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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1906-09-07, Page 3Sept, 1904 THE CLINTON kIEW BRA, - ABSOLUTE Fani News SECURITY Cenuine It pays to treat the here° 'Well. Cut all those rag weeds and Others. going • E. going to seed now. The use of alfalfa Canna be too muell DIAMONDS News Notes epopmnommoloo. • inipreseran our furtutr .ot Grooming and the little cares ate . What pays the horseman. Let us hear from yotwa live stock or farm rnattere now the harvest. is over. Carter's Little Liver Pills* Must Bear Signature:of See Fac.S1m110 Wrapper Below - 'Ur/ wean and es easy lateke Oa siva) lFONNEMIACHE, CART(R8LFOR DIZZINESS. imE FOR BILIOUSNEVii. ER FOR, TORPIII,LIVER. "1' Pert rAtInirNii FOR THE COMPLEXION ,,esugre,MUSTIUYI WAYUU.Purely, CURE SICK HEADACHE. News Notes. The hogs on pasture shoald have a dark place, well aired, for their daily use. Do not run down &neighbors animal in order to boast your own. That is despleable. A little salt all the time handy for. the live stock is the beet method of feeding it. Dispose of your over -fat hens at once, they , are non -producers, and jackets, capes, stockings and other artedee should be turned into money. ' of wearing apparel to reader, use the DIA Carriage horses just now are bring- MOND DYES only, awl you wig lasve re- ing good money. Those who want BURS Whi0b will AU your heart with joy. them are wealthy, and will *pay good DIAMOND DYES make old things look values for something desirable. like new. Anything that brings in cash returns Always ask your dealer for the DIA- MOND DYES and refuse any other make Wore and after the regular crop is a that may be offered to you The common wonderful help to the farmer. This is Y Y • just what the Canadian hendoes. Brigadier HOWell of th S va on Army. says the A.rray will tap the Scats - or very Home ilinavien countries next year and lining to Canada twenty -ave theneand iatia migrant. ' 1 • DiaMOildis for iffety (muidian laome Ara aOti the gang whit& the wealthy alone can purchase ; they are those invaleable genie known AS DIM1OND DYES which have been for twenty -live years true money pavers for the women of Canada, DIAMONDS DYES wherever osed,have proved their superiority oveg all ether package dyes in riolaness, fullness and durability Of colors. . Certain opeoulators, jealous of the popu- larity of DIAMOND DYES, are putting up Adulterated and crude dyee to imitate the DIAMOND DYES, These common and cheaply prepared dyee produce blotchy and muddy colors and ruin good materials. When you hsve &eases, skirts, • blouees, A. ton *of alfalfa, hay cut a little on the green side of life is worth a totr,of braid as stock feed. Clover hay mit at the proper Hine will be almost as goad as the alfalfa. Alfalfa twenty inches high, yihich was sown the het week of May, is re - Ipierced from T. Baker's farm at Bull's Head Creek, Alberta, according to the Medicine Hat News. , • - The New York Herald says the silk trade is being ruined by the processes of adulteration being practised by American makers. Since Deeember 67 failures of silk goods manufacturers have been reported. The Dry Goode Guide says: It used to be that when a woman bought a silk dress it was about the most durable she could buy. Within a few years the cheap makera. have put out quantities of silks "load- ed" with sulphate of tin -what the trade calls dynamite. This adultera- tion, used to make the goods seem heavy, would eat into a silk fibre, and a woman would find that though her tlress had been hanging in a closet un- worn, it had gone to pieoes. That, I think, was what drove women's fash- ions toward cottons. Cheap Silks are not wanted now. The bells orSt. Boniface, across from Winnipeg, made famous by Whittier, are to be removed from the cathedral in which they now hang and are to be placed in a new and large edifice, the foundation of which was recently laid by Archbishop Langeyin. These bells were cast in London and sent to Fort Garry by way of Hudson Bay and York Factory. When the oathedral "with che turrets twain" was burned the bells fell to the ground and were broken. To the English foundry they were returned by the Hudson Bay route. After they had been recast they were sent to Winnipeg via St. Paul. When they reached St. Paul it was found