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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1906-05-11, Page 3r, May. 1100906 Let UseSenu You thet,11,'"7". Q4v.rttmelnt Returns Showing Mode and R,labllltles In Tabulated Form. . Tho annual r'eeort of the Department Three. M. ..orithsoPP0FREE.. Three months' free trial for n)erelyThe Cosmopolitan, furthermore, has sending your ,name. Just begun one of the most remarkable No money -rib letter --nothing but exposes eve' attempted by a contenx- your address on the attached coupon, porary magazine. --+The Treason of the If, after three .months' triiI you wish Senate," by David Graham Phillips. to have the magazine stopped, merely tell us,- and the copies received will It will be strictly iin.)ossible, during cost you nothing, this series, for us to insure news-stand ' You are to be the e*elusive judge, purchasers a copy of the nnagazine,but • And there'll be no questoni3,no quib- bling, -nothing. We'll leave the decision all io you,.• If, after three months' test, you find you need the Vosmopolitan,let us send you the magazine for the full year. Remember, though, that'll) reading the Cosmopolitan, you are reading one of the oldest high -.class magazines pub- lished to -day in America. Such eminent and great men have in And that s why we Offen a three the past contributed to the reputation. 'months' free trial at our expense. •We of the Cosmopolitan as : President leave the decision entirely upon the Roosevelt, Mark Twain,President Eliot, merit of the monthly. JohnWananlak 'r, CountTolstoi,Henry Watterson, James Whitcombe Riley, If „You don't like the three months • tete. etc, received, you may stop the paper, and the copies received woe't cost you a The following list of e:'nlinent con- cent. tributors, taken from among a hundred The offer is clear, plain,• straightfo r - others -will indicate the remarkably ward, .,._ high standard thatwill be maintained You are to be the Orli b theCosmopolitcn dnririg 1906 -FIC -y judge. TION : Sir • Gilbert Parker, Alfred •; We are going to leave it all to • your Henry Lewis,Booth Tarkington. ART; decision. Frederick Remington, Ijenri Lanes, We do guarantee that all readers who Have, under this special offer, applied direct to the office for copies, will re- ceive regularly the magazine during this brilliant series of articles, - Be sure to read the most Scathing of all political exposures, 1• We thoroughly' believe that every intelligent reader will not only take, but actually. want .the Cosmopolitan, should he once see the magazine'itself, Frank Verbeck. SPECIAL Henry Wattersen, Edwin Markham, Elbert Hubbard. - No finer array of talent could possibly be offered than the list of Worldspeoia fists named -above. • • "Home" magazine is the key -note to the Cosmopolitan. In no. Sense is the Cosmopolitan' a small,eheap, is -page mail-order.month- ly.' - It is, to the contrary,a great 2,40 -page illustrated home magazine., '• Its editorial policy . aims at every phase of clean, wholesome home life. An abundance ot bright stories, full of fun, life and action, will interest • every member of the family, Topics of the day are treatedsanely, by experts of international reppute-pol- iticle reform, " international affairs, economies, social problems -and ahun- aired other timely.topicsb£ which every. intelligent man or'sveman, 'Inlet be in- formed. • The Cosmopolitan also affords: unus- ual advantages for the refining and •educative value of art, - Remington; Lams, Fegarty, Verbeck, are only a few of the masters represented. a• • •a Could anything be more fair? Fill out to=day the coupon below,-, place in an enveldpe-remail to us, and receive three. months' test free. But mall the ooupo>i•to-day-tonior- row will never come, COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE 1789 BROADWAY, New York, CO SMOPoLI TA, N.IMIAGAZINE 1789 BROADWAY, New Yonder I accept your liberal offer of three months' free trial subscription to the COSMOPOLITAN; as advertised in ; the If at the end of the three months I do not likethe mag- azine, I' will let you .,know and have the paper discontirlued,u'nderwhich conditions it is understood that the copies received shall •cost line nothing Otherwise you may send - me the CosafoPOL1TAN for a full year and bill bre at the regular' subscription price of one dollar. Write plainly, Name. ,,,..,.