HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1906-06-01, Page 6./ ..„. .-"1- , iit(4)
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4; �+:: • OCT? OF , 111
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NOM.E8.EEKERS
EXCORSIONS
VIA
TOi THE
NORTH
WEST
• RETURN FARES;
Winnipeg - E32.QQ Strassburg - S90,2S
atoon - 9746
Brand • 33.55 Pninoe Albert 98,00
Brandon
.eleosarele - - 34,20 iie. Battleford -39.00
Arcola •
stevan
Yorkton
Regina -
Roose Jaw •
34.50 Macleod - 40.00
35.00 Calgary - 4040
Red Doer - 41.60
95.16 Stettler
38.00 Edmonton42.50
} -
GOING:
June 6th, good to return until August 0th,
June 10th, '1 " Auguut 20th.
July 19rd, I' Sept: 3rd.
July 17th, " " Sept, 17th.
For rates to other points and complete in.
formation apply to nearest Canadian Pacifle
Passenger .Agent, t71 Yong. St., Toronto lot
Milton
Montreal
line.
`ABSOLUTE
AN Q1.0 LEGEND.
...max..• --...•-
The Aaelsmt Starr at With, Aaiun'..
Aire* Ilelpateet,,
SECUR1T y The old TaIMUdlsta bad a (Weer lei:-
;end concerning the first pair created
i if.7� Adam's original "het y
l th was
• b the Almighty. Accordant to the
story, Ia"help
-
********.me meet" and live wan the after vonsidera-
Genuine
c.:arter's
Little Liver PUls.
.....__:.—IVIatett,Bear lKhatyrt 10!
See •Fac-8ltnlle Wrapper Below:
Very trod Mikan paw
saute as sayaFel
FOR REAnicat;
FOR params..
F1IQ.OILWOOSNESLr
FOR`TO.RPID LIVER. •
rot CONSTIPATION
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THECOMPLEXIOR
n���,itiploaatmtaUbYlferMV NATURC,
..
IF --
Gt7RESICK HEADACHE.
Ancient Wttrf2are. .
fr ' 'Steamers leave Hamilton 4.30 a.m.
Toronto at 4.30 p. m. Tuesdays and
'Thursdays, and Saturdays, ,for Bay
•• "ot Quante ports, 1000 Islands,
•sitIontreal, and Intermediate points
TORONTO and MONTREAL UNE.
Commencing June 2, steamers leave
"Toronto 3.30 pan. Daily except Sun
days, from July 1st. Daily for Rocha
. ester, 1000 Islands Rapids, St.
p
'Lawrence, Montreal and Inter
'.reediate points.
For tickets apply to R. R. agents, or
'write to H. FOSTER CHAFFEE,
.14vestero Passenger Agent. • Toronto
•
TUESDAY, JUNE 19 •
RETURNING PUHA *1
St'r GREYHOUND
Days In Oetred
!'ave ttl. 'iEfl ra re`i$iYrt ', ant
i>'OQ PA t1r1GULsue s
..'nate me latistc.
'To "face the music" is a metaphor
borrowed from the stage where the
player c•:,nmM to the front and faces the
•tt^"iae-
some authorities that tffe expression
has a military meaning, the old mill-
ftia lawn ordering that when arrayed in
'line the militiamen should "face the
(:n::Aic.
At the siege of Jerusalem by TItud
the captive Jews were crucified by the
Romans in such numbers that, as Jo-
sephus says, there was no ,longer wood
the crosses
of which to make e nor o s s space
for them to stand.
