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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1906-09-14, Page 3Sept. 14, Mt THE MINTON 'MY BBA NeFS Notes. ' Mr %%Mae E. WiWallas died at Tot- tenhiten. in his 87th year. Mr. Nelsen SInteeon; OrOWle Atter- neY fer •Algenia, died at 'Sault Ste. Marle. M. Alex Forsythe has been appoint- ed Chief of the Alberta Provtimial At Port Perry Williaee Tremeer choked to death while eatnig a !twee a meat. Samples of mdic from Toronto an- alyzed at Ottawa were more than half • adulterated or doubtful, ' Mr. William Atkinson of Eramosa narrowly escaped fatal injury by the blowing up of hie, thrashing enkine. -Discovery of silver on the farm of Mr McKniff of Haliburton haa caused much excitement in the neighborhood. A jocular remark by a teamster . caused a runon the Sovereign Bank at St Catharines. The panic was soon allayed. E. MK/come, Secretary of the Board of Edueation in St Thomas, was strick- en with paralysis, and is not expected to recover. William Wells was arrested in Ham- ilton for an offence under the Charlton Act, the complainant:being his sister- in-law, a thirteen -year-old girl. . The North Bruce Ltherete'ere111.11P1l- , a convention at Tarte on Friday, Sep- tember 21, to nomrciate a candidate for • the House of Commons bye -election. • Fourteen • Doukhobors incarcerated in the jail at Nei innipeg &Whitely re- • fuse to partake of food. Nourishment has to be forced through their teeth by scientific means, Harold Griffith, ot Norwood, was • thrown under the wheels of a work car on tile street railway yesterday, and his right arm was nearly cut off near the shoulder, Wm. Gage, a firmer near Ridge' town, WAS found dead. He had. been hauling beans, and met with some ac- cident when unloading,several ribs be- ing broken over the heart, The city of London,throu igh the Do- minion Government, ntends to deport Mrs. Louisa George and her three chil- dren, who arrived from Liverpool, end who•are suffering with tubercolosis. Piles positively cured with Dr. Shoop's,. Magic) Ointment. It's made for piles alone and h does the work to perfeation. !tithing, painful, protruding or blind piles, dieappear like magic:. Sold by W. B. R. Holmes. It is stated that Arrangements for • the transfer of Halifax dockyaeds to -Canada are practically completed,: and that the Dominion Government will assume control about the middle of • October. Burglars broke into the store of the Montreal Fur Manufacturing Company at Brandon. and had about 04,000 worth of furs stowed away in sacks, when they were noticed by a passer- by who gave the alarm. The C. 1'. R. still owns 9,847,975 acres •of land in the North aVest,and 9.025,375 acres in British Columbia. It. is the landlord of the world. Last year the • sales amounted to 1,115,743, acres, at an • average price of $5.81 an acre.. • • Miss Birt, a lady just returned from • Canada, writes to the Liverpool Post a•, ee longletter in this country. She em- • phasizes the fectthat Canada is a place e for-workerernet-fee-th.oseeborn tilted!' Come again, Miss Birt, you used your eyes to advantage. Boys fall and • bruise themselves. Grownup athletes sprain muscles by overdoing wholesome exercise. The aches and soreness are taken out with • Perry Davis' Painkiller. Rub it well into the throbbing flesh and relief is immediate. The Dominion Government was anxi- ous to secure the postponement of the meeting of the C,plonial Conference un- til June or July, but as a meeting late in April suits the majority of •those who will take part in the Conference, the Canadian Government will have to be content, • The population of Toronto,according to the assessor,is 252,800 and the Globe claims that owing to the handicaps un- der which the &lessors work their figures are always, at least 5 per cent below thereat population. Renee the Globe estimates the population at 267,a 000. Health officials have uncovered a Ing factory in Chicago devoted to the "re- processing" of malodorous eggs. The establishment was closely gutteded and difficnIt to locate, but detectives with ordinary olfactory acumen had no dif- ficulty in 'arriving" at the right spot. Eggs