-,. Streeb. Cit „. :, S' State.. -„,w,,. ... .. ,• ce alms ot-s PLCPI BY FANNIE M'.LOTHROP: at lfywranoe has lust been issued at ot- tae►a, and ;Nes last year' business In voil and *re insurance in •Canada. Premiums received by Canadian life ineurence -Comptanies last year amount- ed to =13,947,827, an inerease over the previews twelve months of ;1,988,727. The amount ot policies, new and taken up, was $67,348,131, a .gain at $8,297,- 028, and the net amount in force $897,946,902, an improvement of $33.- 8016,786. For claims, including ma- tured endowments. $4,400,332 was paid, an ot¢vance of ;318,252.. Good Balance 'Total assets were. 8102,43.5,414, and total liabilities, ineludrn;; reserve, but not capital stook, $92,922,384, giving si3rplus • assets over liabilities, ex- cluding capital, ;9,466,930. Assets In - chide real estate, '$4.792,782; loans on real estate, $26,704,010; loans on c'iila- terals, $3,497,818; cash loans and pre- mium obligations on policies in. force, ;9,679,248; stocks,bonds and deben- tures, $49,918,985; ,cash on hand and in banks, 0,735,426; agents' balances and bills receival,le, $124,9$9; interest `and rents due . and accrual, $1,417,911; out- standing and deferred prc'ultums, 33,- 351,049; other assets, $306,226, . - What Liabilities Are, Liabilities 'include $766;786 unsettled. olaiins,'•' -;91,272,153 net teinsurane reserve; .$4,161,147 capital stoelc !mill up. Death claims reached and ;8,225,574 .was• paid policy ho.d. r.;, ;1,693,994 going In the. form of _divi- dends. Net • premium income, Includ- ing consideration for annui1les, aggr'- elated ;1.8,402,323. Total i'eceipts In gash. were $23,582,602, and totalcash expenditure, $14,162,052, giving $9,4$0,; 610 excess .of - income. Expenditure to the sum of $6,707,643 represented gen- eral expenses, and $218,834 dividends t,, stockholders, • . 'Fire Losses Paid. Fire losses paid .in 1905 were $6,- 008,467, divided as foll .ws: Canad'uu - companies, $1,4013,003; British,' $3,923,- 706; American, .$966,744, Ili• 1904 the Payments. were $14,099,534,. to whl,:h . Canadian cornpahtes: eontribtrut'd - 52:=- :661,l76; British, -.$0,172;919, and Amer!- - • can, $2,366;140r CANADA lee YEARS AGO, Whsle!!! Os Shoal Geography Bald .:pf- This 'Conatry YIw Th 1 g rrtb .ottrwoto, giv ng views •ie ws eitee-. tained .of, our great Northwest a -cen- tiiry,'ago, are taken 'front a book.,en- titled: "The Rudiments of Geography, by John Hubbard, Esq.''..-;Pub11shotl.-in • Walpole, `N. H,; in 1803; and used in the. scliog . of - Canada nearly a• cep- . tury. agti� " British Amoric n, • .New 'Britain. . -•'phis extensive country Is bntruded on ' the east .by Hudson's Bay -and the :fit lantie Ocean, eolith 'by the rtiV G.r' t - Lawrence and' Canada west by pasts Unknown, :and north by "'tli, ' 'polar glens." "Climate -The cold in New Britain 1:i' much more severe than in' any part of the eastern.continent in th}t same lati- tude; The: mountains,. iin the northern.. parts, are covered' with snow during -the-whole -year "River --This country abounds with .rivers; but the• rapids and Iee render • then;. incapable of- being navigated; 'except' with "Fane of the Country -and' .Sail- This country is censiderab.Iy diversified with mountains, plains; . extensive 'swamps and lakes. The mountains are not"high; but 'remarkably •barren; few exhibiting any •vegett%bte: pL ductibn's,: except inose, Tn passing, this dreary. country, we may •fr'eguentty . travel: 109- m iles ..without. 