HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1906-07-20, Page 31
July 20th 1006
A Friend'
Told Me About
111114/k
mg GENTLE KIDNEY CURE
Hundreds of people, who lieve
beeu cured of Xrdney Trouble
by Ini-ju, were first induced
to trythis woriaerful remedy
by friends who had them-
. selves been cured. The sales
of Bu -Ju are daily increasing,
because everyone who takes
thenI is benefitted--aud these
in turn, tell others. Soi the
good news is spread.
Here is what a Picton man says
about leueje
"1 have used Attt-ja with great
beneEt to myself, and cheerfully
recommend to all who, r think, are
suffering from Kidney Troubles
and Rheumatism,
"I think Belu. the best remedy
tuac!e."
Yours sincerely,
'AMR'S MMUS.
CLAFLIN CHEMICAL CO., LIMITED,
WINDSOR, ON • • NEW YORK
THE
SCHOOLBOY CRITICS OF WOMEN,
Ordeal Views Held by Twellei-Yeare
Old Eisayisti.
"It women were in Parliament you
wouldn't hear the men talk," le the
-opinion of a twelve-year-edd echool-
boy of the 14'.. C. C. school in Cromer
.at_GayJ!mroM,d, _who absent eet
knowledge beyond his yestria
Tb. ettleieet, I'Ladies r Have dilate
and Hew They Impressed Me," was set
last week for an essay, and the elaea
of boys all under thirteen, has ex-
. pressed some very novel views on the
subject.
One can imaginethat the master
who eat such a question ls something
Of a humorist, and he has not been dis-
appointed in the replies.
'Women have a character as being
ohatter-boxes," writes one budding
Emile Reich, while another sokolea
more gallant or more fortunate in Ida
acquaintance, says, "Ladies are neat,
gentle and an example for men."•
One boy, just twelve years old,
writes his impressions of the other sex
wi: "Most of the ladies I have met
hays impressed me as being verylond
of talking of other ladies' dresses."
His views are echoed by a classmate,
who writes: "If a lady has on a lace
dress, You see others 'look rotindat her
and say, 'I wish I had a dress like
that.'"
Personal experiences are giveti by
several of the essayists. One of 'them..
le: "I once had a Sunday school 'teach-
er, and she was as kind as if slie Was
anybody's mother."
Another.. twelve -year -cid -savant pre -
zee his views with the' rentarke
"Ladies are sometimes referred to fur
the weaker sex. I have come in con-
tact, during my life, with every sort
fashion, and size of ladies; urea are,
an, on the whole, very talkative,"
Cremer street can boast a youthful
epigrammatist in the younigster who
writes: "A lady is known by her talk
and manners, rather than by her clothes
and appearance."
Also, Cromer street, despite its
drab and unprepossessing surround-,
trigs, Is not devoid of idealism, for
one younster has set down his opin-
ion: "My ideal woman is a. human be-
ing with feeling for Other fellow -crea-
tures and the proper sort of Opinion.".
An Eton Boy's Socialism.
The Hon. C. A. Lister, sort of Lord
Ribblesdale, and heir to the great es-
tates at Oleburn, in Lancashire, writ-
ing in The manehester Deily Dispatch!
proclaims himself a Socialist. Mr. Lis-
ter, who le at Eton, is nineteen years of
age. His Socialism, he says Is•the re-
sult of his reading, and not of practical'
experience. "As a result of the miser-
able conditions of our working classes," is
tie declares, "we find physica.I degen-
eracy threatening.our national eincien-
cy, for we are quite unable to keep our ta
young men In the rural districts and a of
Destruction of Wool%
(Written for the Nniv Etta)
In view of the tariff changes now
under consideration by the Govern-
ment and people of Canada, the fol.
lowing few words on the destruction
of wealth which the advocates of pro-
teotion admit that that fiscal system
entails, may interest the petrons of
your widely -read paper.
According to thole own showing the
protected manufacturers of Canada de-
stroyed wealth to the value of about
1150,000,000 18,st year.
When this fact is understood by the
people who are forced to pay for this
destroyed. wealth, who are in the ma-,
jority in every protectionist coontry,
so -waled protection will receive a short
shrift.;
All protected' manufacturers main-,
Mari that in the absence of protection
their' finished products would sell for
less than cost of production. When
such products are field in the British
market we know that they do sell for
less than cost of production. The
price realized in that market gives us
an idea as to what the price would be
here in Canada in the arbsenee of pro-
tection.