beyond all hope of sale in the markets are mixed m great vats, run over huge wooden rollers, deodorized, dried and sifted, and finally shipped to bakers for cookipg purposes. Owing to the nature of the business, only the initials of the firms buying the stuff were put on the packages. Several tons of the "reprocessed" eggs will be given a kerosene bath and the business stopped. A SIMPLE OURE VCR PILES Pile Sufferers know that Ointments and other local treatments sometimes relieve but never cure. They don't me7 move the cause. There is a little tablet that taken in- ternally removes the cause of Piles and cures any case of any kind no mat- ter how long standing. A month's treatment cost $1 00. Ask for Dr. Leonhardt's Hem-Roid " thousand dollar guarantee goes with. every treatment.) Hem-Roid is the discovery of Dr. Leonhardt, of Lincoln, Neb., one Of the most distinguished and successful physicians in the Western States. All Druggists, of The Wilson-Fyie Co„ Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont, ex • • Old Papers. Old pipers for tale, 5 cents a bundle. NE eV ERA Office. Neimp•moream., Beautiful and Brilliant Colors guaranteed When Ladies Vse RIANOND DYFS Each year thousands of letters come in from all parts of this vast Dominion telling of victories and eeccesses with Diaanund Dyes In the home. The marvellous and iinmense seles of Diamond Dyea in Canada have in - deiced adventurers and speculators (who know nothing about the ch.eeaistry of colors) to go into the putang up of package dyes. Such dyes ere adulter- ated and crude ; the ealer$ are muddy and blotchy, bringing ruin to the mat- erials you try to dye. Diamond Dyes, the choice of wise women, are the kind used when bright, full, fast and brilliant colors are want- ed. No disappeintatents possible when you menial:nand Dyes. Diamond Dyes aresolcl by all leading druggists and dealers. Refuse to ac- cept substitutes when you ask for Dia- mond Dyes. Send to Wells Sc Rich- ardson Co., Limited, Montreal, 2. Q., for New Direction Book, Diamond Dye Cook Book and Illustrated Booklet: entitled "Diamond Dye Longjohns' Winter and SUMM'er Sports." Sent Free to any'address. • • '•qummmmnnmminavamsv. It Fitzsintons it Son. We are still in the Butt chering business, and are in a position to fill all or- ders for seasonable mats, int:uuted to cu..ca.e: Our new business stand is in the Combe Block rt• ritZSiMOUS it Son Mint 76 Ciirtten • • A correspondent of the Farmers' Ad- vocete says that one reason why the idclovercrop so.oftea fails is the kill- ing out of bumblebees. Here is some - Oleg for school teachers to impress upon their pupils. Whq of us is there who has not been taught, by the con- duct of our fellows in early years, that - the bumble be is"the ceinixion enemy" to be rooted out of his .place of abode, and killed whenever come across ? Yet the bee is the fertilizing agency that makes clover and othersucculent foods for form stock grow, and without whose work the crop *tile. Every child ought to be taught in home and in school to be a builder up, and not a de, seroyer -to be a friend of every anithal and every ineeet tbatis a friend of than, n SCOTSBRAINS LEAD. stausue, up to Show Thee Anglo Siniene ond Germans tu Whole Are Away Ufa It le interesting to note, from the extbibined table, how the braAn- Weigh‘ts of various nationalities differ, according' to eminent authorities.. It will be notieed that the cannyinhabit- ant of Auld. Scotia leaae the nee while •the representative of the IlarkeY Vacierland just beats ,Tohn Ben .by short head for second Place, and, the bland and childlike Bsquiznaux brings up the rear. It may be stated that the average weight of the human brain is given as 491-3 • ounces for males, and 44 ounees for females, 05. •Oz. Scotch....._...50.0 Pawnees . ....47.1 • German..." „49.6 • Italians ,...,46.9 Ditglish.. • .49.5 Hincloos . 