09miles_:witliout. eine a Angle tree.. In these: barren;traccts.the ground.ts, -coy • ereil.with a long moss; -e great partof the land -is covered withstones and: .-bar'teri.-bryond all power of etittivatton." 'Produotions-Thd only productions in this ..drearyregion are seine 'of' ,the most hard! Vegetal -plea, such as sorel,- angellea, wLI'd' tansey, 'etc. - The trees In,the for.,sts are.sriiall, consiattn_.g of fir, poplars, birch,, and willows. ..No kind of corn can. cotrie'. to - maturify here.'}. • Photo by Eltott,& Fcy, Londoli SIR GILBERT PARKER. The Greatest Canadian Novelist. A tall, well-built man, ,with dark hair,: closely trimmed beard, calm,: observant eyes, gentle, and with the ease and polish of a fine stock intensified by -the' Culture that comes from travel --=this' is Sir Gilbert Parker, Canada's great novelist. In the famous city of Quebec he' was born in 1802, the, son of ;an officer in the Royal. Artillery and the do scen a n t of many- nge >r ations of fi ghti ng men. It scorned ' natural that he, too, should woo the c anon, but he had his eye an the cassock' 'and was educated for:the church, .die was ordained' a deacon but his train of tliollght-was.,'switc.ied--off-the-cierical:..traei .when he began to lecture on English literature at Trinity •College, Toronto. • 1n 1886 he went to Australia for bis health, and as one of the editors of the • '' yducy Herald" had a roving commission -to study the South Sea Islands and their people. Itn .his three and a hull years in Oceatuca he broadened. in mind and grew more sturdy in body; he wrote and lectureilf became interested lathe stage` and with wide-open,e,c!s saw life under new conditions,. The literary harvest of this period was- an adaptation of txoethe's "Faust," produced in. Sydney, another play "The Vendetta," and two books of travel, Then he went to England, and his real literary genius had its first outcroppings in his works of fiction.. Itis remarkable_ short stories "Pierre. and his People,", opened up the literary Clark ecntt'.inont of the Iludson Bey country.. They • were fresh. crisp, vigorous . and virile tales; the field was new. the treatment masterly, the character drawing vital, real and sympathetie, and the open-air atnlospher bracing and tingling. as a cold=water plunge.They had the sante note ,of sureness, the same unquestioned - revelation of the mining of n treat writer, that marked the data, of Kipling in his " Plain Tales from the Bills." Most authorshave a special sentimental. fondness for their first-born, but Sir Gilbert bought bark and suppressed his first novel "'Phe •Chief Factor," after more than fifty thousand copies had been sold. Of his twenty or more books, perhaps "The Right of Way" has inspired most discussion and; added most to his prestige and popularity, This .famous novelist, journalist, lecturer, pr' f, dramatist ancj member of Parliament, lives in London, in the aristocratic .per!;, ions of C'arlton,Ilouse Terrace,' a t+heti, street closed at one.end. so that the rut .ole of traffic comes only like the surge of the sea heard at a distance. In a studyon the fourth floor Sir Gilbert dors his literary work, . Sileecss, which turns the heads of many of fortune's fav- orites, simply gives new poise, 'ease. and cdianity to others. Simple, strong and unaffected, Str Gilbert eerrnes with stn ulleon'- Ious grace the honors he so justly won. tsntered accor,1E:i (to Ae-tattht f. rhanicnt ,r-Cttttiia• itt..theu�S.0 tV _-.. _It„•artmanc - W a.m C Eraek se trie cr Agrictiltcy itacu_kx ne Not toe much, just *little, just enough to Start the bile nicely. One of Ayer"S Wake u, Pills at bedttle is till yeti need. `hceC pills or directly on the liver. They use eonstipstion, biliousness, dyspep- si t, sick.headache. Sold for 60 years. Olir Wer ■ l N4 r► retxetb, W bN lilt b CO, 'per the MMslrit,:. et ail err tnt�ieieb. Lowe); mug. On Thursday afternoon Mrs. 