For instance, a manufacturer stated,
before the Tariff Oomraission that it
cost $14.50 to produce a ton of pig iron
in Canada. 'Recently our noanufa,c-
borers have sold large quantities of pig
ironan the British market at $9.41 per
ton, or 35% less than cost of production.
It is " a fact frequently commented
on, that all proteated producte can be
bought for a much lower 'Moe outside
the borders of the country that pro-
duces them, than inside its borders.
Thus this system of taxation we call
protection not only prevents the
people who subject themselves to it
attaining the ,main object for which
all civilized communities are organized,
(i. e., to supply their own wants with
thnleaata oraor_expense). but forces
them to supply anyone living outside
their country, with the finest of their
products. at vast cost to themselves,
for: • "
In all cases where the protected man-
ufacturer sells his products in neutral
markets for less than cost of procinc-
tiOn, he is repaid for his loss by the
Government at the expense of the pub-
lic, tinder cover of the bonus, and oth-
er special advantages over the Cana-
dian consarner conferred on the IIIRTIU-
facturer by the tariff.
Although the theory- of protection is
not built on the solid foundatiot of
imperishable truth, nor do its adao-
cates depend in the slightest degree
for support on those elevating and
huinatuzing attribtites in human na-
ture which are not common to liota
civilized and barbarous men, but rath-
er on those qualities that ere common
to both, such as ignorance, cunning,
greed, fear, cowardice, viciousness and
ferocity, yet this one contention of the
protected manufacturers that their
finished products are •svorth less than
cost of production is undoubtedly true.
Were it not true there would be no ex-
cuse for them asking for production.
• They admit therefore that the -raw
material used up in their factories•is
worth more than the finished pear:bats.
Some have stated ,tho raw materia!
be worth 15% more than the finished
-products, tbe majority,' putting it be-
tween 20% and 80%. For the sake of il-
lustration we Will assume the average
cost of the raw. materials I. e., all the
elements that enter into cast of pro-
ductien, to be worth 15% more than
the finished rodncts,
5400000, was ebout the value Of
the raw "material :used up in the prp-
Meted industries of Canada in 1905. '
According to the admission of the
protected manufactiirers, therefore,
wheit this raiv material was changed
into finished • products it Was only
worth $340z000,000, or 15% leas than the
law material. This indicates a des-
rtfctien a wealth equal to ii60,000,0d0
during the year.
Because the tariff enipowered the
manufacturers to charge the value of
this destroyed wealth to the Canadian
consumer, did not alto the fact that
in the process of changing the raw
material. into the finished products,
there was a vast destruction of the
wealth of the country -aa destruction
'of wealth as real as if it had been des-
troyed by a great •fire, or a Mob of an-
archists, Indeed, so-called protection
anarchy m disguise.
It is the enormous. and continuous
eetructicin of wealth. protectionen-
ils, that causes the constant short-
ge capital, the ever-increasing play -
the reason why is not •heed to find. The
land is still in the hands of an aristo-
cracy, and no inducements is offered to
a man of average ambitions to stay in
his native village and till hip own plot
of land. Rural depopulation will go. ea
so long as the present system of land
tenure obtains, awe the inevitable, re.
sult of rural depopelation will be phy-
sical degeneracy of the nation. As yet
no practical scheme of land nationali-
sation has been put forward." '
Smuggling a "Premier."
isei amusing incident ()ordered. fn
eonnection with the Essex Yeomanry
training at Clacton, A telegram was
received stating that the British Prime
Ivlinister (represented by- IdalerePellY1
has been captured by the enemy (re-
presented by the Sixteenth Queen's
Lancers) at Hertford, and was being
taken to the coast for !shipment to the
Continent.
The Yeomanry was senteout to Pre-
vent this. One section met an inno4
aent-looking furniture van, and was
about to pass it by when something in
the driver's appearance attracted the
attention of the *Meer In charge,
He called a halt, the van was sur-
rounded, and the driver interrogated.
He proved to be a Laneer in disguise,
and inside the van was found the keg'
ged and bound "Prime Minister."