that it would be cheaper to send them'back to Liverpool, and to have them forwarded by sea to York Factory, then to transport there by ox team across the prairie. So back they were sent on their sea voyage. These celebrated b.ells have crossed the At. Ian tic tive times. Getallyour harvesting machinery under cover just as soon as possible. Sun and rain do it no good, and by ex- posing your inaplements you get a bad. example to your neighbors. • Tha,offleial statistics from the United States Department ofAgriculture give the number of dairy cows in the 'United States, those that are used exclusively for dairy purposes as 17,000,000, J. Oborn, of Milk River, Alberta, owns 2,180, Delaine Merino sleep, from which, according to the Lethbridge News, he sheared 21,441 pounds of wool. He received $17.35 per cwt. for it. During this year the ttakeya have been very high, but the demand .was more than equal to the supply, and them was never a time when the mar- kets were not looking for good fowls. . . Have a.g8od dust bath on hand for thelowls to wallow in next wintereand it will help to keep down the vermin. A dust bath for fowls is as necessary as a soap and water bath is to their owners. • A small Babcock tester and a little attention occasionally in testing sam- ples of the different cows' milk with a, record of weights taken once a .week will put the farmer in possession of facts worth dollars. Hogs and growing.pigs may be turn ed intp the orchard, where they wil have shade and call eat the early fall- ing fruit. Hogs axe abont the only stock that 'lee turned Ingo orchard • without doing some damage. ' Over 200,000 sheep are grazing in the mountains of Chelan County, Wash.. an °amen over last year of about50:0001 They range on the hills about five months, and at first snowfall are brought down, keeping ahead ef the snow -line asit descends. If farmer:a only realized the good im- pression Made upon those to whorn. . 'they write letters -when -they- have Once more it is proposed by a friend nice letter heads theywouldall provide them. Given farm a name, have that placed an a nice letter head as well as the •name of theproprietor. That is business. of labor to fix the rate of wages by law in the interest of the laborer. It might have been thought that this . question had been settled at once by reason and experience. Labor is a commodity the value of which, and therefore its price, must vary from time to time. The purchaeing power of money likewise varies, and the sum which may be good pay to -day may be • less than good pay to -morrow. One man's labor is worth a good dead more than that of another; and it absurd to suppose that the difference can be disregarded in the payment. There will always be fhany whose labor from various causes is not worth so much as the legal wage, These will be shut out from work and from bread. In England the attempt to regulate agri- cultural wages, even for the season, was a failure, and had to be discarded. After all, what is labor and what are wages? Work of all kihds is labor. Payment for work of any kind is a. wage. The limitation of the name to a particular class of workers is mis- leading and does harm. Toronto Sun. • Weak Kidneys Bright's Disease and Diabetes t. "Use Dr. Shoop's Restorative to CUM the Cause, If You Suffer From These Symptoms. !fere are the symptoms of Kidney compiaintai . trine laden with sediment, brick dust in urine. IlighlY eOlored urine, greasy froth ot blood.. In it. stringy mucous in urine, unusual de» tare to urinate, pain in paining water, pain In the back and over the kidneys, hat dry and litehing skin, hair , pain lel joints, legs feel heavy, sleeplessness. dullness, loss of weight, chilly sensaf lions. loss of mem- ory, general debit. tt , irregular hear t, disorders. :tearing, waxy skin, rever;• eyesight, troUblewith• the other in•Yoi_if... standing'. shifting* frog, one foot te anent is often An improp- 13 t'i'61:t.' worse t hall or treat. - eines get their .cA.c.ii'e..' sone. Mott Kidney medi. effect kfh•oM temedies called diuretics. ese are practically ../V kidney oheeicie eating as cathartics act On the bowel& , They excite the kid. neys to Unusual ao- ', Oen, they cause over. strain. These diur- etic remedies are them selves the f reqli ant ' cause of serious kidney disease. Don't try to ‘ ractor tkidnstems rin ev:tgtu:gegm.weiionly strength ' •IPower. Dr. Shoop's Restorative vitalizes the serves that operate the Kidneys. Sold by W. S. R. HOLMES.. dyee are sold by merchents simply for the sate of big profits, New Diamond Dve ernment has been obliged to modify the regulations to get supply*. eand Direction Book, Diamond•Dye Cook Book and Illustrated, Booklet, entitled eDiu- still the pay is none too geed, The right wayto adjust in.atterss.s, to .7s- m134110- 14°4.2j04-40' Win.Per 84.