'tate Nnrthway of Windsor, Racustoms in. s - eetor, meet the arrival of the steamer Riverside at Brockville front O dens• burg, N. Y., and invited 681adies to her private epartniente, . all of whom were thoroughly searched, and many cotillscated. one lady had a nutiitbyer of enlal1 dashes in her etockEngrf !slid clothing. *'At a special meeting of the Winni- peg Fair Board it was decided to ask I'retriler Laurier to open the Fair, The Premiers of Ontario, .Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia will also be invited to be present. Personal letters of invitation will also he 'sent to the Governors of Minnesotf 1akata Michigan and YVVlsconsin to be guests of elle awSsl,ciritiri2l On Amoricaue1 Day, CLINTONnu . NSW BRA Miseralbie eeeptio 1 aPRA� IS JW t1 Certain Makers of Adulterated and Worthless I?ackage Oyes • Notwithstanding the unanimous ver dict of the world's most eminent .color chemists, that it is impossible to colon animal, wool and silk, fibres, and yt' e, table, cotton and linen, fibres with the same dye,'we find speculators who are Jealous of the World wide success of the DIAMOND DYES, putting up,. and offering for sale worthless package dyes which they represent will color any material with one dye. This cruel deception has caused serious lasses to many a home inCanad a, .t'he DIAMOND DYES, the world's leaders, give to the ladies special dyes• for wool and silk, and special dyes for cotton and linen and all 'nixed goods, guaranteeing perfect calor results.. • The ladies will insure and . pr•otef:t their interests if they avoid all mer- chants who sell the crude and worthless package dyes recently put on the mar- ket. In every case .ask for the DIA- MOND DYES, and see that each pack- age bears the. words, "DIAMOND PACKAGE DYES,” S, Please send your name and address to WEees Rwu- A1r•1)F3oN Go„ Lilnited;..Montreal., and you will receive free of cost New In- struction I3oek for Home Dyeing, card Of dyed samples; and story in verse en. titled The Longjohns .trip to the hlondyke," i News. Notes n The Department of Interior has cancelled a trumbsata mining calicos-- sions in the itn - 0 t"^+�e to - Frank Lattimore of Dunn vi11l7rRaas overcome with heart disease while making an arrest; and died im- mediately. • It is estimated that the immigrante • received by Canada this year will be 50 per cent more numerous than those of last year. The amount of Mand within the limits of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Al- berta voted to .railway companies is 66, s-:9,600 acres, -. • The Grand Trunk is asking a cash bonus of $300,000 from London, and it is thought the proposed improvements will be postponed. • • Rev:. George '.• Bend, editor of the Obristian .Guardian, has resigned, owing to. ill -health. He has been at a Guelph sanitarium for some time. It pours the oil cif life into your sys-. tete. It warms you up and • starts the li£e '. blood circulating. Thats what Hollister's Rocky mountain. Tea does. 35c Tea or Tablets. Ask your Drug-, gist ; The thrust of a lance does not hurt More : than the abdominal pains follow- ing the eating of improper food. Quick relief comes. wilt • the 'use of Perry y Marie Painkiller::: Always keep • it in the house.' "Oscar Edwards,. justice of .the peace fi-oui Sedley, Sask., was fined $25 and costa by Magistrate McCausland at Re- aiiia ler being drunk anddisorderly a s b re isords at city restaurant.. Hie companion got elf with a fine of $2• Whenever your bowelsskip li day Without a, movement-takea;LAZ ET. Whenever your breath is bad, --your skin waxy or sallow, your tongue coat- -your oat--your bre.ithfoul-take a..AX-ET only 5c, o c iy ._ ' - 1aeob Y. Shantz, fathei bf . the but- ton industry in Canada, celebrated his .84th birthday On Tuesday. Ile is a native of. Berlin, his parents having emigrated from: Pennsylvania. He is also well known as a promoter of Rus sian Mennonite emigration to,Mani- toba forty . years ago, when, without. assistance, he raised $192,000• to'bring 