HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1906-02-23, Page 3MIK imeaemattrems
• M C.
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2314 1906
1
I
CEYLON TEA
Stimulating, Refreshing„ Delicious,
Lead packets only.. 25c, 30e, 40c, 5oc,. and 6oc per lb.
At All Grocers. $lack, Mixed,'or Green,
IIGHEST 111ili R'J ST. LOUIS, 19021.
LOG
•
•
•
Afteleidkig BOBS Wailed
Highest prices paid. •Fjm• logs
especially 'rea hired
STAPLETON SALT WORKS
Et. & J. RANSFORI)
FUNDS WANTED EOE JNVESU 1NT.
Investments can be had for a ;limited
amount of private funds at current rates
W BRYDOi17E •
NOTICE 10 CREDITORS:.,
In the matter of the Estate of Alex. Osbaides-
ton. late of the Township of Goderich, in the:
County of Huron, yeoman, deoeased.
Notice is hereby given, pursuant to R. S, O.
Cap. 129, Sec. and amending acts, that all
pp
persons having claims evilest the estate' of.
the said Alexander Osbaldestou, who died ori
or about the 27th day of December. A.D., 1905,
are required to send, by post,• prepaid, or to
deliver to the undersigned Executors, on or
before the 18th day of March, 1906, their names,
addressee and descriptions, and -a full -states
ment of particutare of their alaims.and the
nature of thr seourity (it any) held by them,
duly eertifled, and that after he said day, .the
sets f the will proceed
tdistribute aes entitled
thereto, having regard only to the claims of
which theyshell then have notice,
Dated th6th day of February,1906. •
ALEX.OSBALDESTON }Exacuroxs
JOHN RAITTRBY,
RIDOUT & HALE;
••" . Agents for tho Executors
•
NOTICE 7'O t'ItEDZTORS
• In the Matter of the Estate ofArthurC Conch,
tate of the Town of (Minton in the County'
of Huron, Butcher, Deceased,
Stat tes oftice is hOntbario, Oapursuant 2 . t38 Rand sa i I
amending sots that all 'persons having claims
against the estate of said Arthur 0. Conch,'
who died on or about the 22nd day of December
A.
D.1905, '105 are
re m r
r ed o
befog b '
q 1
A rrrat Year's Crop. •
An illustration of what virgdn boil in
Canada will produce the theft year after
being broken, up is given in a letter
tie a Wend by Mr, Craik, Saskatchewaih, a Scotsman who
emigrated to the Dominion last year,
M. Tannaltill . writes., ' "I started
hreaking'sod on the"19.th•of'May, ;1904;
had no crop to speak of in 1904. This
year, 1005, I raised 1,300 bushels of No.
1 wheat, 900 bushels of .oats that. weigh
40 lbs.. to thQ bushel; 140 bushels of
flax, 40 bushels of parley,'50e16ushels of
millet seed, 200 bushels potatoes. 250
• bushels turnips, 14.0. bushels Swede.
turnips, 150 bushels beet, and sufficient
onions, cabbages, peas; 'beano, carnets.
parsnips, eelery,' etc.,' for use dur'in
the season, I am delighted with the
country and the success I have made,
and the improvement In my health. I'
have 210 acres of land prepared for '
crop next year, I also .have 50 tons of
hay.for the winter, -and plenty of fine
straw 'Leith (Scotland) Herald,
'Tossed For the Seal.
A copper is a very trivial article, but
it Saved the township of Cordele • an
election this year. Them were Ilve
councillors,and it was arranged that
John Lerch and Jacob Miller should
toss lip, the winning roan to take the
eeat'in.council.. Wm, J. Pomerloythrov
up the coin, and down it carne, bring-
ing with it Mr. Miller's . electron to
council. Mr. .Lerch took his defeat like
ieli n and allowed Mr. Miller to take
Use seat. --Walkerton Broods Thom
s:.
Nou •
g
r
ishin Blood
TELEPHONE'S INVENTOR.