Value of Rain ':Water. •• -
The purest water met with under or-
dinary circumstances is rain water,
which is certainly a great luxury to
those in towns or cities:: for washing:
If it were fully_ appreciated hew valu-
able rain water really it, the dwellers
in large towns would see that it Was
not always lost. •
• Saunterer. o
A saunterer is believed by some air.:
mot-ogists to have originally signified a
man without lands, such a person nat-
urally wandering to and fro in .searoh
of .employment. ' ' •
tion. The Talmud says that Lilith was
created just as Adam was—out of the
dust of the earth. Soon after the",
breathh of life ila(iItem breathed into
ter ears (you will remember that the
Bible says "nostrils" in Adam's ea;n)
her entire nature changed to such tut
extent that she became a veritable' de-
mon. About this time the de' 1I came
along, and, resegulzing in Adam's a ru',e
--all-that-was-necessary-to nt:t6;1• if ilr
class: governess of tate infr.iial regions,
persuaded her tocluit;,tfle first man and
go with frim Into ‘La "upper region); of
the air," Te us this seems like a queer
place for the location of hell, but that
lis the direction the pair is saki to have
taken when, they left Adam as the sole
occupant of the garden. At house with
the kingof the sulphurous domain, she
became the mother of devils. and -then'
deserted Pluto and became 'a "Specter
of darkness."
After this transformation her sole de-
light appears 'to have been in the de-
struction of innocent babes. It is even
said that .our: word "lullaby" to a eel..
ruption of the oriental term, "Hue obi,,"
which 'means "avaunt, or "begone,
Liidth."
HORSESHOE.NAILS.
.The' Way They. Are Tnrned Out by
• • Expert Warhmen,
Three Mullion separate shoo. nulls are
often cast from• a ton of metal, Of Ude
smaller,sl%es 2,000 nails are molae(1 to
a single mold, and an expert »vot 1. n in
Will make eighty molds in an Drill t try
• working day, thus turning: out • 101,000
separate,na.ils.
When the metal in a liquid s
poured into the Mold it runs U
,the sandIn passages provided •
n 5
molding •process. . The whole
nails are cast together - and are,
removed from tho sand, connte
• a • network of iron one with a
tl.a:e is
at
au .l
lir t ;u
of t.le
it lieu
•
t� l t>y
uoUrc r.
In this condition the .iron 15 its brittle
Las glass, and very little for:' i't r:'•
• gutted to 'separate the nails fr;),n #In'
network `vhfch holds thein together.. ,
They then have to undergo the litter.
ess. known as' anuealhhg They, are-
. mlbed tip with hematite iron ore, which.
Is 'in a' pondered .state, . put lute lion
pots ..and placed -in an; Una ealing fi,r
nage; a sort of kiln. Bete tthey'ie.u'tai.'
.for some..days, care, being taken to so
regalate the heat to which they ,are
subjected that ,the Iron will .not be re
melted, but brought •very neaiiy to tlhni
condition. The action of the rata ir•il
ore' upou the brittle -casting. is marvel
vt'
ous: After cooling it c,tn be bent wit it
out •risko1' breaking,' and it. bec'o,nes
I useful and serviceable article ,,.
Bancroft's Life `Mork.
Bancroft devoted nettrl'y thirty years
to his "history of the. United. States,"
which is not a history of the United
States at all, since it ends where then
history of the country properly begins.:
Had the work been continued. on • the
same scale down to the present,seven-
ty-five or',eighty' voluhnes. would have
been required. . '
elea
1Hiscreant.
The word miscreant formerly, signi-
fied ' only an unbeliever, an infidel,
Joan of Arc in the literature of her.
time was called a miscreant..
One of Nature's` Safeguards. •
The e elf s close in • oluntarIl' when'
the eye is threatened in order that- this.
organ may be -protected. If -a -man -had
his a es•whe 'some-
hfuk to�httt s n .
to t y.
thing was thrown at them,: he would
be too slow to save the eye from in-
jury. .
Tag .or411TO T NEW ERA.
MILBURN'S EARLY FIRE IMPLEMENTS. I
Appltatscea nosed InThee Celerity,'1* f
Heart • and �4>I'"Y411 tate Seventeenth iCeist4ria, I
Fi1lse( '
Cats.
In mediaeval tunes' cats 'were so
sear. e that to kill one involved a very
beta y 0110.
Drags.
To prevont brass
from tarnishing
dig -
solve buil' an ounce of shellac in•balf
a pint of methylated spirit, cork tight-
ly, Ict:ve till the next day, then pour
off the cite:: liquid. Heat the brass
Ifg fly �J 'and paint the solution over it
•w—with a camel's h• hair brush
Small Eaters.
itd The Bedouin Arabs are small eaters.