8,000 of thein to this country. Be -also founded Ilidsbury, Alberta, in the vi - crnity of which. tna,nyformer•\ Taterloo' county farmers have settled in the past ten years. • • Canada More- Generous Than t,. S. The Detroit 3'ourna1 says, editorially:. "The, first appropriation' of -the United States Corigress for the relief cL 'Sari Franelsai was one million dollars. Can- ada, which • has less than one -twelfth of the- population of •tire TJnited States and a still Smaller proportion of re. sourer's, granted a Government appro- priation of. one hundred thousand. That the Du -a pion Government should itself take 'official cognizance, of the situation - and make a grant that la proportionate- ly esen more generous than that'of our own, ,Government, on which a,.apeol/11 obligatirn rested, was as u eincete d.as' it was Krac.i sus. • - •:Che p .rem t e P n ss ot. the act shows how spontaneous it was. It ought to be remembered as a beau- tiful incident in- the history of- two countries. which are neighbors. - in s seiise in which no two. other nations try the whole. world are neighbors, for nO two others occupya similar relative position toward each. other, and • the rest of the world and the respectiye.Iri. forests- and people and territories of no other, two come in touch along a cots■ ifnuous line 4,000 miles in extent" Historic Furniture, A dispute has arisentkietwecn Alberta and Saskatchewan as to the right 11 two articles of furniture having a hie., torte value. According to The Regina Standard, Saskatchewan has got them both, The cleric of its Legislature makes his records on the table about which the rathrrs of Confederation gathered, and the Speaker sits on the chair filled by the presiding genius, . The history of the table is established by Mr, Hau1- tain and other good authorities, but thechair le said to be mere doubtful, Of course if we were to suggest that the dispute might be settled' by'sending the table and the chair• to Ottawa, we 8116u1d be accused of ...trying .to.,dbtaiiz. an unfair advantage for the effete East. Yet that seems to be the appropriate place. A New Word, Mrs. ifoCafl--rou haven't got that om t pompous pus bu ter any more/ • Mrs, Nuritoh-bio. We discharged hilia. Hs didA'to-Bert-buttle to suit us. ' READACHE Neuraigin and Normalities* 0* 111yto AJAX alis t • Often-times in the sudden illnesses of children if a reliable remedy is avail- able fatal consequence can be apoided. For these emergencies parents are urg- ed to have athandreadyfor lrnmediate use, Dr. Shoop's Diptheria,: Cure, Dr. Shoop's Croup .Cure,Dr.Shoop's Worm Cure and Dr. Shoop's Pain Panacea. Ohildrens ailments demandpromptness above all else. There is nothing harsh or that can possibly harm in any of these excellent household medicines. Sold by W. S. 1t. Holmes. I • .Locked in separate cells in the San Francisco city prison, 1:00 prisoners, whose -crimes range from plain drunk- enness to brutal murder,knelt in pray- er when' the eartlic wake of April 18 shook the•Hall of Justice from base mint to tower top, Sin -hardened Mien andwomen appealed to God to spare them. Their prayers for deliverance cane only after e eit became apparent y. that the .attendants could do nothing for them. • The , earthquake had so twisted and warped the cell locks that not a door could be opened for nearly an hour. To cure fever; chills, Ague. We know,of no remedyso reliable. as Nerviline, Twenty drops taken in hot water three times daily not only stops the chills, but dextro s the disease completely' Nervilinehas a direct ac, tion on ague and -chills and removes. their exciting causes. In stomach' and bowel disorders, Nervilineha.sheld first place for nearly fifty years. ft is pow- erful, swift to act, thorough and per- fectly safe, Being .pleasant to taste, its popular with everybody, Your druggist sells Poison's Nervilino in large 25e bottles ; satisfaction guaran- teed. Midnight Slipper, Gunner - So the