MraMTersi He`* Det rntined to Heuer Its
OfstfnSybheft •mons AteXander Gras •
ienin $.IJ -Witt greet Mun*riat,
Brantrol"d;-4a4- doterMined--Lar set s.
Shod *VAMP 4 to thee, cities that wait
to h WV ** diselagutahed trop Until he lar
deltet, The townie recognition of Aleite
soder GrabslU Bell'ss services to hu-
Manity in Wending the telephone will
Ince the I haps Of 1R, memorial to be.
*tented thane time title year. To ar*
wive detalle has been
tt a d. The .chief attention to he de-
cided is whether the memorial should
be to Prot. Bell or to the telephone. The.
bitter would include recognition of the
Inventor and the 1,oriiner automatic
Syetern, the most important improves
Inent made in the telephone since Prof.
Bell made the first igvention, It has
been suggested that the old Bell pro-
perty at Brantford should be bought.
and maintained ao a park. Whatever
form the memorial Sall take, it may be
taken for granted that it will be worthy
of $rantford and the illustrious-
venter.
. Began as Voice Specialist.
The outstanding feature or
Beira invention, that which differe
&tes his work from that of Edi
Marconi and otherS,is that he be
not as an electrician, .but .as a
speeialfet. In this respect he rese
Signor Garcia, the famous singing
ter, who invented an invaluable device '
tore examining _the throat, Alexander.
Graham Bell's father and his grandfa-
ther before' him had made a speeded
. Study of sound and speech, and one is
tempted to remark that his wonderful
talents were inherited. But as a man -
Inherits chiefly from his- mother and
S her father, it would probably. be more
acientificato attribute the bent ox his
thoughts to environment rather than to
heredity. Alexander Bell, the grand-,
father, was the inventor of a system
to remove defects of speech, and Alex.
ander Meh ille Bell, the father of the
'inventor of the telephone; was the au-
• thor; of "visible speech," whereby deaf-
mutes could be `taught to speak.
WhetrrHe Came to Canada,
The future inventor of the telephone
was born in Edinburgh, in 1847, and as
his people were gentlefolk, they were
able • to give him a first-class educe;•
tion, 21rst at the High school and Inter
atthe 17niversity • of Edln'burgh, At
the age df 2(ihe left to continue his '.
studies at London, blit ill -health caused'
him to ai?ondon his plans. It was in
to.'
Canada, and bought a place at. Brant-
ford, the house. and grounds that it is
now proposed to convert into a city
park. Here it was that the first 'real
telephone :in the .world •was given
practical test, and it is on the strength
of this epoch-making experiment that
Brantford claims thethe
proud title of
Telephone 'City.. Bet while Canada is
propertly considered the birthplace of
the telephone,. the 'idea aitself was con-
ceived some year's—Before the' Bell .faro-
ily came.to this Country. Before 1870
s
n Engiand.and Scotland of his hopes
a
4
Just. -when -the -idea $ratotlick deantte
Prof.
raleSon,
gin,
voice •
moles
mss -
Means Strength
Ton Are Pale and 'Weak Because
Your Blood is Thin and Weak
•
•
1870 that he,'and his' father came
of March, A. D. mato •+end by post' prepai I > _'_ - ,
or to deliver to W. Brydone; whetter for the ' There Car, �„ , „ such thing as health.
Executors, their names, addresses end'deserip- ) wlthdut puke rich' bloody -no .s arklin
ons, and a -full statement-of-pestieulars-of—eyes;clear-skin, or-aetive-dor ' , g
t errclaime and the nature f tit ain.
The very foundation of health and
strength lies in' the` blood; which .must
'hehept freefrolnpoisons and im uri�
ties, n_...
•.,Nature has no better bided me
eine than Dr. Hamilton's • Pills , which
r. a
Bolioitor'fortheExectttors.'i tare :eoanposed .of aiicii yetetabie ex�
HELFN COUCH lExeautore tracts as mandrake and butternut,
JAMES STEVENS r known to all doctors f'or their. prompt
.
and healthy action.
