HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1906-02-09, Page 3M
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8.
Photo by Join:woe 4: liothobnic India,
SARA JEANNET_TE DUNCAN'
A:Canadian Author now in India. fi 4
In Simla, that famous India town, perched on a ridge connecting two peaks
'of the Himalayas and half-hidden'by its wealth of tall dark firs -a town that
. Rudyard Kipling advertised as no other town has ever been --lives Mrs, Everard
Charles Cotes,tthe popular Canadian writer, better known by. her ,maiden,name,
Sara Jeanette Duncan,
• Mrs. Cotes was born: in Brantford, Ont., in 1862, the eldest daughter of Charles
.Duncan, Esq., and received' her education in the Public schoolsand the;Collegiate
Institute of her native town, She tried teaching for a time, but soon discovered
-that she had talent for Writing 'Which was clamoring for developtnent, so she bade
the children good-bye with pathos in her voice but a feeling of, joyous relief in
her heart and started into `literature. Some win literaryy success in a single bold,
brilliant charge; to'others•the publishers and .public surrender only after a long,
bard siege -as Mrs. Cotes found it. Her verse and prose seemed to havethe un
..erring instinct of the homing pigeon, for wherever she sent them they always came
:'back. Then she determined to 'enter literature by its back door journalism. She
wrote a series' of syndicate letters' about the New Orleans Cotton Centennial which
.:she actually sold. Then, after a period of editorial training. on the "Washin on'
,u
Post • shg returned to Toronto and contributed,'>to Canadian papers... Her wv.tc
.as parliamentary correspondent orthe "Montreal Star" attracted' attentions..d
"The
:some delightful essays for Week . showed her 1n''a: new vein. In 18,8;
With Miss Lily Lewis. she madea trip around the.world, writing syndicate articles
along the way and in 1890:first hit the target of literary success, with her uncon-
ventional book of travels -"A Social Departure; How Orthodosia.and I. Went
Round the•World, the first of her ten oc more books, all breezy, chatty stories
that reflect her personality ars naturally as a rose -jar suggests roses,
While girdling the earth she found what determined her life: She met in
'.:Calcutta, Mr. Cotes, aprofessor who"had a.scientific connection
.with the'Ind,' '`
• an.
(.Museum and had won •reputation in-•his:special.-field of research, Indian onto.?
;Inology. She returned to Canada, but. in 1891 they were married 'add Mrs;,Cotes
egt. back to India, Her writinghas viv cit
' i y, wit, lrumot,. i�.lBanc .and
'charm of frank natural'strokes,
ess,. with the happy knack of hitting"off a y the
or
a scene in a few vivid trok the Shine csaKipli 's
s es, same characteristic that � makes Kipling e
sketches so real, graphic and seemingly spontaneous. In India Mrs: Cotes has;.,;
been engaged in editorial and general literary work, and this transplanted Can-.
adieu has lost none. of her sparkle; energy and charm in the new life and romantic
'setting of old India. ,
.Entered aloordtatitdattsti tint Pattlament ofCaoada, In theyo.411S5, br W. O. leash, at the Do,artment of &grloniture
w,.
•tom
I
P0.
r-•
I Have
You
taken. . ad.
wantage off`
our Great. Moving Sale
to lays in,your spring.
supplies
Hundreds of satisfied :customers have, but perhaps'
you have not. .Then to you we would say come and
see
us, andget ..
get yourwants supplied,while fresh, new
goods. s_ are going at cost and• under; all must be gold._ .'
REMEMBER, E
R we'`
are positively closing business,
and our tithe islimited, as we. have •rented our store,„
•t
and.s still tl. having.
large a es
:Stock
to dispose s se
• �'po of, the•goods
must be sold wthin the ; ,eft few ;weeks, .