45.1 Preach • 47.9 Gypsies , .....44.8 ' Zulu ... , , .....47.5 13ushutext • eidnese, Dsquirnaux . ..43.9 • Touching the cube capacity of the brain -case, the Angle -Saxon and the German run a head -heat for first PlaCe, despite the apparently Greater stowage -room. possessed by the aver- age "square -head," Here are some relatree proportions; WHEN CHILDREN ARE SICK. They eat something that disagrees - catch cold,. have cramps or colic.. If there is palm just apply NOrviline, it's good to rub on, and for the inside it's most comforting. Effective and pleas- ant, youcan't find a household panacea, to eq eal Poison's Nerviline Used with setisfactton for half a century, .and in better demand every day. because it does stop pain, ease sufeeteng and cure the thousand and one ills that constant- ly arise in the family. Large bottles at all dealers for 25c. • Wilmer. rerriteie, Several substances, •whose odor. ite to •western nostrils exceedingly re- pugnant, are highly esteemed in the ease as perfumes. In Persia and Af- ghanistan, asafetida .considered a delicate perfume, and many luxurious persons .carry a quantity of it in their pockets or in a bag suspended from the neck, . • •• • The ,breatititi. , The orthodox Efebrews date from the creation, which event they place ID. tete year B. Ce 3760. r • The Jaime of '..Ieriebtv. • The rose ef Jeeleho is also called The resurrection plant 'from the-fattee that, after. being apparently. dead and dried, it may' be: revived and . made to bloom by placing it,* e bowl of water. •„ . • Angeo-Saxon . 105 cub,- in. German . 10e " •" Negro . , . , 96• Ancient Egyptian, .„ .93 Ilottentot • 54 " " Atistrallan AbOrIgine 58 It is at once •eipparent that a really Marvelous disparity exists between the first four and. the last two, each of. which is rapidly aPproaching total ex- . Unction. The aibove•tigures, of course, al:01)1Y merely to the shell containing the brains, but even were their train- easee eonstructed on a more generous scale, it le doubtful whether these abor- iginese who have sunk low in the an- thropological table, would be any bet- ter off as far as cerebral tissue is con - teemed,• As regards the Hottentot, he is such an utterly depraved, videos ' morsel of humanity -that the.sooner he Is non-existent the better. • Xt must not, however, be 'inferred that excess of brain -substance impilies excese of brain -power or vice versa. Cromwell and Byron both vossessed bmins of abnormal weight, that oie :the pr tector's being given • as • 82.29 DZ., and the poet's as 79.00, oz. These figtires, however, are 'not universally ateepted by ecientiste. The brilliant Curler's 13rain was also massive, bat .we find an ordinary ,bricklayer of f-ilr Intrillgence, but .unable to read or rite. possessed of• a brain that' tipped the beam at •67.00 oz!' The brains of SPUrzbelm (55.06 oz.) and Daniel Web- • ster (53.50 oz.) and more notably A.ber- crembie (63.00' oz.) • were all heavier I than thee of the ordinary individual; ; but, on the other hand, a congenial epi- ' leptic idiot, reported by Dr. Tuke, cou14,, le est. of a brain weighing .6.0.0 , a celebrated Mineralogiet.a man Over the medium stature, had only 43.24% oz. of cerebral tissue to work'on. ••,Virlth these statistics in view, It will be eeen, how leepOssible, it is to • gauge, tient a mates capabilities, the,quintitY • of brain Subetance with. which Natttee . hits endowed him. • Daily we 'hear Men spoken , 'of • as "brainless Idiots," or • "brainy. men" as the • case May be, 3 Cents a Day Will Care Your Kidney* • ee a day for a speCialist-tkati will cure yon of every trace of Kidney Trouble. That's all it • Costa -1C a dare -to take FAMOUS BALLET DANCERS - • Madder. • The coloring principle of the 'mad. der affects even the bones of animals Abet devour the plant. • The Toiler wasp. The . tailor wasp, evlien needing' d . piece of leaf to line its nest, always cuts Its pattern in an •exact circle. .,-These wasps have often been watch-. • ed, but • have . never been lenoevn to • mistake the size, to 'gutthe mitteen over Again or eo .epoll. a leaf. ' . .*. • The •sandew. , • is an inseetivorons dower,' attracting ih; prey by. gloe: enles • of. viscous: Matter and boldieg 'fast'Alfe captured insect by drawing its petals •over .the 'body. .