• If you would drive out ':disease and
o e securir y
if any held ladythem duly certified, sted that.
ter the sal day the exeoutor will proceed to
istribute _tee assets.. of. the ;deeea$ed._ an
lS
the Dartl& entitled thereto, havingrear y
the claims g only
of which they shall then have
n Sep.
L et ed this 30th day of January. 1906. •
W.• BRi'DONIC
1
rn 51
One 99>
bone,2 miles from Qoderieh and 9miles,from er, brighter„and enjoy keener a _ e-
Clinton, 1 mile from Village of Ben •1 1 fife, $ 7= pI?.
p g p and hen house, a „ ..,,'s
good large frame `dwelling, with ten rooms 2'� Before using Di~, Hamilton's• Fills,'”
thread wells, fences in geed state of repair. 'writes Miss Edith E Phelps of Wood,
to maple orchard, fa 1 and winter fruit. pale istless, n1 e
about 8 acres of bush. Thi• is a first-class fruit color 'was ye1101V;: and .nay appetite
and stock farm., ,
Farms for Sane 1 increase your force and vi
gor, -take Dr,
Hamilton's Pills. You will
care farm in the Township of Col- , feel fresh
mi er, ools. «
Post Office; daffy mail; churches and schools. ' `s'"t!•rr=-r
There is a good, large bank barn. buggy house, ' SHE WAS PALE AND' LISTLESS=
implement Soueo' i en
ere are about 1s acres of pear orchard and 28 stock, "I Was '•a'nd listless,
ores of l
fall plowing. rawly ail don- very poor, To -day -I am a diiterent
and five acres of wheat; half of farm is seeded' girl, weigh
down. Possession can be had my time.: WWI f r , more, look better; and
y eel:impro� ed'irr every svay'
Also a farm of 180 cares adjoining the by of use Dl,_ $a]]ail ton's,. ton?
' --
farm ; a large, good stone house, frame barn, . O'
eabove
you'11.get thatlzeart bracing health
horse stable, large sheep and cattle shed, and$ that ih.ousa17d5 and thou
larse spring near the h use with milk house's Saying because the used ands are eu
thereon ; spring mine titsougli'farm•to Maitland +. y this.. famoue
River. Several acres of bush; farm over half medicine, ' Price 25c per. box, or five
seeded down and in, good stats of cultivation. boxes,for' ea00, at all dealers. or N. C.
with some 7 acres of good orchard thereon. Polson & Co., Hartford, Con. in, U. S
This farm is known as Cherrydale Farm, and on
t
A„land Kin s, Ont,
•
has 18 sores of fall wheat Apply to,
MRS. MARY WHITE, Benmiiler, Ont, i
Ooic's Cohan Rohit Compo(,
Ladle. P'avoir11teah
Te the only
ctan de
prenodn• � , r
time of need.”
epared into ) (.
1
strength. gt Nai
No. 1. --For ordinary. '
4s by - far
the
best
media, to known.
2—e specie! ears -..-10 rl t '
F'o".s-, ,.
f+—ibree dollars per rime
-sail your druggist' llroro egst for ' ,
Hoot final hizi J.
I>b Take
�t
-"Wee pnd (Mit
ad.......
nd o. E are Ana in the
Mellen to any
and four 2 -cent p�
vuou company* i y
'Wllndsar, oast ;
No. I an) No.2 are sold in Clinton los '
1-1 13 Oori h
e J. E. P. •• i
n' Havey and I', ts4 ,
Watts, Drhegists. , I
i'
The Great . Bes. of Ware..
In Shakespeare's "Twelfth" :Night'"
Ilfir Toby 13e1ch urges. Sir Andrew Ague=
cheek to pen a challenge and to pitt In
It "es.many lies as wililie in the. sheet:
of peper, althouge; the sheet. were .big
spoil for.the '"•
bed of War
e. This
enormone bed, which was'a'wonder.in
llhakespeare's time .and stili exists' in
Ware, is seven feet six Inches High and
.ten feet nine 'inches square, so that
twelve people can lie comfortably in It.
Beautifully carved, it is a splendid
spocimen of antique furniture, dating
from . thr days of Queen Elizabeth.
