log soon appeared, but. before their-'
' arrival Wilkins had bravely dropped to
the, ground, One of: them rushed athim
ss hid fellow-workten appeared, but
ose! .• .. Wilkins ..brought •his• rifle into play,
bis again and killed one of:' the brutes..
The wolves' were killed said Wilkins
his expects to .receive the usual. Bounty
for their heads as the result -of his .ex
citing experience: He has returned to
o the Egan Estate:: • •
er
The duke,• I may add, was a :gentle-' Inver trouble. No house should• be.ny
man-in•waiting.to Queen Victoria' and ;I without such' a valuable-lnedieine:.
controller of the • household of the late 'Sold eyeryrr`here by d gists, Mc per.
1.
er powers." On.thesame occasion Ten
son. told his hearers ,that be o
dreamed an 'enormously long poem
about ' fairies, • wblch began with ,v
'tapes that ,gradually got she
lend ended with fifty. or sixty lines of
two Syllables each; ;
On the other baud, poets have occa natty foetid their dreanns of ;service.
utbey in a letter to his brother says
forgot my dreams and have no Da
el to help out my rem/Section, and if
"y chance. I do remember them unless)
ey are instantly written down the
*salon passes away almost as lightly
s -the dream itself." • But be goes on tat
y that one or two of his dreams were
oted at the time and were afterward
corporated irrecenes of his now intoe
read poem,' "The Curse of Kehama"
All
d then of eourse, there is the fa -
Mar 'story .of Coleridge falling asleep
ne-summer afternoon in a quiet farm -
use, after . reading' about the Khan
Kubh i in Patches' "pilgrims," corn -
Posing several hundred -Mines. In • the
course of a•three hours'• sleep; waking,
and. et once beginning to write theist
down, only to be interrupted at the
"ty-fourth line by a visitor -that "per-
il from Porloek".whose tneinory agar
ecrated by all lovers Of poetry with
e result that on returning to his desk
hour later the poet found that the
t of his dream .verse had faded from
r• melnofy: '}"Kubiat Khan" remains
Meiodtdus fragiment, but if the Elsie -
from • porlock" had only lost his
y or had come to •gr ief•Butfcient 'te
Use a -delay of an 'hone or two 1ve
ght have had a •completely beautifill
1)"
zt .-a-T.ondon Gllobe.
once
MILBURN'S
TAXA -LIVER
the late tau- • .
thoughtL
a
reate, "may be interesting,. in
t affordingiileh promise;of• his ft
ru a
afforded Dueh sa of Teck os, or ve for i3Oli.
o son & 0 „ Kin stop, Ont.,
Hartford, Oonn. S A.
are said, nue and Wit and at+► s psrf�el
• regulator of the system.
sty: They gently unlock the secretions, elm
rter away all effete and waste matter fro the
gram, and give tone gird vitality 61 the
lobe% Wasting track :euriag "
a ,' pub Headache, HOiooadess, Dyap :
she C%ut.i Tongue, Poul Breath, how
disk l8sahttii�uts, and Water Deana.
LIB, °gaga, Woodstock, hT«Z, wrMhlil.
4"Ily hieband end mnso1f Uwe >raed I L
hoofs • Le :Lives Pilln for a ausahae.ed •
e think we seshhos a)r0 wMle,M .
Soft They are the sir > we emir.
trite.°' ` •
""through the easy concealment rd d e , mother of the Prin , N (7. 1 * By nhail .from Dong
ity adjacent •.buildings. but the others cess of Wales •'He is.la novelist, an
Akre far.more cautious than their occa- engineer, and hes ,been decorated by.
i and He _ <
, marry owi 'ba.eeda in• the far 'Crown for •his. services to Italian .agr
fla --but generally makes a winter culture. • . : ..,-
13
I:airmails, threatens. A discouraging
relatives. Though quite warY he .. .
Big 'Holding* In tin, Cobalt•.District b
esegportion of these ' visitors are gen- . . . War yeterans. '' ' . !--• -2-;
, -meatelly. destroyed. When the lee forms . Th. e time, for .the -application of vet
-144 Urge, irregular cones and barrlere erans for land grants for military ser
:lined.* perch that will give his tele- and it is Understemi that .the tirrie ie t
, isliapie eyes a wide range.. Though eeeplree for.gooe, andthat, the Govern
lliamutifully conspicuous he cannot be ' meta will...get. en any aceount make a
itsbeerver are construed as an •unfriend. • Less' than. half 'of the men velto hav
1111 set A. long 'excursion oveathe• rag- been gierezt &lime have located them
4red edge of the ice-bOrdered lake A liumber of the. veterans nave looat
.71113.0we the futility of All Ituch overtures.