I
No More Moit3)liss. °°
pr
Candidates for conn4ssions in the ri
British army will nov. have to face an yo
increased stringency in the regulations aa
with regard to the examination for eite- v
eight. Since the war thee have been.
somewhat relaked. In the &taps issued
for the examination of officers of the
militia and Imperivaet -amity for
commIssione in the illt se.forces it
is expressly Tal d &own that "nu relazete
tion of the eyesight teSt ean be allow-
ed." On the other points it appears
that candidates who are era:owned
unfit by the Medical board Will be al-
loued to preeent themsetiteis for We -
examination by an appeal board. The
retitle:ion does not apply to thee who
are going up for a commission direet.
Sh uld It be enforced to the full, it
probably Involves the diseuipearaitee et
th-e Weglaaaans a milltarjetnntiniste--
erty, and thefrequentIy recurving per-
iods of depressed trade peculiar to all
protectionist countties. Even the tin-
ited States, the most favored by nat-
ure, and cursed by tariffs, of all coun-
tries in the world, has been crbliged to
borrow from one single little eountry
$7,509,000,000, whilst her poor and
criminals have increased to such a de-
gree that they now endanger her civ-
ilization, and no country suffers more
frequently, so intensely, or for longer
periods, from depressed trade. We in
Canada pay tribute to the same coun-
try on a debt of about $1,000,000,000,
the other countries combined owe her
people about $7,500,000,000.
• Practically speaking this debt -some
$l0,000,000,000 -has accrued to the cred-
inof the, people_ of Great.Brittein slAc.9
her government "ceased to encourage
sotne of them to produce things at
loss, at the expense of those who pro-
ee at a pro t, and the protectionist
governments got busy' taxing thew '
own people into poverty to enable
their manufacturers to supply the
people of Gteat Britain with the finest
of their protected and bonurafed goods,
away below cost of • production.
It cheers the hearts of the people of
protectionist countries to believe, as
the tariff beneficiaries and their hire -
liege teach them, that these bonus -fed
goods are ruining the ttade and impev-
erishingthe people of Great Britain.
Whet the people of the protectionist
untries realize the fact that these
otectecl and bonus -fed goodiaare m-
oiling the people of Great Britain be-
nd the wildest and Most extralia-
nt dreams of avarice, and impover.
ishieg themselves,. they will insist on
a cessation of this idiotic policy. Some
idea of hove the people of the United
Kingdom are °barna ruined may be.
gathered from the tenet that between
1891 and 1901 the income of her people
assessable to ineorne tax: (anything
over $800) increased 45%, or by $830,-
000,000 ; and the number a,ssessed in-
treased 200% faster than population,
indicating vast diffusion of wealth
among an increasing proportion of the
people. During the tame neriod wages
incteased, whilst Wilt of living, paup-
ers and crime decreased. But what
Will astonish our peoteetioniet friends
Most, is, that contempotaneow with
these-infitilible signs of a, progressing
TIE" 13771".31=1,...."""="lretitAbli Aucutimi
C ., es greet' Mister) thieketa *tope
newer. It tenet .0,,, in
ratangthans the
air . °nick'
it ..: . ..,..,, d,,,,,,,, riedt ilJpsoTiaattt tthe 011#•
Ait1d trIiiiiitsrt_aalt moisetsehatittrl
nennieneet'S ME. n eaters a Hee: kV:1m
soft Wok., R I. HAI& 0 N
TEE °LINTON NEW EU
civilization, her 'wts exceeded her
extiorts by *10,000.000.000.
ns j
lea
se
n -
ed
re
The debt of the protectionist natio
to the people of Great arttain is co
stantly increasing, yet the few w
gain by that fiscal system neyer cea
proclanning, through theit subsidiz
press and hired advocates, that sl
Great 13ritain) is going to the do
f financially and every other way. Tie
Right Hon Mr. Chamberlain and it
Ifollowers believe this, but the fax point in the oppositedirection, and fo
tunetely for thenetrives the people
Great Britain know the facts, judgin
from the recent election.