We have a et compl. a stock in READY
MADE CLOTHING,. in all lines
Y the est manufacturers �a u
Tach
'ilr8t'S 1iq. the
trade, and we; Will Sell all at cost,
DRESS GOODS, PRINTS, GINGHAMS,
WRAPPERETTES,' FLANNELLETTES '
COTTONS, SHIRTINGS, .DUCKS,
COTTOIVADES, TWEEDS, ,GET1
i EURNISHINS, EOoTs, SHOES
All must go,'aiid all we want is to • • get . o,
out of them
There is little' use of .giv'ing'�prices, f5 Bettor sett fo`
. yourselves. The practice. of marking .. p arl�ill�, goods way lJp, $
and saying they Were se much, now so r.iuch, is worn
$
out in this place. ' We ask you to see what we are
offering you. .,.., . pit ..
1V1,,,THEA Le
Clinton, Feb. 2, 1906
sine 'llteetalit elf 3'tiisty
f She -4-0b, 1.fr, Borem, bow do you do?
I was taitting to Mrs. Nexdore just
} now, and I couldn't help thinking ;oe
I you. Ile -.dud was she discussing me?
She ---Not
eisaetly, She was comment
l Ing on the weather and just asked mo
if I could Imagine anything more tire-
some , and disagreeable,
'The steamship /Corea, which arrivbd
at San Franciseo. from the orient re-
cently, brought the most valuable eon-
+ signment of raw silk ever lauded in
this country, It°•rvas worth $2,450,000.
i It was dispatched east in baste the
1 saaae night, 8,500 bales of. it
,
PUR(•1AT'IYES . ARE 'DANG')RODS.
1' Thal' =L':pe, cause ltstrnttl,4 Naens and
snake the aonsttpatgd condition even
-worse. Physiciu:ns say the ide:tt laxa-
tive is' Dr. I1:imilton's Pills of Meal -
drake. and ' Butternut ; they etre ex-
eeedingly mild, composed only of
I health -giving vegetable extracts,. 1)r.
Hanlfltut.t's Pills restore regular move-
ment of .the bowel's, strengthen ;tilt •
stomach and purify the blood, For
constipation. sick headache, billions -
Hess and disordered di;;eacion no Used, --i
eine onearth snakes such recm:arkabie. i
cures las Dr , ilemilton's Pills Tky a
lac box you alt
� at'. tae great wonders to a man
V th su
witho t to
'
• mb er of interruptions tions a WO
-
Man (stn
endure ile eating.a meal
;Mensal
me Is commafled, suspicion
turns (quicker, to those who once loved
tlfie victim than to those who once hat-
ed 11111.•
An ZIter ewses y •
,Wham President Hadley saeeeeded
the learned and witty 'Tiinotby Dwight
as president of Yale university the• ex-.
dinars, attendant upon the 'transfer of
authority were marred by a heavy fall.
Of rage. ' .It cane down suddenly just
as a column '. of people, President
Dwight and Professor Hadley at the
head, Wetre.erossing the campus: Some
one : handed the couple at umbrella,
and Professor Hadley was about to
open it when this older man took it from
'him, saying as be unfolded it:
"Let me carry it, 'professor. Your
aslgn.will began tomorrow."
•
-cur.
Rheumatism
Too
Bu-ju cures Rhennietism;• be-
cause it •cures the :,IIidne s.
Everydrop of blood in the body
passe through' tiie �kid'neys' -ley
b'e filtered. If thekidneys are
• skit tired-imfiammed-they
don't filter out the uric; acid,
It is this acid, deposited in .the
Joints -7°n ;the nerves that
causes Rheumatism.
THE GENTLE KIDNEY CURS`
cleans,
heal'
s, , strengthens the'
. •kidneys -sets theta to working
properly -•clears .the blood
stops the , ache •- and takes
away every trace . of Irleuiria•
fieri, aid Sciatica, • -•
THE
CLAFLiN
CHEMICAL CAL
li
a, LllittrEtl.
'Wiso8oe ONT. - NEW YoRK.,
4t. )(dirt
•
.r3
DOT' KEEP HENS
Make hens keep you.
An increase of only two eggs a
Month for
each
nw'll
l satire than
Pay for the feeding of ' • •• •
Hercules
Poultry rood
O
It Will give this increase, and
More, besides giving the plumage a
better gloss, and in every way keep-
ing them In tiXs-top health. also
r making the chicks hardier.