Six or seven dates soaked in melted
butter serve a man a whole day, with
a very small quantity of coarse flour
or a little ball of rice.
The Hungry Seal.
"The seal's appetite is phenomenal,
"in captivity fifty or more pounds of
• i:'ltieli being required daily by a single
rmeal. After gorging himself he goes
`'to sleep, floating on bis back, with flip -
'peril folded, his head bobbing up and
v peacefully down upon the waves, as p y as
upon a bed of roses."
Lasting Carpets.
Carpets made from elephant hide are
said never to wear out.
Many Women have
Kidney Trouble
and don't know it . They at-
tdbute their ill -health to weak-
ness" • Dragging pains in the
hips, backache, nervousness,
tiredness, headaches—are more
often caused by sick kidneys.
If your kidneys are not well,
the other delicate organs are
disturbed and inflamed, bringing
on 'the horrors of female weak-
ness and the serious troubles
often attending pregnancy.
Tin GENTLE KIDNEY PILL ', _
cores these cases of i7einalt
Weakness" because they cure
the Kidneys, They promptly
restore the Sidneys to health,
allay inflammation, take away
'the pains, and make the deli-
cate organs well and strong.
At druggists, et dlrcet on receipt of price, sot.
The et.avut4 Ctitt91MCAL CO. LIMITED
womosoR, ON?
Wood Pulp.
A machine' for.' making wood pulp
was invented by Keller in 1844, but it
was not tilt fourteen years later that
the process for making paper from this
pulp was invented.
Frenlheaing Nuts.,
It is a good +thin; .to know' that. if
nuts grow dry and tasteless fretbe-
ing kept for some time they may be
wonderfully freshened by soaking
them in lukewarm water. This. applies
to all sorts of nets,and it is surprising
to see bow they are improved.
Honey.
Honey • is a good substitute, ter sod
liver oil.
, Discipline or Helvetian.. -
Helvetius declared in hisarticles. elf
war that soldiers ought to be• made• to.
thaw
tie
• an
fear their own officers mormoreyr
(10'41e enemy.
Ira».
Imp once meant a child:"Sha4t-
speare, speaking oil'the children ilhtlte
tower, calls them hops. Jeremy Tay-
lor in one of his sermons: •speaks.. of
"the beautiful imps:that sang'hosarllna.a
to the Saviour in the temple."'
Went.
Meat once meant any hind of feed.
In one old English edition of the Lord's.
Prayer the well known petition is, ren-
dered, "Give us this day our ilsilg
, meat." '
F1EADACHE
Neuralgia and Nervosa's, aired eaTt'10
AX A ttU11ALIA- Qua
lit �rptlssteginl(t,rsrd
,ihr,,igt.yo rtWM
'ENGLISH ELECTIONS.
'. siandfng',Fon- a Sent En .I'srlinmeat
ro Is Expensive. '
ft, r •iet lsat•s
. Althot�h 'there, are sti
(against bribery. in
the English
eec
•
tions, steadies- ✓oia.'seat in, iat,il.
"mental
T
mafter: Even a. small constittt liey
will'cost.iiot less than $3,000, and the
expenses turf from t'rtt up to p10.0Jl1:.
At one election i •;andldate staid out
on an average of. ;$5'U:"i'or each vote,
( but this is regarded as the record.
1 price, •the goat running as Iow • as $1.
a head,
I The purchasing- of a vote disgt alifiee
the candidate,. ev n though he may 40
innocent: of: any,, .Participation in the
) bribery, and, as (t'; result candidates
l' andtheir wo
rkers._"agen
ts"they c
a
ll
them to England-are-tmost careful
that their actions shall be abot a kis.
i• picion,. ,.
y:: Dinners may be served, a. constitn-
alley, but payment even- to the women
:of a family it retarded as bribery, and
li the candidates are compelled to trust.
1. to speeches, (louse to house' convassee
:and•literature, bothfor hand distribn-
(tion and in the form ' of: posters..
-Making sir Felt Hat.