This notion that the protectioni
nations are ruining the trade and im
peverishing the people of Greet Bri
am would be avausing, tvere the mat-
ter of the destruction of wealth, and in-
creasing indebtedness protection en-
tails, les, serious for the farmers and
other peoductrve laborers and vvage
ea,rners in Canada, who, like the same
classes in other protectioniet countries,
Intuit pay for this destroyed wealth.
interest on the debt, and, in the end,
the principal of this monumental loan,
out of the produce of their farms and.
hard-won wage** For productive lab-
or, that is to say, labor devoted, to the
production of things that would sell
for more than cost of, production m
the absence of. protection, not only
produces ail wealth, but sustains the
value of that which we have already
acCumulated,
lt is the current profits arising front
such labor, and such labor only, that
furnishes the fund from which all the
disbursements of the body politic are
paid, whether such payments are made
for the Maintenance of our protected
industries, the charitable dole, the re-
turn to capital for its use, the wages,
keep, fees or enaoluments of the non -
producers, the cost of goyernment, the
swag of the thief or the contributions
we make to the people of other conn -
tries in the form of our protected and
bonus -fed goods, for less than it costs
us to produce them. - -
• To produce at a loss, as our preaa
tected manufacturers admit they are
doing, would check the growth of the
Pablic fortune, even if the loss fell on
those engaged in such production. but
for the governiaient to encourage the
unlimited. expansion of suchproduction
at the expense and consequent check
to the expansion of profiteble produc-
tion (the only kind ot production from
which any revenue,. public or private,
can be obtained) is surely the very
gs J., IN THE NEXT. -CENTURY.
0 i
is Seine or the manors 'Plot Are Po
r.
ts dieted e'er tite 'rewire.
of
r" "The bath of the next century," eays
g
T. Baron Russell in his book "A Hula •
tired Years Hence," "will lave the
at body speedily with oxygenated water
- deliveree with 4 force that Will miler
t- rubbing unuecessat7, ana beekle it will
stand the drying eupboerti, lined . with
astinia cliiielaY moving arrangement of
soft brushes and fed with a Malay des,
iceatea air, from width almost 'In a
moment the bather will emerge dried
and with a skin gently etimulated and
, perbims electrified to clothe himself
quicaly and pass dowu the lift to MS
• breakfasts widch lie will eat to the ac-
, compauittient of n summary of the
, morning's news read out for the beim-
: fit cif the family or winspered into We,
ears by a taliciaganiteliine."'
j Dishwashing will be easy in that
• -day. lairtf plates. and dishes, for ex-
ample, "will be simply dropped'one by
one Into an automate receptacle, swille
eti eleae by water delivered with forge
and charged -with nascent oxygen, dried
by electric heat aid polished by elee-
ted
trig force, being tally oxygen bathed
as a superfluous n' t of sanitary clean-
liness before being\ pent to table again.
Aall that has come off the plates will
drop througle the scullery door into the
destrtietor beneath to be oxygenated
and made away with." ' .
, There will be many other frnproVe-
ments. Trains wilt gather speed more
' raiplillyamateingplettearms -WIlidoetway-
with the need of stopping trains at eve
erY shttiou. _People will have more aei
cidents to avoids and they will•be dove.
erer in tlVOKIng them. On snerill fly-
ing maehlues they will visit mountain
tops on Saturday afternoons 'lot (non-
alcoholie) pienies.". Actors will , !MIX
play mice in one part, for their :per.'
formaeces will be reproduced by a per-.
feted kinetaseope and phonograph. a
quintessence of governmental folly.
Such folly on the part of govern-
ments is the one controllable cause of
the increase of those great evils that
now menace the • civilization of protec-
tionist countries, i. e., the inequalities
in the division of wealth, governmen.
tal corruption, poVerty and draw.
In those countries where the expan-
sion'of unprofitable pro:Motion is not
encouraged at the expense of that
which is profitable (i. e , free trade
.countries), vvealthis becoming diffused
anion& an increasing proportion of
'the people, whilst poverty, crime, and
. governmental corruptitio is. increasing.
These broad facts should help our
government to resist the present and
all future attacks of the protected
manufacturers on the •horiest and hard,
avdk earnings of wealth •PredaIPDX4..:
As a eivilized government whose
premier duty it is to protect the hon-
est and industrious against the attacks.
of the dishonest and vieious, they
should•reinember that any increase in
the Protectionist tariff must
1st, Increase the wealth destroying
power ef the protected industries.
2nd; Check the expansion of all bi-
dustries that wouldayield .a profit hr
the absence of. protection (from the
profits of which all the disbursernents
of the society are paid) by robbing
those engaged in suela industries of a,
greater proportion of their earnings
than under the already high tariff.