Thio wonderful bed is naturally an ob-
?set ofcn l a
itY,and interest to
many
wisitori, • In the same room there hung
a pair of horns, upon wvbieh all stram.
vers forrtierly were sworn.
_ass 's'alle.,81Milleamemillelerelleffairellilleann.
7 -re ct t /r,� m Ceylon
One Pt -ice. -- 4
Frost Fender
Are Strang Ali Around
The laterals of a irrbat Fence are High earboit'No. .9 Hard Steel Coiled Wire,
thoroughl4t ga\ivanized•-thet can't ire broken until the strain reaches from ape to
saeo pounds, +
The stays are No.,7 or this Baine No h wire,
And the two wires are locked with the licit I.erka.
That braces the Tenet in all directic» es—en cluivtr anii dfagnnelle.
40,./
We are so sure that Prost lienees are the strongest and best drat we guarantee
to repair, free of charge, any fence that gots wrong. That's fair, i5'i't it/
Prost Wire Fences are for sale by
DVNCAN McD014ALD, 117th
J. W. HILL, S Lyru>,m � i► lit
ck' J. 3. r'iatci , ., .. , .,
Ite>t'tw'xlAtl~11l4i171`
W. Ii. STOGx3I I..I.,e r" ►yr`yar .
lexander Bell : had 'told some :friend
nil , dreams.,- and one of them was tit
el.ie� that he would some. 3 • invent
elephone
•The Boy I'nveritor..
•
4•1411+TTON ZEW B44.
................. .
..... ......... .
QUEER ENGLISH LAWS,
c.onsumption
g' There is no specific for
consumption. Fresh air,. ex-
ercise, nourishing ' food 'and
-
Scott's Emulsion will come
pretty near curingit, if there
is anythingto build on., il-
lions of people throughout the
world are living and in good •
health on one lung.
q From time immemorial the
doctors prescribed cod liver
oil for consumption. Of
course the patient . could not.
take it in its old fprm, hence
it did very little good. They
can take
and-` 'tolerate it for'a long
tune; There is no oil, .not
excepting butter, so- easily
digested and absorbed by the
system'as cod liver oil in the
form 'of 'Scott's Emulsion,
and that is the 'reason it is so
helpful in consumption where
its use must be continuous.
We will send you a
sample free.
ljj Be sure that this
Th
picturein e form of
a label is on the wrap
- pet of every bottle of
' Emulsion you buy,
Scott & Bowne
CLemists:
Toronto, Ont.
. fon; and;S5; all druggists
A STITCH IN TIME:
'Tires:but a rusty little matAnd `on`5,t hangs this tale,. •e
For on it sonic .one caught and -true.
The, -pretty new frock that she wore,
.But sense nue only tossed wn
her he.
"I'll ;mend it by and by," :she said,
Another hour in play was spent,;
And then the tear was quite a rent,:
e Alas, before the ,.day had flown
'
a The rent into whole had grows
So big that mother had. to spend
Quite half• a day 'that hole to. mend,.•
And• now that pretty frock' rile :were
Is not so pi•orty its 'before
shape Is not known. As a:boy he Ove.
taken one day -to' see' an `automati
talking machine, • 'a hick in a fen 'day
' he was able 'to.'successfully reproduc
As he grew• into manhood' his studie
in vocal physiology had advanced so fa
that he had ouneeived'the ''idea of fol
?owing. up 'Helmhoitz's synthetical' ex
periments.in , the reprodudtfon of speee
by ,electrical •transmission. Betwee
1867" and• 1870 h4 had Made ntimeroii
electrical discoveries of academic value
rand had' resolved to pursue the Study
of harmonic or multiple telegraphy to
a practical outcome. If at this :time he
had not in his mind's eye a- vision. of
the modern .telephbne'he knew 'at least
what he wanted, and..'thenceforth his.
experitnents were made 'with plan and
purpose.. „
1 , Forestailed'by Gray.