—en-in-the'tOwniihips of Dyment, --Rue
1 A• more than usually interesting 8°
( drainage acherne was brought fo the "I
' t ter of Public Werke, recently, by a de. 4eigh find Tilbury East, in the County ;p
_ . 'of Fent. About 8,000 acres et land I a
along the shorea Of Lake St -Clair, : tia
", have been reclaimed after the Holland zt
fashion by dykes and embanionenre.' Gs
o whicth keep Out the lake, and at plaees '''''
; the River Thames. 'The water ihside
" the dykes Is removed by a pumping e ' plant The work • cost about 8100,0007 _Ea
Recent freshets have, however, done o
and it is estimated that $25,000' more
and Hudson, and these townships liar
110 has a good repUtation as a de,stretY- ' been withdrawn 'by the; doverranen
',W of vermin. but that would not save from settlement, so tar as the Veteran
'IdiN., if expelled to the destructire *ea- are concerned, as: they form part of th
AUL
7 mattent shape TO this a -mount the:
Government ia asked to dontributo an
'" liberally as possible.
He owes his survival ta a teal: Withdrawing theee towttships, a larg
Sees for the great unpeopled portly number of veterans Made locations
. Where, , protected by' the color of th,,ts. betause • they Wire understood to • be
Doug winter, he lives and moves .313,,...,. rich in Mineral, and under the Vet.;
*meow' harmony with the great /Irak done Land Grant Act the mineral be-,
I!.',' The Gehtle 7.
Don't think that fiu-ju is not
! the Crown. ' All the dents that have
i nernent the minerals 'aro reierved by
. hind good. .Ie 'ordinary eases of set -
parties will be cancelled unleas settle-.
settler, The claims of veterans loented
before the vvitbdraWeabrder passed will
effective because it doei not merit clear% ate performed as in the
"tear things loose." Then:ant anasa of the Ordiaary settler.: Prospebte
whO talks most, dOes least.. ate . feltir geed 'tot! , a , ethebet Of lear
Kidney reniedies that- purge- 'emits °Vet claims ift tine district,.
.to o you mighty little good. • "There has been itIot of talk about
. .the therein*, of ohne - in Canada, but
la thirteeki . Years the. number of Onr
pigeon inmates hari4linwa very little
aro foreigners, our -record win corn-
. . tare favor4b1y With that ocoariy 001.311.
" . try in the Civilized world,. Oo said
„ Pal *haat eariligi*figenuY, :.ttr. W., XS; Archibald, Dorninidin Parole.
mildly, eorreetty.'„ on never Officer,. reeStitlY,• wblie talicitig to the
. . letiOW you, are taking mediate Ottawa Canadian. Club :mon the work
Itettea .1_,Statt; 4_1,1_0 -AA -A_ ,'.' n,.,.._0.....eafe caeoaloat prisons, where tonvicts Were .
'' "tottita,...,_Pg"u w man . lead fieriest lives. There had been 1082
w halting again eeinmitted crime. About
tootagat ' fit Other tensest
e Trapped Muskrats Megan's,
•
Genie Warden Wm. D.' Wigle was in g/°
Learnington recentlY and confiscated
nearly one 'hundred muskrat skine ta
t taken front animals illegally trapped. an
The six culprits w r
pleaded guilty seit each Was asse.tisad
eon
Every Hour Delayed
IN CURING A COLO IS DANGEROUS.
ET, SPIVIiTHING GOOD BE SAID.
When over the fair fame of friend ov
foe
words of blatne, or Prod of thus and
Let. Something good he said.
rgetheaadot, that no follow4ehig yet
ay tall ea low but loVe fairy lift hil
on the eheek of shim) with tear* iti
semething maul he said.
geiterouit heart iney vainly turn
aside
lOttlethttig hood be
eloitotweortge 7e, hrs the OW*
Too Imo tem heerd sort "Its_enlY. T
seld.1 table (teeth." hat attars ire me*
wined semi diferresit if, se „the fintt aPPearauee 01
'WAY PINE SYRIJP.
am* mots, Pitha, la Cheek Aatimesi, nesoreillo.
Snow Whoosh* Chalk Odom, Sad all Ada- HO
oleos of dor Thaw gad 401040.
*Jew "IV*. used Oa trews ittost. Mho Pa
;. Orr* ter Amebas, sad bine heed it le boo tt
*sad emehlorl, aloof Mid* lad* Wk.
woo sot be *Meet heitte.ist at et lee Mg
twahile
try. Weeds lidiftrill PIN flatio hrhat;* le 411
• pare iteeete. Tarts litee Trois it Ili ante
; oak aid the ones id sitite
SOIL Lit
•
adatethlag. gee,* vuy oft.