Tor the winter laying of eggs
nes: is nothing as good On this or
a.•,° other market;
1•:cop your hens from fretting by
using HERGU,[.ES. LOUSE _Si.1,,.
LER. , T'ry. it and see the difference
i t tiro weight and eggproduction.
Nothing better for keeping the',
i nheuso7.clean, than' OLIVES.
El.i»is. CARBOLINE ANTISEPr
,r11i Clyde dal, L anttiontr are
said under a roams Vs rums..
ANTEE OF SATI$PACTIOH or
money "cheerfully reinaded ,1'g► the
dealer.
6'.r,vnsiril( ' sYs'tryt,sis Olty, *Whisk,
J,'or Sale by
r3 11 UAt,l',AIt11, tiLIN'I()N,
Minixti.
BOMB `IIl,Yrut:.
. i'C. I.• NA L , AU1�T,
W. T. ItIl)Ianl`,L4
AUBURN,
fide BOS, BviRit
J. BNIU ♦ B1TtJC7IE i17if
,.
T. J. McABR, V',
Y`t
ti•
1
H
CLPITOIsr $W ERA
..
Az, �,.•, esti*
HAIR AND BEARDS,k y ,
,edits 1Plptye/1 important Isomer.� � ��
g deduction ale
Slier
In th4 Weenies/ll. liistotry.
In centuries past the human bah
I►1a yed an important part In all judicial'
proceedings. Those„that were permit
ted to wells beard and hair bad rigbte
that could not be ei'tbimed by the shore
and shaved. When men made oath
they touched their beard andhair, and
women placed the linger tips of the
right hand on their tresses,
Servants Were obliged to leave theft
hair cut, and If a freedman went into
_slavery be had to divest himself of lib
hirsute adornments. ,An adult adopted
by foster parents was obliged to havt
his beard shaved, and the shaving of
' beard and hair was a punishment in
Meted on criminals. The jurisprudence
of our ancestors dealt with punishment
"by skin and hair” tor small. offenses
and "by neck and hand" for greater
crimes, . '
' There bas always been more or les:
superstition about hair. Great strength
' was iniplied by it, and wizards and
witches knew of coucoctions o! Bair b3
which they poisoned. enemies. Cate
hair was especially ,named in the Bate.
gory ;of poisonous hairs, and even to
the beginning of the seventeenth cen
tury.Paulus Zaechias • a remelts physt
clan, writes of the virulent poison of
the hair of cats.
Atnditg civilized people•suet} superstar
tious beliefs have gone out of existence
and only. Malays .give . their enemies
tiger hairs in 'broth to kill them.
I THE': HUMAN RIBS. -
lean, nee Twelve Palrs, and Wows*
nos Just the Same:
A. man who-' had been • sick . said: he
rads so thin he could count his ribs,
When 1 heard `this: -statementI asked
"How' many did you count?•" He war.
• unable to answer. Several friends were
standing by, and the query was put tt
them, Not a man 'could tell the. num •
ber..of/his ribs. One bright chap sale
in all '.seriousness, that a woman has
onemore rib than 'a men„because man
lost one in; the fashioning.,ef woman
And; •do you: know, .this 'belief is cora
mon?' Suddenly spring the question. on
any acquaintance you may happen tai
meet -•in the day's. journeying. T7nlesi
he be a medical roan he wain all prob
ability' be unable-•te answer,
It is an anatomical fact that man ii
twelve pairs of ribs and woman
same' number. The'four short: -'rib
two, on • each gide, are the • "free" rib
and in all probability:Eve was•made of
,;040 Of these,. A man could: manage tt
struggle, through life without his' free
ribs, and. I have no doubt that ere lone.
some corset 'manufacturer will' ;,require.
woman to have bets removed in ordei'
to lengthen her waist and to reduce' iti
""girtf.'"To'Bialk ii-feif of the asterna:
ribs (ten ..altogether) is nothing;
te'
g,.
break some'oC the sternal: (fourteen ix
number) ones is far tenre serious. ` 1'•
THROW MEDICINESTO THE DOGS!
At best tliey are unpleasant; often
tideleSe You have some disease of the--
neee,•tliroat•cur lungs. Doctors .would
call it: hrnnchitis, , asthma or rat:irrh.