3rd, Give an additional impetus to
the Concentration of wealth, by forcing
if out of the hands of those•who pro-
duce it, into the hands of the tariff
beneficiaries •
• 4th, Check the advance in farm
land values, which hasbeen so pro-
nounced since the tariff was lowered
in 1897. ' • '
5th, Inerea,le the proportionate IHIU.1-
ber of the poor and the criminal.
• tith, Increase the power of the cor-
ruptionists.
Although it is quite *true,' as :lay pro-
tected manufacturer will naaintale,
that his finished product veould be
worth less than cost of production in
the absence of protection, yet our own
experience proves than manufacturers
as a whole Would gain itfinitely more
by the cheapened raw material and
widened market, that a generel and
radical reduction in the tariff would
necessarily involve, than they can ever
hope for under the exceptional privi-
leges they now enjoy under the present
excessively high taxiff. • '
B. WASHINGTON', •
Seey British Colonial Free
Ottawa. Trade League,
veer Red 'Tape. •
A feW Mouths age the. president alt -
pointed 'a coratuittee to make a thine
(nigh investigation Of the basinefie
methods of each a the several depart-
ments at Washington, with a :flew tti
ridaliag them of some of the recl, tips
ways of doh* things. '
Secretary Bonaparte on being kiter-
elewed by this Committee told the fol-
lowing story,. which ' beautIfullY fUua.,
trates thiefree Use of red tape in the
government service:
"One of the naval officers • on a eere
. Min • ship desired to change , a there
mometer•trom one side of the vessel,
• M. the "othera,weigaing veep' good roa.
annna for doing so This • coiiid---nOt be -
!,done, accOttiteg to ,naval, regulations,
.,however, wait heiiad marled the Mat-
ter to the ship's commander,aed
through birn tO'nie. • I readily coesent.
ed to the proposed change; vehicli coit
just 53 cents -50 .fer the postage and
stationery and 3 for the ;nail and the
wear arod,:tear n the hamnier."--Hat-
perte Weeldy.
. ,
An Auspicious Thirteen. ,
'There le in France splendid cone
panioiship of thirteen, which, besides
patriotic and martial claims to respect,
bas the further interest that it may be
said to explode the old superstition
against thirteed as an unlucky number.
The •companiouship Is 'known through -
oat' Prance as "The Thirteen of Le
Sauvetat." Tbey are all men whowere
born in the village of that name in
1845, fought together ingthe terrible
war c•f 1870, were all made prisoners
at Sedan, and, after a desperate at.
tempt to escape,, all lived through
months of bard captivity to return to
their native village, Where .all still sur -
viva arid keniatin. Every man of them
is now a grandfather and a pattern of
frugal- and rustle comfort. The proud
villagers kept high festival to celebrate
the fortieth anniversary of their sol-
dier neighbors drawing the army lot In
1800. -London Globe.
The Humor of thelluel.
There was a touch of humor in the
bloodless duel between AL Millevoye,
the Preach editor, and Comte de No -
allies. After the shots were fired the
editor hustled away, -perhaps to get
tiyamei Cures Catarrh
It Healing Balsams KM Ali
. eatarrhal aerate.
ciatillibit'Silitatif than-
oetarrh, arid 110:1(1 that is more dangerous..
It weenenii and debilitatethe whole
eystern, it xi is allowed to ran, leads to sell-
out:, and eonietimes fatal complications.
No daugerowi drugs ate taken into the
stomach when Hyolnel ix: need. Breathed
through the small pocket itthsler that
connei with every Hyland outfits its heal-
ing Welting penetrate to the most remote
cella cif the throat, nose, and Tanga killieg
the goons of taterrh, healing the irritated
mucous membrane, and reeking complete
and limning cure*.
The complete Hyaena oir fit consisting
of an inheler that eala be carried in the
pone or vete pocket, a medicine dropper,
and a bottle of Hymnal, costa onlv $1. The
Minder will hoe a lifetime, while extra
bottles of tiyoinei can be proeured, when-
ever needed, for only 50 omits.
If you cannot obtain Iltomei ot your
aealer, it will be forwerded by mail, post-
age paid, on teeeipt of price. Write today
for coneultetion blank that will entitle you
to setter:lea of our medical department with.
out charge.. The R. W. Booth Oornpany,
Hyornei Building, Ithaca, N. Y.