• whereas these individuals may pobstblY be in reality mine the reve.rse. • ----There-appearaLte_be...a aietinet rela- tion 4ietween weightiness of- brain - substance and crime. • The brains of • French. criminals have been subjected to post-mortem examinations and these" ,,yield anaverage of 65 to 60 oz. for • those pf • the worst type of maleffibtor, While' one Hula!, a very clever linguist and scientist, who was executed for murder 35 years ago, was the owner of a brain that turned the scale at 59.00 • oz., or almost ten ounces ever the aver- age Weight,. - Arab Coet 'Ili! es, There" is no reveri.1..or, the Costumes of the •Syrien, Arabs having changed. during the 'period 'covered by human history:either ae. regards male or fee male dress or adoennient Saving ouly .for his Stomas there is no reason to believe that the Bedouin of the 'desert • does nut clothe and ;ideal himself ex- actly . as he • did in the deys, of. the , patriarchs. •, .Old 'Mexican. -swords, . • The 'Mexican .sWord, itt tise samoug the- aborigines et the: coming of the Spaniards, wee Modeled after the nose •of the , sawfish. ' • • Bench and. Bar. ". Mn W. Ballantine, for Co-• ventrY,•recalls in, The Grand • Magazine some staits 'concerning his father, the late seripante Ballantine.• Among' the berristersof, lealia..ntine'e early days was one Johnny:Williams, a queer •cild bachelor with a sarcastic wit,andan intense prejudice "'against .•marriage: • His clerk one day asked him , for hcilidaY• to get married, and some .nteetlis ; afterwards ' on entering' his chambers Williams foetid .1-11s' dead body stispended front the door. . He engaged another clerk, and then asked • him if he was married. "No," the °clerk eepecl; but, tihinking that ••Oir'iltiams would regard marriage as a- guarantee of steadiness, he. added, "but • I am go- ing. to he." "Very' replied ,"but underetand this. -When yeu hank' yourself, don't do it herel"' Iluddlesten, when at the bar, was a •favotite butt for jokes, but a very -able advocate, and Haliantine used to say (,f hint that he was . the. best verdict - getter: at the bar.• A great dandy, he _always Wore "5. vete -•much powdered • he 'alSo• were kid glevee in court. . Re Was sornewhet egetistical, and dur- ing a general criticism' of him some- one Said in his .defenog. "At all events, you reitrer hear. him sneak. 111 Of any - The Ant Lien. • • •. The pitfall, much used in Africa • and South America as a means et catching large flanie, iff an ireitation Of the device' employed by the ant lion to entrap his 'prey. Tbis curious insect digs- a comical hole in the sand and lies in wait at the bottom. When' an incautious ant approaches too near, the top the sand gives 'way and be slides • down Into the ja.ws of his enemy. • • •• The chineee Pen. • The Chinese pen from time iMittleMO• - rial bee been a brush made of some soft hair and sed to paint the ctirlouls- er formed letters of the Chinese Mph*. . bet. •• South African Ant MM. The largest structure on the ed when eompared with tbe tize of tli builders is the mie hill of Africa. Some of these mounds Witte been cieserved fifteen feet high and nine feet ha al- timeter. If a beanie habitaternt were constructed ou the seine seale iewould be more than seven miles MO. white wee:etre. In all mythology and folklere White flowers are supposed to spring from tears. ••'• *Nola Tree. iteetae, • T� pleffeet its ova and young trent the attackof fish the tree frog ot ettrazil betide a • tubelike subaqueetie Natifieation of mud, •Whieh tt jettiouslY ' guards until ita frogiets aro largo efeeettle total te poo, 01 umouteavos. , FIFTY CENTS IN some cOnditions the, •I gain from the use -of Scott's Emulsion is very rapid. For this reason we put up a lifty•cent size, which is enough for an ordinary cough or cold or useful as a trial for babies and children. In other conditions the gain is slower -health cannot - be builtup in a day. In such cases Scott's Emulsion' must be taken as nourishment: a food • rather than a medicine. • It's a food for tired and • weak digestions. &miter tree snags SCorr & BOWNE6 cherkistl, • Totonto. Ont. delh iiinl SI oio. All druggists Th GNTL.E, KIDNEY NM. And " flu -Ju" cures --remember teat. Not Merely eases the pain and makes you, feel better -but • heals and sttengtheus the Xi& neys and completely cures,. Wee .