°11* serve a high• standard and let higher -met Sporrlentet to' auY ady who •pay induce eappi7. Mrs Brarieh, Sts Louis, claims to be the 'youngest grandmother in the world. She is only 32, and has ,a married daughter who is a mother at the age of 15. It is said that the Duke of Connaught who 'will arrive in Canada Potobei, will be the bearer bf an autograph a few adobe, but most all are stoue, letter from the King to Sir Wilfrid brick or cement. There is a brick Laurier. Such an honor is a very un- building dowa in the old part of the town that 'WAS erected prior to 1450, 118Tuhale°Gnoe; eminent auditor working on the laooks of Napance. He is going It shows that so long ago as that the Indians were experts In tae manufac- over a petiod of ten years, and it will , ture of bricks. But probably tIO per likely take about twe monthe to com- plete the job at a cost of about $000. .cent of all the buildings are Made oe The a,esessment roll of 1904 is missing. concrete cement, Cement and concrete Advertising is the best tonic for a have been used Successfully in Mexico business that has got that tired feeling. for 500 years, •and all the cathedrals Use it Winter, Spring, Summer, and and churches are of that Material. On rFitealol.. Use it as a preventative as well as a cure. The Clinton Nirir Mtn is the newspaper a good many people there are evidences ef a city ruined the line of the Vera Cruz Pacific can be seen the ruins of Toro Bravo, wbere centuries ago. There are tanue twenty Teachere are so scarce that the Gov- • • Paramids of cement which must have been erected over 500 years ago. One of these pyramids is 170 fbet in height,' -mid on the sal:aunt rests a eemeat ledge thirty feet, Joa.dliseeeter. Thia,.as well as others, Is of filigree work and carvedstatuary... Near this stands • another of white limestone, built in four terraeesa with carvings and orisementations which would put to shame the modern Amer., lean sculptor, It, has stood these centuries, yet the limestone is much °Seer broken than the cement. Think of a town of almost 400,000 persons, and the fire record is three in one year. The inside walls of many or the build- ings are as much as six feet through, mad all buildings are built 'around Courts. There is no provision in any 'of 'them for fires, and at the present time Small coat oil stoves are selling la the city for $20 -the same abat'se11 for $3 in the states, The floors are of stone, ilia ceilings of filigree cement, the walls of coarse plaster and almost without exception hand painted. Tbe architecture on many lunildings in the repulelic shoyvs that the Indian of cen- turies ago wee ahead of the medern :builder of today. AZTEC ARCHITECTURE, Weadertal Ealitteauee at the Ohl The Meaxicane or the Aztec Indians the piief.4 .of tbe Vulled States lessons in architeeture ill solid construction of builaings. There are buildings standing today in tbe City of Mexico that bave stood for three centuries and are in an excellent state of preservatiou. Timms is not a frame building inathe city. There aro fiends her iddress to Wells az Itichtadeon This - . Co., Limited, 200 • Mountain Street,t ; 214 OM OW year we sen ovei , , Montreal. . pounds -of cheese to the old -country .; about the same ainount we sent last HEADING THE • TREE. year.