A felt hat is made by a pneumatic
process. A conical cup perforated with '
holes is provided,. The air beneath is
exhausted and by a eu'aious device the
felt is forced evenly to all parts; of the
outside of the receiver, and thus by
the strong pressure and rush of the air
is thrown..upon tate frame and dfstrib.
uted, thus forming the basis. for the
hat.
front.
To prose once signified to write in
prose rather than in verse, and a prosy,
man was ono who preferred to clothe
ibis ideas in prosaic rather than in
metrical form, .
'1'
Pickle Test,
If you suspect that pickles have been
colored. with Copper, yon can satisfy
yotit'solf with a very stniple test. rut
some pieces of the pia'ithe into a :vital
containing a mixture of equal parts of
ammonia and water, If there is any
copper present tau liquid will become
blue in color. '
•
The 91'iixaatlexfted'Bacltelor.
"I have not 'married so 1 may have a
quiet life;" said the bachelor.. "Had I•
Married a. good wife I would have been
Afraid to dose her: a bad one, I would
;have been ° unlhappy Iiad T' taken a
poor girl we- would stave lived wretch-
•u'rich one, and she w
ouid have
had cause to taunt me -with her money.
Ilad she been ugly I could not have
a
• :llovedelovedher;: •beautiful;. and i. Would have
'been • eternally jealous. ,Therefore I
,:Ono tiot married, and yet _ life Is a
:nuisance.'"
areophant.
A sycophant sena t>11(•1' 0 person who
watched the front;el of Attlee to see
that no figs were brought 'lilt in or carried
out without the payment Of the proper
duty. •
TheLions Share.
It Is really. 'not the male 'lion, with
l
las terrific roar and fornnidab e aP- .
pear n ncct thn t the explorer fears, but
his mate: The male lion is a good
tooklug poser, bat when: it comes. to
busiuess•'it le. his wife who counts, a
la the African native. Game is. pulled
down. Jae the female lion, and then the
male beats her .otf' until he has feasted
to repletion, when shemay have what
is:+left;, hence "the lion's share,"
An Eye to Business.'
"I thought; Alice, that you were en-
gaged to harry Smith, and now T hear
you are going to marry* his father."
"That's right, Maude. The old gen-
tleman said he could support one of
'us, and I decided to be that one and
tools the widower."
•
Are a specific for all heart and nerve
troubles. Here are some of . the symp.
tome. Any one of them should be a
warping for you to attend to it ins,
mediately. Don't delay. Serious break-,
down of the system may follow, if you
(lot Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Dizzi-
ness, Palpitation of the Heart, Shortness.
of Breath, Rush of Blood to the Head,
Smothering and Sinkizig Spells, Paint
and Weak Spelis,Spaaurvr Pain through
the Heart; Cold, Clammy Hands and
Peet. There may be many minor symp.
toms .of heart and nerve trouble, but.
these are the chief .ones:,
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills will
dispel all these symptoms from the
system.
Price 50 cents per boor 3 for $1.25..
WEAK SPELLS CURED.
Mrs. L. Dorey, Henlford, N.S., writes
us as follows :—" I . was troubled with.
dizziness, wealc spells and fluttering of
the heart. I procured a box of Milburn's.
Heart and Nerve Pills, and they did me
so much good that I got two more boxes,
and after finishing them T was completely -
cured: I must saythat I ,cannot r
cu
mend• them too highly. '. • •'
AFTERMATH.
One .man gave •lavishly. of gold . - • '
•Ansi, build. d• tower and 'town;
Then smiled content to think lits deeds.
0 itxld win' him ate.t, renown.
'-a.nothleh posit; in world'y gain, '
Gave alt within his ken -
Of strength, and ten.dclntss and truth,
To 0elfi hist fellow -men:
The t•. cold of the rich mar s,gifte'
Lies oti a dusty s;hcif;:
The Boot• Mart Eve; in count).+'ss hearts,
Because he anve-hi n •elf,
—4'n' rl,,tte•.T3ecker_
A UNIQUE WINTER
The Great Day.
Drcy Youth—Have you noticed
that there are days when we seem
more in accord with the world—more
in unison with .'nature/ 'Practical
Youth—Yes; it is always that way with
me on pay+ day:
0
flit R. F. Stttpart Gives Some Facts
About thee Weather.