° ThOtt "on our guarantee " ',het they Care or uthney refunded • At druggists' or sent prepaid on receipt eec. '4E.eeeetete Lm am. nitiorson. eat • weal." *eve,- rejoined, teamantine; 'emit the reason is that he never speaks of anybode but himself!' . Another story retatee Cookburn, who presided over a legal society. of Which the ,Judges were all members. and ef Rallantine wee treasurer. One of the members who undertook the duty et receiving and diebtirsing the moneys of the society mentioned one day to 13allatitine that he had been din- ing the night before with some bishops. "If you dine with bishops." was the reply, "we hall have to look into your accounts." Singularly enough, some months afterwards, it was accidentally discovered that embezzlements lte.d ac- tually been oominitted%by this partleu- lar member. A meeting was held to determine what should be done, and the judges attended IL It was agreed that the Matter. ehoald be allowed to drop, w.hereupon Ballantine remarked that the theeting afforded the unique spectacle of the afteen Judges corn - Rounding a felone. • • Overstepped the Line. , At Willesden, a woman who obtained a summons for assault against a man, said that last wf.ek her daughter's young man struck her and she said nothing, but when he sent his brother • • round to strike her, welt, it was too much. (Laughter.) •• Animal* Clever With Their Peet. • Goats are the most sure footed of our native einimals. They can 'walk up- right where the average- human being would not crawl. }levees are ehe dain- tiest treaders, however, though they cannot climb. • No horse will step on a :than if t can possibly help it It is standing rule itt. cavalry regiments ethat if a trOOper.l.e.disniounted he must aeinain perfectly stile when the whole colamn 'passes ovek him without injur- ing hina. Camels are careless, on the other hand, and the man, mho "came Out unharmed feene ender tee feet of .eamel-vorps- witeenotaltornetaehe tune_ over by any beast or vehicle; •. Aerated' Water. Artificially aerated drinktag vetitere, were the invention of the. clicnitst - seph Priestley, who itt 17712.publistied his "Directions For Impregnating Wit- ter With Fixed Air Itt Order. to Com- municate to. It the Peculiar Spirit and Virtues of Pyrmont Water and Other , Mineral Watersof a Similar Nature."• Some one has calculated the coastal:in-. • tien of aeratea waters in. Great Miele and Ireland ' to. amount; to'..200,600,000 gallons a veare-London Staadard: . . • salt. *Oise &tit as a toothWasii. • It ie.usefut for removing tartar . from a cltiftTh teeth. As a cougk`medicine a strong • solution of • salt ofteu stops a: child' coughs • . • . • The Moanatone. • • In the moonstono. the wearer bas an itid' to beauty and the gift of pleasing. Under this stone's iiiffuerice she sees everybody and everything about her in the best aspect. • Some ancient writers believed the moonstone cured epilepsy, others that its powers waxed and waned with tbe moon. • • Worship. • The word • worship originally meant nthing attire than to honor. • • • ' • Gatfoa,• • Gallon virasi originally a niteher or jar, no matter of whataize. . . • Eat Pines Like filonbons. Our North Aineeican Imliaus eat the seeds of many plants, parching them, then grinding them and mak- ing them into gruel. Their fondness for the seeds of some Dino is *elt. known, these. "pinioes" being to them what sugar pintos. are to use • The Creek War. The Greek war begau lefay • 5, 1838, and ended. Sept. 30, 1837. The total number of meu who served- while the trouble lasted was 13,418, • The Human stomach... . The hiniatin stomach Is provided with Nur coats; (1) Tho external, or peri- toneal; (2) the muscular, which regu- lates the mechanical movements of the • organ when churning the fisod; (3) -the submueous, or cellular; (4) the mamma membrane, Which secretes the gastric juice. • Ilot Catetidared Paper. - "ILA calendared" paper is Made by passing the fluished peocinct between hot rollers, • which iron the paper and give a 'finish end polish that • catt be secured en ea other Way, • fieoraits or 1.f4 ToitUoloi, w14104`7 Lrimaer and 149114 It WM been esserted that