The common rrut•of •.ttese disceases is
germ or microbic irritation, Catarrh.'
rl'!.•'ua not Only ,destroys disease germs,
it does more, it heels.diseased and in-•
tiarnerl .iritic. • The diee'ase 18 not: only
enretl, 1?ut its 1441.1111) is forever i re-
ventrd by using (atair�hnzan'•, which
srletutirl also fret. iedds, coughs and
irritable tni•ortt.-Remnembet von inhale
Catartrh,z,l u• -Nature's .own. cure':
use''10 otlie:r dut t'atarriiozon ..It's
the best c'laa i?1 cure mode.
WALK WITH THE BOY8. •
Dr, Osler'. Advice to ,Veterans Who
Want Co Keep Up.. •
1..
Continues
a n
i ue '
sl
n winter Underwear, n
dery
ear •
(itis
r di an
Shirty, heavy Rubbers and Socks, Horse Blankets, Sweaters, heavy top'
10A --.down, ,Swa°ndown, ,?asses' Hoods Shawls Boys' Toques,'a remises, Idea.
d Scarfs. Are pu going 1 ,Men Men*,
��ER
� y ons u
o
rn
d )
Telescopes
: K am SOc to $l„r0. Br Hess' awl Ol ' sire sell•.
at. mild, sura and nate, and an. s perfea
regulator of the system, ;
They gently enlcok the seoretfons, c1M1►
away all effete and waste nutter frost the
eyrtem, and glte tone and vitality, to the
whole intestinal tract, curing Consttpa.-
Won, Sick Headache, Billowiness. Dyepep,.
pia,, Coated Tongue, Boni Breath, Jana.
+Yee. Heartbuun,, and Water Break, li/ie,
1R & Ogden, ' W,00ditook, N.$, wst:ue,,
"My husband and myself hews. used •V#1.
sures Leets -Elver Pills fora masher' el
rem. W. think we eaanot do without
theta. they ere the way pine we ever
Pries 26 oasts or $wits bottler fuer ti1.ii,
St all dealers or direct on reaar sa' Pias.
T. Milburn Co.; Limited, Toros%
MASCULINE. DIMPLES. ,
They Are 'Not Always Appreciated 'h7”
Their Owalerp. -
"Dimples are just as'co;nmon among
men as among women," says a'.New
York beauty.doctor, "only they don's
show off to such good' advantage'
Beard and mustache .combine• to'hide
their charm: Anyhow, when are not
proud of dimples.: , They Consider them,,
a sign of effeniinaey, Now that
faces are the fashion,` the man with a
dimple in cheek or chid -fa hard put to
it to.laide that beauty mark. in his ex.
tremity he seeks relief . from. me,
'"'What can I do with t these confound:
• ed dimples?' be asks- •
"'Take 'em out,!' I advise.
'"Can you do it?' he asks..
'"'Sara,' says L . '
" • "'All right,' says he; to ahead.'
"Then 'I begin treatment, : In the past
year._ h. have removed' 'sets of dimples -
from men's faces that any woman of
their acquaint*ince.. would have paid
$100 for. All men with :money . to'
spend patronize'tkie' beauty doctor more
shamelessly than: they used. to, put of
all the mfr "
sees ' tbey I h;
w e rm
y rfo ed
� p.
tb!' • ' there is none they:"iaxsist upon to stout
>t : ly' as' the. removal'. of `dimples."-Ez.'.
st change. •
"Counsels and Ideals" is the. title a1
Df:e,William Osler's new book, , Upon
the question ,of age limit of man's util-
ity. the. physician whose views on this
subject provoked so.•mtich discussion
last winter says in his book:' •
"When a man nor watt' nor honey can
bring home he should, ill the interests
of an institution, be. dissolved from the
hive to give more laborers' m. ' I
too
would urge the olinieal'physician as he
travels farther • from the east to Took
Weil his compantonr to. see that they
are not of.•his own age and generation.
. He must walk •vith the 'boys,' else he.