"In the p?tat fifteen) IN inter, there were
ten In Vt nit 0 ilo Eileen tteni) ratu3C of
"t'Ize t'.)UII V''IRL,1 .:i7otiltths •`Vv,,i, -lih lien
than that •of the ''past :winter-, so that
J+: to. ,1U, _ '1 .r. if ,n7-
ever,; tlt lt'(-(1111 (1',,1ei..8 t'h(''.'T1t0a .;.."-it'-
-t .1 1(110 lir -1,11:8i 1)t�ce nU 1 and .nu.
ark-, }las. only. bren:excee•rled tWice,"iii.
l i,8.)Ahl and 'iih 1801-L ' A.cc.•pting tih•.
nbs(-rt'ation, as entirely. t•eliahle Jarra-
at•y. 1535; was the mildest, -wifh'a .tent-
pPr'.ttui ' •Uf' 35.i. and 1a}irr tha hl^\,,.
Milpest with 32 of 17OOegi-r Vturm-
'te, 1,21a.sleZi�tii' ja SC •Jatlll ti V.' '
i'lri.; ,,i•a•i erre 3 (ltt' ittr.•nn1OS of .Mr,
It ,1.''. titupart; 0:rector of ((it_ Domini ,n_
ran :'niolo ,cal eervic(' at Circ Canadian
Iasi 11111-1 leo'nlly; in an :iitti'rr::t on tit"
tt'er.iche., conditions of the .past winter.
Smutting •gen'• rally,. ,1r. Stupttrt/St.•tted.
Clfat-tht' weather of the whale winter
hail been ' \vaiiner •tha•)a . average
throughout the we.•lt+lrn proyftxxies, wile
in. Ontario, ' Qu(°l)e•c. and the. Maritime,
Provinces the flit ttvo,ini)1ths''nf Win-
ter. were warmer than 'average, • and
• the latter two perbapa:ulittle lower".
It was claimed that the . con'tention
of the old: inhabitant that the Winters
used'; to. be colder was not .eonflrmed
from, the 'offidia1 records, : , , There had
been no really., mild winters for'the last
fifteen years, while , before that. so far
as ,ie known, there were several. • .The
lowest'terepe •ature ever rcorded in To-
ronto,:26.5 below. occurred in 1850, eth.-:
ertx;ise a mild winter. In, one winter..
1901'.02, zero was never ,"touched, nei-
ther was that ebb reached (luring De=
',oember or January of. ibis winter.
The snoyefall 6f the winter.j•ust closed
had' been only 30 inches, which was teas
than any other on •record, except-
ing 1;877,-78, when 28 inches ttad been
the limit. Coming to the weather warn-
Ingsi of the service on the great lakes,
the speaker said, 94 per cent. of theme
had been:verified in the last Six metiths,
which was the best .record they had
ever had. There was;, he Said, no met-'.
eo,vological servieee or bureau anywhere
that made :a better showing with 'ref
erence to accuracy. The general equip-
ment of the service was quite good, :
• "We .can ,now be fairly , certain," said
• Mr.. Stupart,' ""of Outlining the areas of
high and low ,pressure'"over, the Dorn -
inion,, within the, region reached by
telegraph, with a fair degree of • accur-•
ac '
::
What Modern Girls 'Read.*
.&n Englishwoman who writes' with, a
knowledge of 'the girls' schools • of her
country gives in a recent review the
'results of an •inq'uiry she -personally
Ihade of the books girls of the upper
class read nowadays. The writer ques-
tioned 200 girls as to their favorite
fto)velists and poets. Alt answered her
' without reserve,., and the. majority ao-
knowledged that they preferred the
novels of Marie Corel1i, .Anthony Hops,
and Edna Lyall to all •others.. Fear had
heard of Louisa Aloott, an 'Aitiericab
author much read by. Englishwomen of
the last generation, and George Etlot
tared little better. Thackeray,• Scott,
1:)iektens, Kingsley and. Jame Austen
were elect little known.