the grand • ballet died When the famous Teglierel retiree In 1845. At any rate, the ballet today is chleily a SPeetaele Of dreal3 and colored •Ilinelight, Except for a very few performers, dancing as a high art ba $ vaulateed. There is no one now to set beside Le 'ragtime, vele> was the queen oe the stage. naivete iutroduced ber into hie novels. Even Thaekeray condescended to notice her anti declared enthusias- tically in "The Newearnee" that the "young men of the day will never see anytititte' 50 graceful as Tagliout in 'La Sylphitiee At that thee ehe waa the rage,' • • Stageeoitchee 'and greet - cents wereliacned eftier ber. I,a Tagtioni owed her eitarne to a. wentierfpl lightuess and. grace. Her . stele was rather ideal than realistic . and voluptueus, as was then the vogue. The hideous ballet skirt 01 today silo 'lever wore, but a street thae reeclieti nearly to • bee ankle,. It was orte. of the prineiples of ber father, who 'Mug/it her ad she learned of the art, that the datieer tUtutiIU be modest In dres8, la movement end in expreseloh, Another Cainoue master, who called • eimeele elee Dieu' dent Pnit$0," always. told file pupils to use ell the coquetry they could. • . Vestris, who • founded the eanioua Vestrls familee was an eighteeuth cen- tury celebrity and quite- reotarkalny conceited even for a dancer. "There. are but three great men etlive," he used to say, "myself, the Prussian Fred- erick and Voltaire.'? (It is interesting to. compare • Southey's remark that a male dancer deserves to be ham- strung.) Tbat professionof which he was so proud Is intleed.an arduous one. Vestals used. to practice for about six hears a day. A. dancer must be ex- tremely strong and supple, • A. curious story is told about Fanny leessler, a German dancer with coat Week hair; which illustrates the ex - tree* muscular strength a daneer re- quiees: She was croesing to America when She entered, her . cabin.. one -day aud discovered a thief abstracting the jewel ease Whitth site kept hidden, un-' (leafier •pilloar. Before he could' attack her She planted Iter . foot 'tun la his cheet and Jellied him oe the spot. It 1s eurioua that no Englishwoman has ever aceleyed. eupretee success as a dancer, It ispossible, as foreigners aseert, thattliey lack the draniatic- gift .is certain -that a elefeloug devotion and arduous appreatteeship are essene tiat toany expression. through. the me- dium of dancing. The "rats," the be- ginners at the Paris Opera, are arta cled for flee years, and. then, unless. they have danced from thein. cradle,' they carat& hop*. to attein the &St rank. , : • •. • Another qualityessential tei the great • deader Is infinite leitience... The only • English' ilancee who ever gave prOnese 'of attaining the front rank failed this respect.. Lola eiontez • wee the somewhat foreigu utuue she had taken. • She losther temper one day, with•the., --tannagere-at-ee1teentett1 eend-expeteeeeda herfeelinge so dramatically as th break an: ma beetle ever his hend; • e n- agers will emlure, Melee forares but this was.. too .nitic Carlotta Grief:13 4nOther 'funvJuo. name cole the old 015 -era. It 'Wire eette • Who: Beet icrtroditeed the polka foto • England-ealtoliernitin dance that en me •to stay. 'it was . for her, , tea thee • Heine, °Emile!: e nil AdolphAthii• collaboatted la writing tellselle." . - There.. were. O .score mare femme; names 'thatwere familiar words in .those . days; Of the . twelve •eeaditeg. dancers. engaged at ' the King's thezt ter , • ill .1824 tor ti two inotethee eetiakt fire • • were asutliektnt attraction to receive • more than ,k1,00t) eee.h.-1,mition Ma a • .• Prance,e FI&e Roadie • ,Franee Is one of the best paved' countries in the world, .The first Na-, poleon Instituted and carried out a read system which gave Ietante the roads which are lasting monuments • to. the Napoleonic foresight and shreivdn4s. Those roads, alltigfit paSabljTind reaching nit the cen.. tors o`f illation, are competitors o ('the railways. ' • even:tee anetee ewe., . Herr Hager, a wealthy tied &Jamie winded - beaker who lived In •Berlin many years' ago., frequently bad watch. es picked from. his poekele . At first he had •recours.e to all •Ithals of safety chafes; then One fines moaning be Moe no preeeutioo whatever auti quietly ale lowed himself to ae7 robbed. At eight, • On returning from .huSiness; lie Wok up the -evening paper, when he tittered an exclametioit of delight. A. wateli had exploded le a mates hands'. The hawk of the victim were sbatteredeatel ahe! left eye gone. Tbe crafty banker bad tllied tbewatelicese evitle dynauthe, which exploded during the •operation of Minding. .