famous' baseball player ate a Welsh rabbit before retic. ing and had some wonderful dreams? Were his dreams eheracterlstie of hill profession'? .. Guyer -t should sad' so, Why, he VAS Pitching and tossing all night. -Detroit Tribune, Rig Guide. i ' "Wby is It that the perfoxnlaneee of so' very few musielauo Blease your' "Well," answered Mr. Cemrot, "to tell you- the truth, I don't know much . about it. 1 AM merely going by what the musletens bay of one another," -- Washington Star. • - 0 Changed ,ter Mina. 44Well, well, there goes Bliss Strong. When 1 saw her last she was posing 58 d bachelor :girl. Tbat's'har ]lobby." "All that's changed now. She drop• pea that hobby for 'a. hubby,"- »etrolt PANTSF-1 ANTS� = iPANTS PANTS QALORE, -ALL OVER THE STORE. But there is more truth than poetry. in these two Pi. R. Srnith's,Pauts Porfec Particular P t ve Attracting Assor txeu- t ..,�uF Attention ou �Iw c L e l Trousers Now ,.i; Nicely, of r'Towards 'S Selling ,,�,-�op ere Show W. in dowNow Te ered Trxmnea Inside, tie Pants.. will ..,i ;,ekinveiientl Onanged Iar-your inspection n - Plias, 1,00 1.251 404.16 2.00 2,5 2"50 2,15 3,00 3e25 3.50 and3.75 . • z_. L. 'A. R. SMITH,Clinton..C� . ar I iER, . and ' FURNISHE ru;. lanes, as .will be . seen at Correspondents Wanted. The NEW EWA-has a splendid' staff ofcorrespondents, to whom: it owes much of the interest that is taken in the paper; but there are a few localities in the district which- are not represented by a correspondent. Any person who would he ,willing to act as' cor- respondent in any of these unre. presentedlocelities is invited to write us, and we shall be glad to furnish the necessary supplies: A. V1 AANVWrl1/W1/111/1/1AAAAAN HIGH. CLASS, M.ILLJNERY ASHIONABLENESS is , the one clear, an indisputable d peculiar p p ar em- phasis of this business; and - when it o conies to Millinery we insist that no store anywhere round here has a better showing, We've had encourageme enough already this season• to know that we're on the right side of every comparison, and ..:we're bending our- selves to excel ourselves at everyg int p4 . Please call on us, The chances are that we have theprecise shape you ou want, ,l and what we haven't in stockvery • can v r easily be • got. A �AA t`� M :Ern ' r'u' • � po i m,.Londesbnro If you prefer to take medicine in tab- let form you can now obtain Dr.Shoops Restorative Tablets. Absolutely no; change has been made in the nnedieinal ingredients: Sold yW,SR.'Hol by , nes. 'San Francisco Business men, who have been waiting for their safes to cool, that they might open then and recover valuable papers, and who, have been congratulating themselves that their 'valuables were in "fire -proof" safety, have been given an unpleasant surprise.. During the last two days 576 safes yaults and hav e.• been opened in the district east of Powell and north •of Market .and�in ho morethan slit er' bent:.of p These ins�nc the contents foil, unharmed In most cases"a pile -Of ashes represented' thousands ofdollars' worth of tic- ,;counts,« Haye you �weakness'of any'kin.- d' sto mach, ,back or any organs of the.. body? Don't dope yolarself with ordir�- ary medicine. .Hollister's,Rocky Moun- tain „Tea is the.Supreme curative. pow- er, --,30c: Tea; or Tablets. Ask •your. Druggist, April, 26th; 1906. •e win � Machinesat 1 nesatBargain Prices We have decided a e eCld ed to' i t- to.,quit t • he Sewing Machine business: and o, a w11�;close out the balani � f .e o our Stock at • 2.r . c' • �. per en belowregular prices;—. ' The " Nenr•Wiilllams " full Cabinet worth $4.1.00 for : $33.75 :Five Drawer Drop Tread worth $35,00 for .