As -a rule the .girls interviewed de -
glared that the eladsles seemed to them
insipid, a fact' that creates. no surprise
when tale known that these critics had
a;. habit, of. reading, the cheap: and in.
ferior magazlnes abounding in Eng-
land. Sixty of the 200 girls eonfessed
to making five of the more trashy and
sensational magazines their regular in.
tellectual fare. ,this question is by no
{ means a Iooai, one, and Canadian par..
I ents •and educators May find in this
• report some suggestions, The writer
thinks that literature should he made
' fascinating in the school and in the
home, Parents should begin early and
forestall the advent of trashy publica-
tions by placing good books in the
hands of the young and also readittg
from, them aloud three or four, times a
.weelc,• The best literature 'needs a
guide or champion to point out its
charms to the uninitiated, but once the
novice has -drunk of the spring he will
' • drink deep or'ciaSSt0 literature is not
for him,
Labor to keep alive in, your breast
that little spark of celestial fire called
QAneciene�.; .,C oOrge Washington. •
this country was .for
organized
the first : fire companyorganized in this
in New 1"eris in lti:)$. It was called tilt
Prowlers and was •composed of eight,
t'aen„wltb 250 buckets, books and sma'lt
ladders. Where the buckets were ob-
tallied and whether or not they were
la addition to those owned by the town
the records fail to state. In 1070 _Selena
purchased twO or three dozen cedar
buckets, besides hooks and other Im-
plements; also vie selectmen and tufo
others were authorized to take corn -
wand at tires and to blow up and pull
dawn buildings when- such action was
neeessttry, T•it"ls practice-••appe
have been ninth more. eotumon before
the. use of engines than afterward.
Boston on Sept. 0, 1070, ordered that
every quartet of the town should be
provided with twenty swobes,' two
scoopes and six axes. The swobes, or
swabs, as they are .now called, were
long bandied mops that could be used
to tut out roof fires. The general use
of swabs has long since disappeared,
but when a slight blaze is beyond the
reach of a pail of water and more im-
proved apparatus' is .not •tut head,a
long handled mop is today the most ef-
tieieiit article to be used. In Japan
these swabs, may he seen on• any roof.
tops. , ` '
In 1690 hiety York ordered that five
ladders and also hooks he made, In
Philadelphia no 'mention is made of
public precaution against fire until
1696, when a law was passed( forbid-
ding the firing of chimneys or aillotving
the same to become.foui, Each house
Wits tohave a swab, bucket or pail.
Another act was passed in 1700: order-
ing every household to have two leath-
er buckets. In the following, year six
or eight books for the purpose of tear-
lug down houses were ordered to be
tirade.
•
Jane lot, 1006
E J, . PR
When en the babytalks, it is time to
b
give. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea.
t's the greatest. baby medicine
known to loving mothers. It . makes.
them eat,sleep, and grow. 35c Tea or
Tablets. Ask your Druggist.
ARE, YOU MAK@NC $21003.22 A
YEAR ? xt is being "done with aur goads,
Work is pleasant, permanent and profitable.
Goods used in every house, every day. ' 4o fake,
and no need to create the demand, x egitimate,
reputable business, You tan start without a cent
of capital. Write to day. G. MARSIIAa, StCo.
Whotesele Teas, and toffees, tendon, cont.
.. �. __ .a.. ,.... , .
A -kinetic ' ltltyme.
I had a saucy servant, •
Anil :lila name n'ns Silver Jlnsr
i% h;1rin.t.any loch. ,'
And he hadn't Soy "Iamb. •
H'e had a little afm.
And he'hatl a' Ittte wrist' ' ,
And little pointed lingers
' That r..otildn,t make a fist.. •
He brought me' new potato"s
Andevery l:b:cl of, moat •
And all •the different sorts of pies..
That. any ono could eat, '
But all the time 1 h)id him—'
A do: (n years, 1 think•
.The saucy little rascal' ' -
Would, never fetch a drink.
—SZ. Nicholas.
Don't' be fooled and made to believe
local ,appliances. •" o is era ' oc 'y
Mountain tea, is the only positive cure
•
for rheumatism, 35c, Tea or Tablets.
Ask your Druggist
Vegetable Wrongs.