• But we sent 82,904.000 pounds. Canadian butter, valued at $6,802,003, e -----a. How the Forester Geta Its Life Him. $21 lbs, and an increase in value of The forester reads the histoty of a Miss Louisa Jones, the victim of the tree in great detail, says the American daring assault a few weeks ago at Magazine. After taking out a fele Owen Sound, has practically recovered "borings" to the center of the tree at from the effects ot the outrage. She different heiglats and ' Counting the has completely regained her novmal rings on them he may spinyousuchn Mental condition, but has .not the arn as this: faintest recollection of anything that y "This tree is 150 years old 9.50 rings transpired on the evening in question. at the base). During the first five Think of Dr. Shoop's Catarrh Ciiee. years it grew only seven inches (140 if your nose and threat discharges- it yciur breath is foul or feverish, This Evidently it then began to touch snow white soothing balin contains E Oil of Eucalyptus, Thymol, Menthol, dugs, seven inches from the base). crowus with other saplings, for it took etceincorporated into an imported, a spurt and put on fifteen inches a creamlike, velvety petrolatum. It year steadily till it was forty years soothe's heals purifies, controls. Call which represents an increase of 2,914, - tory In Detail. old (forty rings forty-four and one-half at our Aare ftir free trial box. Sold feetabove the ground). • It was net growing as fast es its neighbors, how- • ever, for at this point it began to be oveishadowed; and its grOwth declined for the next ten years to as little as four inches a. year (fort -five rings at ferty.eight feet and fifty at fifty feet). Just in time to save its life something' happened to its big neighbors, pre- sumably a windstorm, and it resumed a steady growth of about six inches a year, having passed its fastest growing . tithe. Its growth In thickness 'doesn't seem to bay° varied much, about an • inch every three years. But It grew Laster and, faster in, Volume, of course, as its:height Inereased-a: little over:a- . cubie feet a yearin its priine of life, L should •judge. 'About thirty years ago if reachedmaturity and stepped grow - lug in height(thirty rings ,at the top of the Main stem); and now It is AP-' proactang 014 age (the last -rings are Pretty thin); Hold on. a minute -here's prosperity la every pineince and on every hand. In the United States the conditions seems to be reversed. There is some ptosperity of course butthere is no -peacee-a. Canadian Graphio:a- Speaking it the difference between Canadian and British litw. the Monet. ary Times pointe out that the result Of Now is the time to get into °that poultry house and clean it out. White- wash it and fumigate it so that the fowl may enter a healthy winter in stead of starting handicapped amid the remains of disease. Add an ounce or two of carbolic acid to every gallon of whitewash. . • . The use of nuts as everyday food is inereasing, says an exchangetine of the newest -ways-ofbaking apples is to core .them and fili the centres valet' sugar and chopped almonds. They are really very much better than ordinary baked apples, and. possess a higher food value, • Again the sate of prime 1,421 pound Angus cattle at $6,60, the highest price ,paid for cattle at Chicago since December af last year,when Christmas cattle were on the market, should call the attention of feeders to the vital es- sential, of feeding cattle that are bred right, says the Drovers' Journal. The value of the live stoek and farm products produced in the United states last year is estimated a,t $6,415,000,000. The value of the farm products report- ed reached the enemous total of 0900,- 000,000. Of this nearly one-third, or about 5250,000,000, was for live stock , and animal products. Approximately one-half of all the exports of the Unit- ed States were produced on the farm. rhe value of the country's farm pro- ducts is increasing with great rapidity says an exchange. vosereaswirasirimir R. Fitzsimons & Sone We are still in the But: chering business, and are in a position to fill all or- ders for Seasonable mets, int.usted tc cu: We • Our new business and is in the Combe Block. R. Fitzsimons St, Son Mat 78 Clinton •• LIKE. A' NEW DISEA.SE ' New- to. the man • who never had 'corns is the pain relieved by Putnam'e Corn Extractor. Old corns and tow onesl cured quickly by ,"Putnam'sa Sold everywhere., • ,.....