• ..: $26.00. Three Drawer Machine worth ;30.00"for . . .. $221.50 J. H+Vhe11 oar;31, .l<H Furniture and ;ti ndertaker. The ;raid. Beni!. ' • A held head is a less' familiar (and uowacliiye less` true) representative of 'the unchangeable than the Ethiopinn's skin or the leopard's. spots, but it was cited in this ilii rt•ter With impressive pathos by.IIippatchits; oneaf the sev- •en`martyrs of Sanlosata. After they 'had been subjected to severe. tortures 'they -were' at last eenfronted With sev- en crosses; and the Einperor Maximittn oOered them `a last.chance to' recent. • But the aged Ilipparains put bis hand on bis bald head`and cried, "As this, according to ttie order • 01 • nature, eau - not' again - be coveredwithheir,-so never ,vlll I change or couforni to your wish!" - Maxfniiatl ordered a goat's skin to he. nailed: to. Ilippachus' head and then jeeringly claimed that .'the condition was. • fulfilled, ' .ilpt Iiippnr- ehus - remained . oliciurafe and speedily died 'en tile evos's.--] otlelon Chronicle..' to Have you pains in the back, inflame,- tion of any kind, rhenreatiam,•feinting spells. indigestion or eonstibation, Hol- lister's Rocky Mountain tea makes you well, keeps you well, Ask your Dreg. gist. tjo,ter ,., -.. `. . ,The word "costerinonger" *as oxigi-. Wetly ,, eostilydtnoilget•'-that is, Apple Seller. ' Their noisy ,Ali:i nners were com- mented' upon lit Queen Elizabeth's day, Yonn atuterri, Dagobert I1, of ;''ranee. was the Young, Ile was fotir years old when he ascended the throne,. Leo II. and Louis 'VII. 'were also sometimes thus. designated, the fol'xne • having been elected when only foie, and 1°.ouis VII. was seventeeu on his accession. Lud- wig II. of 'Cerinany, wild Is aiso desig- nated the. Young, was twenty-three .on his accession,.: and Romani -is I1„ •emp4'er- or of the exist, was twenty. - Lutemalxing. , The first person to make Inreniakin) a business tvas liurbnt'a Ilttrnan of Holland, in the year 1550, 'sha River Jordan. Even apart from its ]31buical associa- tions the river .iorclaii is of great in- terest. During its course it falls over 1,200 feet. At no point is it navigable' even by small craft to any considerable distance' and lu'rs9nts the unit]ue spec- taele •of. a i'iVttr_ Ai'h kJtli is never been navigated flowing Into a sea which contains not one living eroature.' A Million Dollars Squandered. It 1s estimated this sum Was wasted last, year by people trying tofind Amite for catarrh. Foolish for sufferers to experiment when its so well known that, "Oatarrhozone is the only remedy that cures permanently. Other treat. mentsonly relieve, but Catarrhozone cures and prevents the disease frofn ever retuin ng."I had Catarrh in its worst form writes G. P. Padden, of Royal. Que. "1 was so bad that or - dinary medicine did'nt even relieve, but Catarrh zol a eared perfectly, No 1 fdf a of ent chance s pp ntin twith Catarrh. osone---it's certain as death to cure your. catarrh—just try it, - ,P aY .ret Your Buggy Buggies !need painting this. s s sin ; and the tune to ^have them .done is' now,and he g place to have them done_ sight is at. umball fie.. R /YicMath s • Huron Street, Clinton. Didto ever ou y Stop think r? When buying a. Dinner, Tea or toilet Set or Parley China, first -Class goods, up-to-date shapes or decorations be sure at J. W. IRWiN S. 5 CRATES ON THE and call POTTERS IN ENGLAND, WAY FROM TEM l x Teas, 5u a> •�.� �, jinnact Glab�•�C g' . s �• iWpeillcoadlctiz n A aiIenkiion n dY s,3Q uReadlr i tiY pnl.ao1v` erYP,b rAib ealessi sk. e, Timothy, •Ur• oliegesays: - "Yellow eviathan stands at thetuAgrSicEultEurDStJchard Grass, Mangold and Turnip Seed. Ontar- head of the list in yield per acre ie 25 different varieties," - Sold by J Wo IRWIN 4***$ -*****-$4****-.******* CASH PATI) FOR, BUTTE 4 Dunton Sash, Door, and Blind Factory The Town of Clinton is on the e 8Y8 of aboom If • . you contemplate building, let usL� +ivre you our estimation etc" - i f `"1terad iiarters lior.all ki'irt'(is ut builders' ni ter"a1s .101 S S. COOPER., Olinton• The C 'Tinton New Era Book Jo De artment is full...:, a ui ,eel fo the . Department � �. �p � prod duction of .Ane -appearing Sale Bills, etc. want on w t h oars I e Bills this season, wc' can do the work to please you,