Digging' out •of the eyes Potatoes,
Pulling the ear:; of Dorn', ' .
iiehba.es:.
Eating the heads of a i;
` P-iittiiig'tire- beards • ottt of -rye.
Spilling. .the ' blood of beets,
Breaking • the necks of squashes. •
Skinning apples, knifing peaches. • •
Squeezing lemons, quartering oranges.
Thrashing wheat, plugging water-
melons.
atermelons.
Felting trees and piercing. -the bark.
scalding celery slashing maples.
Crushing .and:'jamrning currants.
Mutilating hedges, stripping bananas.
•
What's the' good of keepingfrom,
Any good things you may see,
That will lift his:ioad of labor.,
Like Rocky Mountain • Teas Ask
your Druggist.
9
1 'CEYLON. TEA
Contains inside the ltad exactly the ,quantity of tea
speci1k d on the label.
25c, 30e, 40c, 5Oc, and GZe per lb. 1 111 Orocers,
Rumor WAED ST. LOUIS, Mt
]Rating t,y Law.
An edict of Charles IX. of France,
dated 1,533, made it a civil offense to
offer any guest more, than three, courses
at a meal.: If ;a fourth appeared, the
provider of the feast was liable to .a
line of 200 francs,while the guests who
partook of it could the called uppn to
pay the authorities 40 francs each.
• ' Wild, Oats.
.Taie seed of the wild oath seems to be
endowed :with a sort of life of its own.
Wild oats whenheldin the hand will
move about ina manner that strongly
suggests the Mationsof the larvae of
certain. insects. • '
,'/Argent':Navigable Stream.
• The Mississippi' and Missouri rivers
'combined•' -form the longest navigable
'stream in the world.
- Clown.'
Clown was at first a tattooed person.
In Britain and France the country pea
ple retained the habit of tattooing or
of painting the facesin imitation of
tattooing Tong after it had been aban-
dened in the cities: `
i a P ie natore's specl6O for
DIARRHOEA, DYSENTERY,
. CRAMPS, PAIN IN THE STOM. -
AOII, COLIC, CHOLERA MOR.
BUS, CHOLERA INI+AN.TUM,
,. SBA SICKNESS, and all SUM.
MER COMPLAINTS In Children i.
or Adults,
Its effects ar4.Iitarvelledi.
Pleasant and Maritime to take,
Rapid, Mailable sed.Effectual to Ito -
action. -
iT HAS Btl'EN A HOUSEHOLD
REMEDY POR NEARLY
1fBAR5• P010e se OCNT5
Swam Summons. larvae lutinetout3,
44444 ;
Did you ever Stop td think
When buying a Dinner, Tea. or,Toilet Set or Fancy China
flrst•olass goods, up to•date shares or decorationsbe sure and call.
at J, Vv. f Wi1TS. 5 GRATtk1`$ .ON THE WAY PROW THE
POTTERS IN ENGLAND; t
Teas, Sugars and Canned Goods'
We
oods-
We lead in Quantity, Quality and Prices.
Special cutprices.on fluent in 100 lb bags
SEEDS�A11kinds, RAd'Clover, Alsike, Timothy,. Ur
chard Grass, Man Old and Tarni
3p Seed. entar-
i� AAg�rriculturalCollege says : — •• Yellow Leviathan stands•at'the
head of the list in yield per mire• in 25 different varieties: '
Sold by
a.1.• W. IRWIN
CASH PAID -FOR BUTTER AND EGG'S
- • ' a
•' Notice
Advertisers ' changing .' their
advertisements any week must
$
have their copyIn not later
than Tuesday.mrning.
SMITH'S
W a
k
per
a1P �Store
Are you one of the crowd to the'Busy
Store P Everybody is tow talking.
of the beautiful designs of • ^
p
all Paper
�' r
we have in stock, and prices to suit the'
purchaser. We also carrya stock of
Window Shades; : Curtain
-. Poles, -Cottage Rods,
Room Mouldings,
d�
PO
F�"ueit .re ar u `"V
nish,. etc.,
of ail descriptions,, v`vhich are : sold at.
prices never kwn before to the
pubile. • -
Painting and Paper Han ing- done.