----e-reeee-aaaa.e. • by W. S. R. Holmes. Along the Main line of the C.' P. R., between Cartier and Fort William, schools are necessarily few and ,far be- tween. Within that Iiinit there 'lives a Frefich-Canadian, foreman of a re- pair gang, who before the holidays was pitying $11 per montla, for the board of his boy, who was in the first _form of a public school located some 50 utiles from home. That shows an evidence of appreciation of the value of education, by a Quebec father, that might well put to ehaaise a good many. fathers in the Province of Ontario. In Canada a general election is due in about three years but as yet there is scarcely a ripple on the political sea to indicate the beginniags of the cone- ing storm. Business men ate going about concerned wholly With their personal affairs; farmers are besy with their &tips; artizans are • thinking of wage -income; nota strata of citizen- -.ship is thioking strongly and • definite- ly of politics. We have a peace and n. false 'ring,' twenty,' Torfy, foity-six • Years back;, -,two very "thin rings -a' . , see.;-histeaci of one , thick.; one•;_mteans_ ,that Something interrupted the growing ason, probably a late ttost A Horne Story. Our Dumb Animals tells a 'remark- able story about the intelligence Of a mare who saved her colt from death by stopping e train on a railroad in TeXas. The colt had fallen with its legs through it railload bridge, and the mother started &Ain the track to meet the coming train. At the train came Up She stood on the track whinnying. The traits stopped, andthen the mare trotted. ahead of it as it moved slowly to the hedge. Here the colt was dis- covered rind extricated front its peril• ous• position. The •story was Vouched for by the engineer, railroad daela and passengers indite train. The. Dkee.: In tho. old days t-hc sing. clerk spent', • the petseaution to Which the Femme 'Minister has been subjected willnot his spare nibments in pounding leaveiprevent his being in his seat wheu the and .bitrke for: the: production of tine - tares and extracts that are now sup- plied by wholesele. manufacturers.. When d. he hanothing else: to do be •sions.Monet arly.Y Times'eted saye: what eele Fieldine has recentcompl • is surely arecord term as Fivance1J1n- ister tO the Crown. VertainlY no Chan- cellorof the Exchequer' within the last • hundred years has presented to Parlia- ment his tenth•consecutive Budget. ' of toil. ,It is, still a. time hollered pracee• Mrs. Davis is a woman who is mil, deal jest to ask the apprentice to pleyedon the G.. T. •P construction - works ten miles' west of Saskatoon, :handfing & team and scraper. • She is giving Satisfaction, and does her work with great energy and skill. 'She is the wifeof a homesteader from Wyoming and she says she is working because she needs the money. Her services were accepted reluctantly', but new the camp boss says she is one of the best. workers in the outfit. Many home- steaders' wives belp.thein in the .har- vest fields, but•this IS the first woman to do this sort of 'work in competition with men. Mrs.Davis earns $2,75 a day ouse opens, if the electors so desire which they doubtless do -because the vacancy can be reported between ses- made ointinent-• and rolled pills.. The mortar and. pestle. Weim the :universal signor the"trade. But the'diverse mod- ern 'activities pf .the pharmacist more than compensate for_the earlier details • der ten Pounds of camphor, in a inor- tar. . After sweating at his task for an hour or two. he learns that carapher won't powder, though it is readily sol- uble in alcohol. Some Worms Are Corlett's.. The most curious creature of the wornt family is the diplozoon, a sin- gular parasite wheal infests the gills' of Several species of lisle particularly the bream.. Each individual dlplozoon hes, two distinct bodies united in the 'middle satei to fortea perfect St. An- drew's cross, each half „of the ereature containing precisely:the samekind of • organs -via,' • an a limeatarY ...canal, a venous system, reproductive organs, etc. • • IT RINGS IN YOUR . EARS • • He Wes ikt Church. Sanaders, the village slater, was a very poor attender at the church. One day the minister met him and said: "Conic, now, Saunders, why is it you tire never tit church nowadays?" • "Novet at the kirk?" replied &wa- ders, "Ye're quite 'wrong there, sir; spent the hale o' last week on the tap 01." -Glasgow Tithes. 1 That saine cough is 'everywhere you go, deep and hollow because consump- tive. First ifwas catarrh Which could have been. cured by • Catarnhozone. Motel, never neglect a col, . never trifle with Catarrh, go to yOur .drug- gist and get Catarthozone. It's in- stant death to colds, cures 'them in five minutes. - Throat trouble • and catty rh disappear as by magic. •Catorthezone is the great throat, nose and bronchial remedy to -day, r.elaeusands ' use it, doctors arescibe it, --why, because it does. 