Municipal Powers.'
In Ontario only British subjects may
hold any officeaumnicipal or otherwise,
Which wits for the adirninistering of an
oath. Thi is new departure, but is
considered emote in the right direc-
txtin. The council also Inc now to pass
a by -lave prohibiting the sale of pea-
nuts, fruit, etc„ on the streets from
pushcarts, and also to give a entrain on
the license fee to a British subject as
compared with the fee cherged a for-
eigner. 'Under the new law, the corn -
°limey lake proceedings to wipe out
such pearl: as the tussock moth, and
cherge the coat as a local improve-
ment. The aftlefidittiente to the act
ititio provide for the putting (learn Of
pavements on streets lay tr• twaithirds
vote of the council and withoilt the
consent Of the property owners.
out a special edition. The Comte Ma-
thieu" de Nimilles scurried across the
field with an ugly looking „knife in his
band,uglier looking than the pistol,
and hacked away alt wooden fence at
the ena of the ground. "I have it!" he
-snouted, after a, natiatee the-
• AL' alillevoye's bullet,' Which the ciiiiet
put in ble pocket. He has evidence that
something was fired in his directiou.
Of coutse It is bad foein to bit.:
Mein and the Apes*
• In the alonthiy Revie-sv, Mr, Paul
Tahlenhuth writes on the blood relation,
ship of man ahd apes, and describes
how, by means ot• the precipitin teat,
*aeons albuminous substances arid
the blood at different animals may- be
distinguished from one another. The
teat has also considerable medico legal
Importance, and biologically may be
employed to ascertain the relationship
of various animals to one another. In
this wet; it may be shown that the in-
thropeld apes are most nearly akin to
man, while the lemurs are but dia.
tantiy, if at all, related to him.
tout Youth,
A. man looks back with regret, but
without bitterness, to his lost youth; a
Woman, howeter vehemently oho rasy
protest to the contrary, seldona if elate
attains to -this same • calm aerenity. •
nautical*,
Angel °Wide -Aunt Daisy, What hr
vacant by' "a fictitiouit character,"
Aunt Daley -That means one that kr
made up, dear. Angel Child -Ob, poi
Then you're a fictitioue ehitrecter,
aren't you, auntie?
Learn to be pleased with iteerythiag
e -With wealth, so ,far at it make" 'Oa
bettelleial tO ot•hers with poverty, for,
net having much to care frit and With
obadurity, for haat unierried. pkg..
tora. •
0
COIVIE TO THIS STORE FOR YOUR* CLOTHING.
You can save money by doing so, for . we are offering
better goods, at less mon.ey, than can be procured, in
Clinton, Goderich, Seaforth, or. elsewhere.
A.CALL WILL CONVINCE.
24
eLOTIIIER,
R SMITH'S
„ and FILl1RNIS14ER.
A, Good Dog.
It Is related by Professor Bell that
when a friend et his • was traYeling
abroad he one morning took out his
Durso to se e if It -contained sufacient
change for a day's jaunt he 'Mended
making—He cleParteil Awn. ,..11iEt Pd.....S
_,..a 1
Ingo, leaving a trusted deg °Wan.
When he dined he took out his purse
to pay and, found he had lost a gold
'coin from it. On returning home in
the evening hie servant informed him'
that the dog deemed very 411, as they
could. net Induce 'man to eat anything.
He went at once avais favorite, and as
soon ai he enterea the room the faith-
ful ereature ran to him, deposited the
gold coin at his feet and then devoured
the food placed for him with great
1
eagerness. The truth was that the ‘?
gentleman had dropped the coin in the a a
mooring. The dog 'had picked It up e3 re
and kept it in his mouth, fearing even AI
to eat lest be should lose his erapter'a */
property before an opportunity was ria.
forded him to restore It -Chamber •
;ournal. ' •
'Row to keei, Kool.
Buy our Iron Beds $3. to Mt Wire Springs SI. to $3 50
Sanitary Mattress 3. to ilk 'Wire Cots $1.50 to 2.50.
"r— -Japanese Mattingr-Veran4 and_LaW11. Chairs, Settees etc
J. 'IL eitELLEwp BLYTIL
FURNITURE: and UNDERTAKING.
,
nis newark. Al wOn't do any more work tor that I%
1,.
'
man Hoplthis." • • .. •• ,
., .