Is Irrevocably lo,,t. I would not, have
IF
:revocably
basil plant to feed on the brain'
of the bright young men who follow•the
great wheel up hill, but to keep his
mind receptive,• plastic and :•impression-
able he must travel with, the .mea ,Who
are dots
d g tits work of• the world, the
men between the , ages of twenty-five
and forty." • '
l'lere is .some of his advice to stn-•
dents' • •
"Throw
A
'
away, in ,he first 'place, all
ambition beyond, thatof doing• the
day's work -well. As to the method of
work I..have a single hit of advice:
Fake no thought for the morre'w; itva
neither in the past nor• the future, but
let each' day's work absorb your entire
energies" . o • .
On the way .men die the dootor
wtdtes: .
"As a rule `man dies as he has lived,
unint ueuced, 'emetically; by thought of
a future U. l`�,itave•careful records of
about 560 deathbeds, studied partteu••
larly with reference to the modes of
death and the sensations of the dying.
Ninety suffered bodily train and. dist
tress of some° sort or another, eleven
showed mental. apprehension; two posi-
five terlbr, hne expressed si irttual ex-
altation and one bitter renlorse. The
great majority. save. no sign encs way
or the other. Like their birth, their
death Wali a sleep .and forgetting,
Ttte preacher wad right: Xn this matter
RUM- "hath ata pi's-eaddnence -Over-11a
beast.• , As one ditlth 10 dleth the
trig" °•
,' Watchesv •on Board 'Ship. '
• On board all 'eh ips aseries of"watehea"'
are established, so that work is' shared
equally among the sailors. To• aid this
'object also' the crews are' -,divided into
two divisions, sta'Rboard:•and port A
:•ship's day • commences• :at' noon, and:
there are seven watches. • -The , watch
which is 'on duty in tlie-'forenoon: 'one.
Jay has the afternoon nezt.day, and
the' men who have four hours' rest one
night have eight' hours the next.. This:�
is the reason.ferltacingl`dog watches,"
which are; made by dividing hours'
between 4 P. m. and 8'p. m. into two•
• Rheunsatiem acid Ti*tt.
'The discovery of a remedy for rheu-
matism by' means of tan ; was acct=
dentally made by ;em tanner of 'Min.
Wurttemberg. One day, be fell,iuto: one
Of his'ottil .vats, and, as no o e was
near, he had to remain. in the` tanning:-'
lfgnidl for .aver' halt, an hour.• When
:rescued he found,' It is said, tb 'fill.
rheumatism had entirely•left him.
then. .turned doctor 'and treated 1
tneans of a system called electrotanno•
•thekapla.
•
i'•
•
no tt4:sing..
Marryat-You don't believe in di-
loreI've thea?' 1lft;gley-No, sir; T ve got..
�too • much . dportin' ,blood; Marryat;
• What' has that to do with it? Mugley
ILL I believe: in a fight to the'fnlsh.
A Wein. aa's Way.
i -
lad ill What luck did yon have in thq
last race? Maud --None• at all. I back-
ed all the horses .with a .pretty name,
.: but I -didn't find the winner.-tlfustrat..
Itis.. .
sucr
I.
ass.. Foliow'tng Failures.
We believe that nowhere Is the man
who has failed, without impeachment
P nt
•of his integrity, more sure of encour•
(geement and assistance' than here,
iblowheere is,there a snore general, and
, more active wiflingnessto lend' a Help.
ing hand to one who le down and i9
struggling
to get on
bid
t@et again,
,
Certainly In 'no country is It single
failure ue
so seldom
ace
CPtd.
e as Seal,
t
,
ands in. now) are there so tnnny ins
,'.stances of successes'tollowing failures:
• • The nee oath '
"That beeline' of yours, Ltacy,"' said
the man of tilts loose, "Seemi to be It
pretty tough fi ah. wteh,"
"'peed he is, ' sub," rooted the col'
oted maid, "Be Ps! uatchelly deems
to he die white sheep oh our' tambly,
•$iter 'nCtn' r
Her. 'Coaltak
1tA on•--
rvb .
tters CVbat
Yb
t it. had
toll a I.. three touter* cooks n d8 1rAonths? bits.