Al's multiple. telegraphic • invention.
ended,' p
in disappointment, for hisatent
was 'forestalled by' .Elisha Gray. This
was, in -1875,' and had it not been for
.words of ,encouragethent received op-
portunely about • this' time young Bell
might have grown disgusted, and left
the fame of 'inventing the telephone to
some other sclera*: As it•was, when
ire did file his patents for a telephone
on March 7, 187'6, he; was only me hour.
ahead of Gray, .who had •ivorked' out
the same idea on almost identieal lines:
So we see that even a selentist' cannot
afford. to' despise luck. ' His final tri-
.uiruph .carne after long experiments and
Investigations with phonographic ap•
-
paratus, human ear drums,. etc., car,
'reed on for 'the most part in 'Boston:,• with his. assistant, Me T. A. Watson,
tut investigator whose name 'should be
preserved. in • 1876 came the first
faint promise over the wire that the
experimenters were on -the threshold of
success. •
The First Telephone'
s
a result
Bell was able • to get
per, financial backing and return to
ntfcrd, to give his discoveries their
dab test. A wire was strung from
father's house to the house 'of the
, T. Henderson, And this was the
practical telephone line ' In the
rid. This was in June, 1875, and • q
ceforth it was a uestion of mere-
mproving the crude apparatus: The'
phone had . been invented. From
s to Brantford the first long dis-
ce. wire ,was strung in the same
year Two years later Hamilton instal-
the' first .commercial 'telephone, and:
world pang with the name of Alex
-
r Graffham' Belie, '.He 'is hale and
rty'ta-day, and can appreciate the
r :that Brantford will do her most
sus son. • -
s So recollect this iliyme of mine
h
.•
Wo
Acts of Porliamsnt Abound WitheAls
sttrdltiee—egxsmpiai Showing Mem,
here' LspeesIInto Ambiguity, .
The British Parliament can abolis
any institution in the country —tit
throne,. the church, the courts of jus
Lice—.and can ever •extinguish itself
"'It can do anything," said Lord Palm
-
Orators when Prime Minister, "but turn.
a man Into a woman or a wozua_ into
a man." But, adds 'a writer in Th
Grand Maine, it is often unable to
"make Sense"" of the statutes in which
it embodies its authority;
One of 'the ludicrou's enactments to
be found in acts of Parliament is the
statute for the rebuilding of Chelms-
ford Jail, The bill as originally drafted
provided that prisoners should be con -
lined in the old jell until the new one
was built, But in committee a clause
was added to the effect that' the new
prison should be construoted out of the
materials of the old, and the .bill be-
• came a law before anybody detected
this glaring ,absurdity.
When there is the "fifty..second of
George II., chapter 140,"' which enacts
that the penalty imposed under it shall
the e poor of veri half
the�parish.Wig`
After thel act
, had been passed it was discovered that
w ,the penalty which the act provides• is
t" nspeaol' 'lin aorstatute en Years; The
first intention was that the penalty
should be a fine of ZOO. On second
'thought Parliament substituted a term,
of penal :Servitude, but It forgot to omit,
the clause providing tor the' division of
the spoils between the King and his in;
digent subjects.
Again,: the Darlington improvement
act of 1872 has .a "definition" which it
would puzzle the most astute lawyer',
to explain. It reads, "The ' term •.'new
building' means any building pulled or
burned to or within ten feet of the sur-
face of the adjoining ground,"
• . Such mistakes are. due to cl_imsiness
'or carelessness. Others as amusing
arise ,from the use or misuse 'of teeh-
nical language, 'Even the lay member
• tries to copy the jargon of the lawyers,
and the result frequently is that he
o confuses every one,' including hlmself, .
'One amendment proposed by such a
. member was worded as_follows; ."Every
t dog Sound trespassing on•inciosed land
k unaccompanied by the registered•own-
. er of such dog or.other •person, who
!shall on being asked for his' true name
•ah'.ad
d dress , may be then and he
Y ..: - a d t re de•
1.
• stroyed by such occupier or by. his or-.