"WhY?" • , ' . • . 1\
"Well, he passed some remark I. did '
not like." a •
"Did be? ' 'What was ft?"
- -"Fla said, ' 'latiiitn -yeti Wolet be Want- '
-,
ed after this week.'" • ,
C0natitne Advice..••
• t'A, woman should always. depend on
her husband for advice," said the de -
t d f •
• "Yes," answered the -visitor, "but it
does grow nionottmous not to get any
eilvIe.e except to orrmoinize," • •
PARIS REM
PURE ENGLISH
Do you want the Best -7 -at the lowest Price—
We can supply you with Berger's, one of the •
best Enghsh makers at 'gets. per 115. •
1 E HOVEY, Clinton
, Dispensing Chemist.
"
eireetaesie
eeleeeeeee. .
. •
. .
The..142:1RIVIOIJR School
Telegraphy,
,And General Trabaing for
Railway Service:
The new method of int:truction adopted' by
this wheal hae proved a great success,
theertlePfiolaregaradt treteleainstthexpeehenesret,est possible tint
Employment provided at once." Write for a
free pamphlet which will give full information.
School room in Gordon Block, opposite Pos
Office, the roma desirable looation In the bay
Inspection of classes at work cordially invited
ROBB.RT LARMOUlt Stratford, Ont
Principal and Instructor. 'formerly
District Superintendent G.T. R.
Apri120th 06.07. •
BARTL I PP'S
RESTAURANT
Subscriber having moved
his _Restaurant to the store
recently occupled by F. W.
Watts, will be glad:to meet ;
his old customers,and as mat
,new ones as may favor him
with their. patronage.
Raving arsciNotight-Olit 7 the'
Xing Bakery, he will, supply
thepublic with first - claps
Bread and Cakes:
BREAD DELIVERED AS
FORMERLY
I-LBARTLIFF
SMITH'S
Wail Paper Store
Are you one of the crovid to the But
Store ? Everybody is mow talking
of the beautiful designs of
Wall Paper
we have in stocka AO prices to suit th
purchaser. We also carry a etoek'
Window Shades, Curtail'
Poles, Cottage Rods,
Room Mouldhigs,
Floor and Furniture Var.
nish, etc.,
of all descriptions, which are sold at
, prices never known before to the
pu
Painting and Paper Hanging done.
Hairnet& furnished on job work.
Stnith'S Waii Paper Store
N.R.-Sigtt Painting done. Ali Pape
tvitnnted FRP,14. -
Ladies' and Gentlemen's WaterproofsLadies' Wrappers
and Waists: A large stoat of Gingham, Linens and Mus-
lins for Summer Dresses, Laces and Embroideries, Underwear
and Hosiery, in great variety. Our Wall Papers are the best.
We sell the famous Sterling Paint, none better, some may
be as good. Lots of seed on hand.
May 1511, 1906.
RADAMS, -Emporium, Londesboke.
smewma
13uy ypUr Buggy where qualityas well as
appearance is considered in manufacturing,
and have your repairing done by exper-
ienced men.
All- are fOund at.
Rumba & AICIVIath's,
Huron Street., Clinton.,
16.
Clinton Sash, Door, and
Blind Factory.
The Town of Clintcin is on the eve of
:"boblif," if you contemplate- building,.
let us give you our estimation, etc:
1:46ileadquarters tor all kinds Oltailders' materials. -€1.
S 000PEgri Clinton
Advertise in. Tao CLINTON • Nnw E.aA
Did you ever/Stop:to think
'When buying Tiinneke 'l'dd'OFTenet Set or Pitney Chinni
' first-class goods, uputo-date shapesor decoratione be sure and eall
at 5•CRATE'S ON TRH WAY PROM THE
POTTHRS W HIrslOtAisID.
.
•
Teas, Sugars and Canned OCsodS
We lead in Quitutity, Quality ittad Prices.
Special cut:prices on Sugar in 100 lb bags
• SEE,DS=All kinds, Red Clover, Alsike, Thnoth y, Or
chard Grass, Mangold and ',Parnip Seed, Ontar-
io Agricultural College sets : "Yellow Leviathan stands itt the
head of the liet in yield petaacre in 25 different varieties."
Sold by
j.'W. IRWIN
CASH P AID FOR BUTI`P.R ANT:01;0GS
t*s3K*4********