Estimates furnished on job work.
,
Smith's Wall. P a Irx Store
=-CLI NTON—
N.B.—Sign.Painting done. All Paper
trimmed FREE... .
•
Cement Bricks
The uiwfersigned having bought ';a
machine for moking Cement Brick; is pre-,
pared to manatacture..brioll8, and do:all'
kinds of oementwork. rick' supplied par-
ties .who intend to bail, at:, lowest prices,
-A. COUSINS..
American a 6 r n
For Sale.
A quantitY of first-class A meni-
can Corn"; will be sold .for
cash or exchanged for grain.,
Also other stock food. -
Standard: Erevator, • Clinton.
American a Corn
SEED COIR. -.i` -
Northern ' Prolific, Mastadon,
Bailey and White=cap Dent.
These brands are particularly good
samples, ':and can be depended upon.
We have beau' making a specialty, of
Seed Corn and never had a': complaint
last season. - •-
JAS. A. FORD
• QLINT'ON.
I -IOW ABOUT 'YOUR'
WALL PAPE,'R?
Nothing adds 06 mach to the decora-
tion of a house as good Wall Paper.. I
am in a position to,show you the very
best and choicest patterns, as .I am
agent for the. • ,
Empire . Wall Paper Co.,
of Toronto.
BARTLI,FF'S
T.
RESTAU AN
Subscriber• having moved
his Restaurant t� the 'store
recently occupied by F. W,
Watts, will be glad to•meetal
his old customers,and•as many
new ones as may favor him
withtheir patronage.
Hg avin • also bon ht out the King Bakery, he
will supply_
the public with 'first -.class
Bread and Cakes.
BREAD DELIVERED' AS
FORMERLY•
AT� IJ
l
•
NEW GROCERY ' STORE
' a choice, We have opened up
fioeri 4 1st a. 4),
Stand and now ask a 'share of the
patronage of the citi'z.ens of Clinton
and the surrounding community, ,
Fair ices
& Pr
Good Quality ty
are our special cares.
Customers will find our stock, the best
value in town.ThedRed Feather .
ba ands in: Teas' Canned 'Goods
are samnies of the values we handle.
.-' must
Fran
We are strangers .and ' m g
get ac uainted,.
q
-
those who sell farm
ro
It will pay pro-
duce
duce to see us, before disposing of their
butter, eggs and potatoes, elsewhere.
We will buy, at a good . price, what
youthnve•to sell, and willsell at' a fair.
price; what you have to buy •:
The samples for 1006 are entirel '
new. Prices run from 5c a roll to 35c,
With bordersat same price..- Every
roil of paper guaranteed to contain 8
yards, Stmpfesgladly
shown, to in.
tending
purchasers, at anytitne.
GEORGE POTTS,
House .Decorator and Paper Hanger,
Cor. Queen and Princess St., Clinton.
50 nt
We, will send The New
.
Era for the balance of
the year TO NEW St13SCitll3•
tits, for 5oc. cash. Now
is •the time to subscribe.
BYAR.D 'HILL;, 'Phone 114
WRY BAKE E O PICNICS
When you can have an assorted basket
of Sandwiches and Cake, Cookies
and pastry, to order
AT MODERATB PRICES . . .
Bakeit of CenfOrseetiont-class er EYread and
'
Ice Cream, ice Cream Sodas, Sundaes,
Davide Sarum's. -
y
NIMENS' C AF
AND RESTAURANT,
Albert St.; Clinton. -
•
•
CO AMA
Before placing your orders' for
your season's supply of Goal, get .
our prices. The verybest goods
carried in stock and sold at the
lowest possible price,.
Orders may be left;at Davis
•
emennomminsmonaum
&Rowland's Hardware store, .or
with
W. J. Stevenson,„.
At E1eetrtc Light Plants
it' Fitzsimons Cffi .: SOD
We are still in the But-
chering
utchering business, and are
in a position to fillall , or-
ders for seasonable . meats,
intrusted to our care.
Our new business stand
s in the Combe. Block.
R; NISsimo So
Puke 76 • Clinton
F•