• 'ders. But .this gem of.'meaningless'
rhetoric was not passed, "
Peers or the 'realm as' well as the
humble commons are• not abovd laps-
fug into ambiguity. A certain noble
lord .in committee on the agricultural .
holdings bin put 'down this startling
notice: -
To ask'the doverinnent whether they
will Consider the practieahility" of•. in-
troducing some provision for' alleviate .t1(
in 't eg rear hardship w. . 1
g,. h. g., h p no. Auffered by!
the:family.of any clergyman if be' dies
while . occupying .bis glebe; as many
I
c ergymen have, Lately found'tttemselves
• r&luctaiitly compelled. to de. •
h
e
•
0
The
- Phrases p'rpm Scott and, Other:s,. .
f—Sea tt'c poAul i i t � fedi
people remember that from "Old \ior
tality'. We have "A seaof upturned
1ivr.:' r ve i. nke, fo
1 . "Flesh and blood can't bear it." The
":Most hum-,rou's • and feast exemplary
'of British `parsons"' is itnown to •hate
thought "They order things better. in
France". and "Godtempers the wind to
.the shorn lamb,.,.,
but we seldom credit
" ltim with "I'; Fav theiron enter into
his soul. Yet 'that,. keen "image of
,• .grief, so ,Often. oil our lips, may also be
found in the ' 'Sentinlenta1. 'Tourney:"
4 --Cowper is comparatively -talo read,, the
immortal "John Gilpin" always' except-
ed.• Therefore we may be forgiven if
the source of "Hand and glove" 0i' "Her
1• dear 500 friends" has,elipped, our mem-
oriesa .The :same may be said of Rode
era ' t'To know her was to :love . hers"•
C.angreve's ."Married •in .haste and' re-
pent at leisure," Farruhar's "Over the
hi]ls and far away" arid '' S'outhey's,
"Mareh of intellect. Sir Philip Sidney,.
'who was poet, philosopher and, best of
all, hero, shsruld share a better fate.
Hove many: can tell that it was he who •
first said in English; "God helps those
v."ho help themselves?"—Cornhill Mag-
azine.
that a stitch in time saves'nine.
a ' Advanced Ramona.. ..
According do the Mohammedans of
:southern, India,. pulverized .diamond !fi
the :least painful, the most active and
n the most certain ef'all poisons:• &e+.
s - cording : to "Wijke's H'latory," . the pow
der of diamonds is kept, on` hand -(by
the,'wealthy only presumably) as a last
resource. .But a belief in the poison•
ous character of the diahnon:d • also ex=
fated in Italy in the sixteenth eon.
A
pro
Bra
cru
his
Rev
first
wo
then
IyI
tele
Peri
stun
led
the
and
hear
Bono
tam
Substitute For Cellulin ,
An Austrian chemist, Dr. Zirn,-ha.ts
invented a process whereby casein, the'
essential element 'et **Beare • and tout-
ter, may be 'solidified and Shaped into
the various articles that are how made
of celluloid. It is said that.: this ` new
rrednee possesses many advantages
over celluloid, it is not inflammable,
So that the danger faint -fire sometimes
encountered in the use of artielea made
of eeliulofd is entirely avoided. The
new industry" is now being , developed
at Surgeres, 'France, one of the . great
centres -for .themanufacture of butter
and (theme.
d'4
A Seotchman who canis to Calgary
last year with $7.000, invested most of
it in farm lands twenty miles north of
Calgary at SO 50 an • acre, Re sold out.
his entire holdings. this winterfor $12
tin aero, and is reeking around for
another opening. This 500tchinan is
firmly of the opinion that the ,Calgary
district is a'Vel'a guid deestriet.
tury. •
Yellow •Fever.
There 10 a marked peculiarity: about
- yellow fever, which distinguishes it
from' most epidemics. It is essentially
sdisease of a hot climate, and it takes•
a Certain amount and duration of heat
to awaken it to life, It is said that it.
can never prevail .where' Indian 'corn
•will not ripen.
• The Poor Poeta.
"Poets are born, stir," said the bard
to the editor. •
-"Yes, I know they' weren't batched
from duck eggs," answered the editor.