'relieve quickly and cute thole.' oughly. • Two sizes, *25c $1.00 , at all clealets, peeitifely °area with Dr, Shoop's Menlo Ointment, It's made for piles alone and it &we the work to perfeation. Itching, painful, protruding or beta piles, disappear like niegio. Said by We B. 11. Itolmee, Home. • Of all European citlee Rome is that which has Mostfrequently been in the hands Of enemies. It has been entered or sacked more than forty times since 390 B. C. rimless Territory. No other empire iu lad world owns so much absolutely useless territory as the British. Banks • Laud, Prince Albett Land, 'Victoria aud Ilatila Land, with hundreds of other arctic !stealth and lands, are at present quite useless. REFRIGERATOR. RULES. •• rse clean, 'fiat dishes to bold avbat- • ever is on the lower shelves. -Buy your. lee la • pieces , as large as ean be aecounnedateile This, is much more .economical • than. to : buy small ones. . .• lae careful not to fill 'dishes too full 'o !lint they will *spill. Over.:' If any- thing is pilled, don't 'fell 1.2 wipe it-upinmediately. -•• a •. .Pack the ice. well together and do., not wrap it in papte• or elothe; •histead, keep the door of the lee chambers hut • as much as possible. •, • , • , Do not put •footi of any.. sort .clIteCtlY • .en. the Ice, If it is absolutely neees- • .sary to Piecei the lee, see that it Is in glass ,or.perceltin. , • . . Empty the ierrrgerathr at. least 'once fr-wevkrr,crub--the--interior-thoroughlyT- then scald the ice cilnimber and drain- . pipe with boiling water.. in..which' lamp of soda. has been dissolved; fol -low tftis with clear acilingewater; wipe dry :nal let it •air. for twenty. minutes. ' ' • A. Parallel" Shot.• . "I hear," eel(' rs, Caddie; "that yenr husband's got a" job 115 superin- ltendent of -a. eeme,tery and.,''Y0u're::go7 Mg there to INT." • -Well?" replied Mre; Nayber shortly.. 'Well, 1 was thinking it weuld be an wfii I ghostly and creepy Sort of, neigh- borhood." ••• '•• , • "Perhaps, but theneighborhood • won't be prying Into our business." - 'Philadelphia Press. .Sounded Jinks --Yes, the old termer was tell- : . itig about the, fight between his two game. roosters, • Milks a- But way was old -Colonel Illuecork so interested? . Must Ile Sent naltile: WatitUte Englishmen abroad can 'de- mand to be sent home. They apply to their consul, who givee notiee emir - • ingiy to captains of ships about to sail: 'Kaiak meow, • Knighthood was intended to serve as a mark of distinction for deeds of re- nown and merit. "Knight" properly signifies a perste), who for his virtue and martial prowess is raised from the rank ot gentlemen into a kigher oleo of dignity and honor. 444444.4.44.14.4444440444iiiiiii: Reliable Goods IN no Jewelry Store in Clinton,• or surrounding towns, will be found a more reliable and up -to. -date stock of articles usually carried by merchants dealing in jewelry wares. . Call in,and we will CONVINCE you that we excell in many lines. "Repairing " is our specialty. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. All articles bought here engraved Free of Charge. :eotitft0t JEWELER and OTICIAN. • t/Mtt/t/t/////tt////1///t/////t/tt EXTENION TABLES. We have the kind that will geat 16 men a,nd 4 boys. You will find such a, table very useful during the threshing season. Our tables range at the follow- ing prices 55.00, $6.00, $7.50, $8,50, $10.00; and 02 00. Every table guaranteed to give. satisfaction or money refunded. J. 11. elIELLEW; BLYTH. FURNITURE and UNDERTAKING. ROOM WANTED. As our new goods for Fall are beginning to come forward, we are short of room, and are peening out our summer stock. Yon would benefit yoareelf by perchapieg some'ef it. Do not be afraid to ask, as we may have thegoods you want. A fresh supply of Timothy Seed, ,13.sit, Barb Wire, Boots and Shoes, etc. We constantly mina to meet yoar waists. Do you Intend to dry Apples? If so, please call and get special instructions, as loaned by:a i exteneive dealer. Now is the time ,to buy; Poultry Food. • . • Aug. dlst, 1906; R ADAMS, mporE "ium, 'L la • on es ore. • Great ken's .Childbotod. -Many great men," said a peycholo- gist, "gave