Gatt reettt Y , and 11 didn't please
Men it 'thein..
e
Lslbil!' Ia the inevitable lit atthe
rilled te belt edMr(tdYl
is
'titer' dill* Will cake thole allbor Ino11t
t!der.4 . y Prou•d*
Ode's Cordis Root Compo
Ladies' Favorl
Is the only sato retain',
regulator on w 1
can depend: "In i'
and time of need."
- ` Prepared In two
strength. No. 1 nn�-
No.4.-For ordinary
Is by far the beat
media, a known.
era 2-•Eor special cagy --10 daggite
er-¢tBtee dollars per e. rz
k gour',ciortg tit for
eYleekoil, fAtoo# •r}onipotun . d'ake' -• •
t 81Iis,,,res anti Nitta +so
� were iva 1 OM No, it
reavateRRYARRINI by UM arnattts'v to the .
.veideuts at e'n.,l 18t. a heli to any addL�EfS
ct d�And your :t -cent host
ori; coompanv, ,
rail ulsor.,ue ,
• No.1-and No. 2are-soltl'1H'Clinton In
H. 11. Oornbe, J. E. Hovey and F. W
Watts, Druggists,
' SO YEARS'
EXPERIENCE •
TRAbE MARKTs •
DESIGNS
CalaM
Rlc HTt1
Anyone rreti lite a rkk a
K et it on reeert Eton rnat
'err Ckl 9 rt tl
I y tin re s i en r to a pp
0 1 n lA a intoner ° rrivantlnn in proitaUiy 0 hie ta c�� 1'nnTmnnit'�a•
f4n4antrlel?veonfdonit xnataOB00K omPatente
sent free. r:aeon.rtaency for eeearingg�ripatente.
Patents tauett through Munn St co. receives.
mpei'tat nottct, without charge, in the
$Cle t i
A;plindernestrilln,nrafndwetatiyy, .rater kyr
.•rrt 1••u of buy aetentlfln iournnl. erns,, 0 n
4,r'erfour months, 01. Sold brats rearndreiter;+,,
ei. V' :Wink,
•
Londesboro: Emporium;
JAN.2fith,' 13011...
.\Vc can supplyyou wu tl' . a.: new' S i.,
P Sewing Maculeeither
i
lV,L ii ;and Or a a
Y.�j? ,t 13.
')'hese are amongst the: best MVTechites Inc family- o
We have a largo stockShoes, use. Call .:kinds
e of Rubl7ers;. l3ools:ind'suitable for all.; kinds. of .
•` tve,,.ther. ;Try there..
We are well iii 1ied..with Paten
need,call pp ' t Medicines, of all the leading lines, . When in
thisway. •
We are always well supplied with a first-class stock' of Grocerie `••
sit lowest_possible prices:. s. Which we sell
Lon.'x.fcu .et -'about ' •
g . aux• Plaut, -Salt, Coal -Oil, Machine --Oil and :Separator Oil.:..
Adams
`ries ail' " , aye stunt efts '
ey ? Our
, make your bens lay, n arks Panacea in stock. It will
Highest price for Butter and Eggs, in cash or trade,
.Dried Apples• a per lb,
1t1)REl#T /GL LIME,
General Merchant. Ctl►1'ST.iZtGE
Clinton Sash, Door, and
Blind Factory, t
This'faatory is the laegest in the co'"` tiii q,, and has the very 1ateat improved Ina
chino
yy, oapable of doing work on the shortest morias, We oarry an exttrneiye
and reliable stook and prepared plans, and give estimatas for and build ali• I s---
es of baiiiingt on short nodes, and on the closest prioes. All work is • impair-
ed in a maahsnioal way and sstisfeatIoe gusrenteed. We sail alt :kinds, of. is
# ,it terior and exterior materiel. g -
N it er, Coat , , ace,, Mum Sub: emits,, Winds, . Ete for the Celebrated GRI? EMG SOIa,�U 6 to
;at 'stades. Q&II sal eii pant aid esusnityt bat a pl iiayai bnr ori , aaaot ra
S.S Y
• ' : O �� O ln'toij
T
.h�
•
1-invey's Bakfng Powder, per lb.,. .2,,5c
Hovey's ('!omne.ponnd Syra;i'of Vtrhite
add colds., 4 oz. bottle foe tae
i3 ivey's Beef, Iron and Wine, for .