"Put the question is, Why are they
born?"
i
•
• Wanted Her Reformed,
Mamma—Why did yeiu pray that God
h I'
a ou d stop your. sister 'from' telling
6tories7 Small Son -.Because she prom.
lied me she' wouldn't tell that I took.
the cak
• ea, and she did, tell.
There are more talkers than think.
ors. -Here..
you .have the solution of
gbeirip. ' ,
%..
SECURI'
•
Cenuihe
A Family Mix Up.
This 'always seemed to' me a very
funny story:
I married a widow who had a grown-
up daughter,, • My father visited us et,
ten, fell in love with mystepdaughter
and married her, .Thus lie became my
son-in-law, and toy • stepd"aughter be -
cam
came mymother, titer because c
ruse she was . MY'
• • father's wife. Soon after this my wife
gave birth --to a sin, which of course
was my father's 'son-in-law and my
uncle, for he was the' br8.ther of thy!
Heli -mother, My' father's ,wife also be-
came the mother of a son. • lie was of
course my brother .and 'also my grand..
i child, for he was the•scin of:lnyr daulrlt-
1 ter. Accordingly , my' wile was my
1..grandmother•, ' bec-atise . she - was shy
�.
ili• mothers mother.I tt•r< 1 iv � •+ �•� a:
t � .f, tt
land and grandc i ,e.1 ;ii (we.p) and. a•'
the husband of a iirr=:rn s grandrnua]iei
. is his grandf't'h",r: T hoesine iii ' ,owr
e7 l
ra
nc
iftier. -••:
.lie
a":ui:u •.
� r � Ui 'Fun.
_.___
•
Rents fr. a Crowded City.
Paoli is about the Walk '
great i;itylp
the
world where household rents are
as nnich affected by overcrowdlpg as
in New York, Yet in the French capital
697,708 people hire apartments costing
less than 897.3ta year; . 114,798 pay
ff• less than 819,4,66 and more than 897.33. •
Only 62,406 families liVe in apartments
• , Costing more than $16.22 a month. Only
1 .17,020 pay over 8178.64 a year, • • .
]• 'shat is net very much:like New York.
Yet Parite Was the birthplace of the
"flat" idea, The first apartments built
Sia New York upon the now. familiar
m el' w e ca ed " en fin
Carter's r-
iattleLiver Pills.
Illlust_Uethr SfBnattare+, of •
ram
• See Fsc.$im11e Wrapper Below. •
'Biel' send' and ae e11.117.
Wrtake as s agar
FOA SIMMONS, :
FOR buurfftms&
roa suousftat.
reit tafrtplatittlti
�fl Cdflt$TfPATTOIt
hat SALLOW AKIN.
f a� THECAMPIt owl
istinetee Winn
ARTEI $
Profanity. •
A correspfindent writes to the St,
Thomas newsiiaOeess complaining of the
use of,,profanrty on the public streets
there, It is used as a matter of course,
just "as if it 'Were logittmate • Ian-
guage." There may be some excuse for
letting tall a "cuss" word in the heat
df: paseiain,•hitt there .10 Ilene 'ter `Mese
Who habitually use profane language
in' their daily conversation. Its..use is
a sign of vttlgarityr and .ignorance, and
the wonder is that decent people tole-
rate lir
Indian Population.
The annual report of the Indian De-
'pertinent "has been (eiltued. It shows
that the Iridian ptlpnlatiefi of the Dom-
inion for 1905 was 107.637, compared
With 107,938 for 190.4,
2n Ontario 20,850; Quebec, 11418;
N1oya Ocbtla,1,993;New Brunsw�lck,
1,199;, Prince' i dwstrd /eland, 238; Brit-
Ish Columbia. 25,142; Manitoba, 0,870;
Northwest Territot;iee, 17,493; outside
treaty Unlit,, 2,284; teete.107,127,
•
•
�.