signs of greatness even in their childhood. Mozart at' the age of live composed a piece of music so diffi- cult that his father, a professional mu- sician, bad 'sonie treable fn playing it. "Macaulay before he was'..eight wrote the Compendium of Universal History, Being an Aceoent cif the Lead - t' • Ing Events From the Creation DOWil to the Present Century.' . "Hartley at seven weote a long and abstruse essay on the 'Nature of Man.' Bacon at nine finished a wort: on phi- losophy; atiltou at twelve wrote two epics. . "On the other band; Goethe, Steele, Dr. johnson, Wagner, :Voltaire, Tenny- son. Poe and Fenimore Cooper were deemed stupid in their childhood:" . Buy your Buggy where quality as Well as Appearance is considered in tnannfacturing, andhave our repairing done by qkper,•7 lented inen. All are found at Rumball.Se McMatles, Huron Street., Clinton. Clinton.,Sash, Door, and • Blind ractory, The Town of Clinton is on the eve.0 a "boom," If you contemplate building, . let us giveyou our estimation, etC. Headquarters for all kinds ol builders' Materials.=€t S. COOPE Clinton • • . Bitter Jerrold. Among the sayings attributed to Doug- las Jerrold is a. very: bat& oee plied to 'Mark Lateen,then editor of Punch.. Lenion was deeplyattached. to "Dickene and 'showed it in a •Very Opel fashion,. which . perhaps aroueied, the great Satirist's jealousy, At ali events, aSailerrold was walking out one day with Lemon and another friend, find. Dickens with several more • behind ., them, Lemon sialdeely dropped away and turned back.' "Whet has become . .of flinch?" asked Jerrold's' companion. "Did you Ifear• Dickens whistle?". was the eyniein reply. "Dickensepaye the dogatax fey Lemon." • Did you ever Stop to think • +If • When buying a Dinner; Tea or Toilet Set or Fancy China, first-class.goods, up-to-date shapes or deeorations be sure and aell at J. W. IRWiN'S. 5 ORATES ON THE WY FROM THE POTTERS IN ENG„LAND. . • Teas, Sugars and Canned Goods • We lead iti Quantity, Qiutlity and Prices. Special cut:prices on Sugar in 100 lb begs SEEDS Allkinds, Red Clover, AIsike, Timothy, Or • t. hard Grass, Mangold arid Turnip Seed.' Ontar A.grieultural College say@ : - "Yellow Leviathan stands et the head of the list in yield peretcre in 25 different varieties." Sold by •• nuke-AN:11y, because the farther said wben tb flttht was over. there wei. nothing left but two cocktalls.CleVe. - • land r loco la,• Dquolly Painful., • "Iinh! What do yen know about war? Did you ON'tst hert yourself lino, the Imminent; 'deadly breach' or 'seek the bubble velintatien, even in the can- aon's Mouth?' " "Well, nu, not exaetly-not to • nny notleeable iixtent. But 1 have token betne. unexpected company to dieuer," In the Mr. Farmer Greene (who bus beea knoete NI down laballeem auelioria riven. 'ow: I'll hey it' law ou "0111! Whites :Merin •• • Vernier Brown -No use kiehing, joehl Them (Titters is &ewe the taw, I rec- 1 hull:A1oll:46M Post. • Quiet (I Itherver. "We are offerine indnanimite thle season -to purynaeore or ow: neo. eleilea," • said The antoMobile anefa 17. (mar. enter reiolaed the (inlet observer. "tInve you built a hoepital for them?" IRWIN CASH PAID FOR, EGGi? AND BUTT Txl, ? zea.aeata,aa.a.""a‘ta rommossaisfaime, Norsoeuss• • . '1o.' • • 1 These pills onto ill diseases and dis- orders arising from weak begirt, worn out nerves er watery blood, such ail Palpita- tion, Skip Beats, Throbbing, Smothering, Dizziness, Weak or re int Spells, Anaemia, , Nervetumest, Sleeplessness, Drain Fag, i General Debility and Lack of Vitality. 1 They are i true heart tonics, nerve food 1 and blood enricher, building up and 1 renewing ill the worn out and wasted 1 tissues of the body and restoring ported health, Pri:oe 50o, a box, or 3 for OA at kil drUggulta, see.. BAKI, N. G...POWDER. You would rather trust an old friend than a stvanger, wouldn't you? Our Baking Powder is a tried and trusted friend in many homes. It does not pay to experiment with untried doubtful brands when you ean get ours, made with Pure Cream Tartar and the best English Bicarbonate of Soda, at only 25e a lb: If you have not tried it, we will be pleased to give von a free sample. - c„. J. E. HOVEY, Clinton. Dispensing Chemist. • 41.11111111`ea.."aseeesa•alse The elinton New Era • From now till the end of this .year, for 25 Cents.