titanic and strengthening
rned,eine, . . ,16 ox. bottle 75e
liovey's Compouad loon Pills, 50 in
a box.:. , 25c; 5 boxes $1,00
•
•
34E
Ilovey's Eril.ulston Cod 'Aver Oil
and Hypophosphit -e, . 50%
. pure Norway Uii, *lade by
our ' own receipe.' Nnue •
other; just as good' 16 oz,
bottle :"75*
Hovey's .Cocoa Cream, Dream of
fi_' Witch t[azetatid Qreahn of
Violets, for.;chapped bands,
etc.„,* per bottle tae:
O VvY
•Dis ensin :Chemist
! and Druggist
F•EB.RUAR•Y FURNIY:URE SALE
28
• Desk No 509, Beautiful finish:
t
r:.c.
drop leaf and letter boxes, regular
pric $7 5P,Sale pr�ce ., w•�,:'� ; .�: "_:,
Desk No. 4$, •solid . uazter-cut
Oak, regular' price $.01.(1Q; Sale
Rprice' $3.Q0
Other.', stiles at prices fioni $$oo
B
J..1 (fl
1,Ew
. , . Y Td
1.
•
1. s
sea •
This 1S
Interest t
You
F
'Cutters : ,and 'Sleighs ;
First-class Cutters and Sleighs'at
reduced 1 'p
. pr res,: •
Repllirh g promptly atteHde("tA .''.
Rumball;MeMatn
f
•Hurof .Street., Clinton,
�`0'``'���.�� ,T. ''�P'•��.gi<.•p.. >.f�y�•wO"4.y,:.tr:o� • �Y��.
int ,T• ,4 ""PP,. .y. .�'.!' `i,• "7.A. e .�••,'.]l•f`,
'''a' New Crockery and Christmas Fruits 'IJP
vn Just '• Received. •'
We have just opened five crates of. beautiful Crocker i
ported direct frorn the ins )'' es
kers in England.-
We• a
and largest e rr
y
the afloat
res
g t assortments of crockery in the countyand. this lot
4r, contains the very latest and choicest patterns ad designs,. in
Dinner, Tea and Toilet Sets, and fancy China. -They are goods
you should see. We are selling theta at less than regular prices
New; Teas, Sugars) and Canned Goods.
Wedead inequality, quantity and• prices in new Fruits,
Teas,
Sugars, g , and (:tinned'
(,roods. .Call and get prices,
TEAS 'Black, Geeen and' rapan, WO:8011, the beet 25c Tea in
.' town. •
'J. mt.. Irwin.r4.t yid j,. r1`e Y�Y
Features
Connected
with this
Closet
which make
IT'S
r superior
to anything
IN THE
MARIE?.
, .I)hlyT,A IIIT,I7' ',-y It is adapted to Inivats resfdellOes, public build-
ings,Ylhotel5, sLltciol house. ni. irl uhitmer re-ct.rts,
1'OIL7' lIlIT,1T It ertth 1rt71sistccd in hcs sttti'd o e iiitr ; kssitl soot
or outside kitchen, of in any pines wberc there is a fltle of cilfmney..
ROONOMI(! J, T1; ''requires In; diainfeetaft,,,..'tie strong currel
of air:passing through it, daring accumulation, carries oils all otiose.
I+T1t:. Is only nerr.snt once in
fifteen or twenty
da s,
whenUsed
hy'1t f. 4411,y .of ,t from four to --- members, to liters it out. ;
4,.►•a.. ::, ,.,, a..• �.,.-«.^i.::.�.,,.r:..tl.FY,lc%.:.NG:siCYa.AarsaVrwwuluYi
+A.ri'LIUA" I;ON. -1 nor villages or toWni, 'li'ilere leis is netverage
it'ends the career of,tho filthy. uuheaitlhy, uncomfortable, out -door affair,
,which more titan any other single agent, has been responsible fir
both disease and death..
The odorless reNito � and General Hitiilllg Ce).r,r
Hiamilton, Ontario.