1
'Prioe II mots or eve bottles for 11.4%, •
se all dealers or direct on roadeeet.prir
The T. Milburn CO., Liana. Tem*
edliketi Caton Root Commit
Is the only eaf
re
regulator on
can depend "in yeat
Is by far the beat
Medici, m known. ^
.2 -...Por medal cases -10 deft"
three dollars per tiolG
,, your druggist 'far COON
u nowt evinpotillial. Take so sum
1 and No. 2 are sow
sil drugosto In the
.11teilea to any ad
and four 2-eent
i,
coil and examine
ottr atOek of high art planet Of 1M6
latest aiyles of sweet-t000d orgters, at low
Joliet
swat taw
CEYLON TEA
. T �■r Tilt 777±���y �\(y ** r
t<ead Packets envy,, ,.5e, .,i3Oc, 'IQe. 110c .
lay ail Grocers, • • as lits vein i , t9 . .
Highest A>Arisi'dv St: Louis, Z94SE;
Features • .
Con fleeted
with this
.•Closet
which:znake
superior
to any bl'1g.:
EN THE,
MARKET.
ADAPTABILI�`Y, It is adapted to private residences public
Ings, hotels, school houses and summer resorts; ' p lLc
. PORABILITY.=-It .can be placed in the attic or . cellar,b th-
or outside kitchen, or in any place. where thex•e Is .a, flue or eli a room
EQONOMICAL.-It requires no disinfectant. The••stro coney.
of air passing through it, during accumulation, carries oftall odors en .
- FIRE. -Is only necessary,•once in . fifteen or twent .cin s, w
Y y r when used.•
bye, family of from four to six Members, to burn it out.,
.. APPLICATION.-Fot'•villages or towns whey
e e there is uo.sewt'rage •
it ends;the career (Attie filthy, unhealthy, uncomfortable,, out -door affair,
which more than any other single agent, has been responsible for
both• disease and- death.. .
•
The.. Odorless Crematoryan Oe
(� General Heating CO.
ami l
111;.
n'Ott
Ontario.'
a o.�
50 EA
RT
•
-FORD
'' E IE
>�Efl'.NCE
. .)EALER IN'
FLOUR •AND ..F1Et .op
ALL KINDS'
'ALLORDERS PROMPTL`53' FILLED
ONTARIO A
R,IO .ST. CL
INTt} ;
•
. prices, in.. thiS., Wonderful
34 Victoria pt., Tor/ante.
Steih Clinton
•
We wish
you all
A Bright
and prosperoUs
New Year
We have still a few odd
lines of. Olassware and
Chipa left over Trom our
Christmas stodk -During
ibe on sale at _prices whiCh
pay you to Investigate
A.' D. 13eatop
The' Oeople's 'Grocer.
Phone z
Our Bulk Teas.
Are as goodes'we say.they are,
probably better than you think
they are.
They have no fancy names
they heed none.
or 40o Tea, and yolf will get in
yoUr parcel this store's idea of
• Tea GOODNESS, vithout pay-
ing More than you °tight fOr
Of course there may be people
who have formed a preference
for some other brand of tea, who
WeLlIdil:t dare to change.
•
But We have noticed that the
majority of those who try these
teas of ours stay with them<
W." T. °NEIL,
The bib :Grout
Ciintent Ont.
DESIGNS •
.Aiyone trending; it skettlr out deseriptIon waif
Itraelcild aseerthht our opinion free whether ee
sentlreee. Oldest agency, foreeeuringfiatente.
ore, crel notee. without charge: the
.ritzs4ons it Son'
We are stiii in the. But-
chering, business • and lare
in a position to fili,,alt,c)r-•
.intrusted to our care, '
Our new busifiess stan
iS in the Combi713lock.
R. Fitzsimons lif:Son.
'Nine Clint on
FARM fin
We have appoiuted
,our Agent for that
vicinity, he keeps a com-
plete 'stock of * our goods
on sale, We treat all -
diseases of hbrses, cattle,
.sheep; hogs and poulty,
young colts with naval
and joint diseases quickly
cured. Our Free Advite
Coupon System will in-
terest you.
Ask our Agent for theie
goods, 'and you wig use -
no other—Tou can rely
on them. •
We have a complete
board of V,eterinary
The
Veterinttry
Sbeciilty Co.,
Limited
TORONTO, 0 NT