00
rc4.ance tOmr
$hgaRcaed WOW' t Cbtary
Have you got the notion the hard for a boy to make
money after school hours? If you knew how thousands
of bays snake all. the Money they need by a few bourn'
easy work a west, wouldn't you jump at •the chance of
doing it yourself i' Therels no.. secret about it; -,these
boys sell . . •
THE .kiss ; T AT
E.VENING
POST
Friday afternoon and Saturday. Some make 4I a.week:
All make someti'ring •depends on the boy. It won't cost u,
• a cent to ito' anyway. you,
+ Ask us to send you the complete
outfit for starting in business, and 16 free copies of The Post.
Sell these Posts at the copy, and with• the•00 you make
buy further'supplies at wholesale price. Besides theofit m
p .:. ode
on every copy we give prizes when you have sold a certain
number of copies, Further,
$250. in , Extra Cash
Prizes
each month to boys who do good work. Your chance of getting
some of this money is just as good as that of any other• boy who
sells The Post, :•
' The Curtis Publishing Company,'r . et..... _elpli
.. 9 425 Arch Strut, Rhilsdelpdis, Pa.
The Mat4srriant
who aims t the .a he whole target will seldotn.hit the
gcentre;•..
The Forest Cit : 'Business and Shorthand College
nndon, s
ecializes alongevery ''
P e, e y line of Business' and,
Shorthand work. { ,
as succeeel in`
satisfying tiotTi Ehe stucl� atia.r
business.. men employing the• raduate
Has. the' largest attendance
g' of any school in••>fhe+
'. West.
Catalogue for a postal..
School term --Sept..' till7 une .inclusive.
tic
K
K
is
C:c
K
K&K K& K KiK K&K K &i'( K8,•K
BLO.OD POlSON.
.
On account of its terrible effecti, blood disease is called the king of all r•ieaees,
Itmay be either hereditary or contracted; eo while it may not be a crime'to have
the disease, it is a crime to permit it to remain in the system. It may manifest
Itself in the form of Scrofula, Eczema , rhenivatic pates, . stiff . or' swollen joints,
sore hereaese takin, eruptions
or blotches, ulcer* in the mouth or on: the tougiie{:
falling , sordered stomach, stud da general
the's, n sal depression/3f
semg
y i If{
ouha e•
no time to tome. Bewarany ofld fo�gqpyy" freatmmeut—bemara of mineral �Yppoisons
beware of Quacks and Patriot. OUR naw MGTHOD TRaATM7?ftrr
is guaranteed to cure this disease, never to' return, Bank Bonds will ' protect ou.
Our t
treatment is notinjurions in any way, but reaches the very root or the disease
and eliminates all poison from the syetem: The e m t
disappear. The . blood beccrees pure awl etrriched • the wit we hole io elleeadaed
and purified and the patient feels prepared anew for the. duties and the pleasures
of life. CURES GU&DAYITIaD OR ' NO PAY. Atf Years la,
Dstroit. 250,000 Cured.
COI/Sultana 'Free. ' "Question Blank for Home Treatment and Books, Free.
DRS.KENNEDY&
Oar. INIc1tban .hv er.'and Shelby St., Detroit, Niels.
K- K K t9c K K K K uc K K t'i R..
Many a case 'of
chronic Won-
hitis, Pneumonia and even dreaded Consumption itself,may be traced
directly to " only a cough." When the first cold comes, start in on
GRAY'S SYRJIP OF RED SPRUCE .• GUM
• • IT CTIRBS COT.7GBS— heals the infiemined surfaces --
strengthens weak throats — pitte the lungs in the strongent
possible condition to resist the trying 'effects of a
Canadian 'winter. .,
25c. IRO
IMMO
theater 2„
Arid 4 horse,.
It ag gag
tt Handy lihb. Frame locks to the
Wares combined 'With Cleaner Bart MO
pieties free of all Bode or trash. Nall leder.
rags. AO antafrietion bailer make draUght
very light. Flexible. Will fill furrows off
fit uneven ground, Platt% the correcti
shape, tunes and 'naiveties* the soil. Other
, Dieke and oultivators tested against the
Agents. Manutannuta by
T. BISSELL, ELORA, ON%
t'353 Write fel' Booldeb")3."
T. T. MIURPIllf; Loft! AgeA CLINTON.
tho Clinton New Era