• Salt and Enileoiy. • 'Whenever we get 5 call to -attetid 0 .case of epilepsy," said as amblilance surgeon at Bellevue; ewe always . tied the patient's neck and face eeVered With' Salt The efficiency of snit as a cure for epilepsy le evidently a relle of • wino. old country superstition, though just whet it le we've never been able. tO.tlisd MIL" • . •• Start end FhOslt. ‘‘A:tt men are, created free," declared- ' the ilainboyant eltizep. l• "That's' right," .assented the sour cit.. leen. Marriege ain't toeced tin- to no- body. Whea a ,feller• gets spliced hd does it on hie own responsibility." • • ark darted tet. "There has never been anydeelsive action Oh that bill erou Introduce year after year." •• "No," answered the statesman. "Thal bill has been of suck value in giving tne prominenee that I should rather re- gret to see it removed froneactive con. troversy and •buried Iii the Statute books." • His Hestet meening. Belletield-What did you mean by saying that Sparing was a man of rare hitelligenee? Thet Isn't the way it Which he is usually regarded. Bloom field -el mean that ids gleants.ef intelli gence are so far apart as to .be very rare indeed. A Pima EtiOar In Ilotmekeettlair, Mr. 3ones---What is it, Ity pet? Mrs jones-Thie rabbit (sob)-Vve •beet plucking it (sob)-ali the afteramil, it isn't half done ,vett-rimob. 444444.4444404404444.44.4.44.44444W 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. Cali 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 CbaFge, W. R. Counter 9 JEWELER and OTIC1A1N • ttl/MTMM/t/TIMMIMMIM BUGGIES *. 'I3uy,your .Buggy where qualityas well as appearance is considered in 'manufacturing, and have your repairing clone by • exper- ienced men. All are,,found at RUmball & McMathts Huron Street., Clinton, Clinton Sash, Poor, and Blind Factory. The. Town of Clinton is on the eve of a "boom," ,If you. contemplate building, let us give you our estimation, etc•. Wileadquarters for all kinds ol builders matellals.4€11 S COOPE a olinton $$$$-ta-le4:104*-14***.$464e--1146* Did you oVex Stop- to ihttik-? -47*. When 'buying a Dinner, Tea or Toilet Set or Fancy China, fl'aea Au' first-class goods, up-to-date shapes or deborationsee sure and call iler aela at J. W. tRWIN'S. 5 CRATES ON. THE WAY :FROM THE 6, POTTERS IN ENGLAND. Teas, Sugars and Canned i'Poods We lead in Quantity, Quality- and Prices Special cut:prices on Sugar in 100 lb bags; • SEEDS IA I kinds,: Red Clover, Alsike, Timothy, Or • hard Gress, Mangold and Ttan arSeed.. Outer Agricultural 0 ollge says - "Yellow Leviathan stands at the headed theltd in yield peretere in 25 different varieties." Sold by CASH PAID FOR EGGS. AND BUTT • Readers of the Papers will have not!eed Shoe Talk that Shoe Manufacturers have decided. to advance prices 20%. We have forseen this for snynn time, and laid in a large stock of Shoes both Fine and Course. So we are prepared to supply you at the • old prices for some time. • Men's from $1.25 up to 93.00 Boys' from 1. 25 up to $1 05, . Ladies' from 1,00 up to 2.00 alisses' from 1 00 op to 1.50. Childrens' from 25e to.$1.2e, It will pay you to give us a trial. • R. • Adam's. Emporium, Lontlesboro, Sept, 4/06, • N 4111.411W.1111. toreeweeete else • • • • BAKING POWDER You would rather trust an old friend thane, stranger, wouldn't g von? Our Baking Powder is a tried and trusted friend in many N1 • homes. It does not pay to experiment with untried doubtful / brands when voe can get ours, made with Pure. Cream Tartar aad the best English Bicarbonate of Soda, at only 15e a lb. If you have not tried it, we will be pleased to give von a free sample, •• 1.‘ J. E HOVEY, , Clinton. Dispensing Chemist. '• Norlitirwtor..4/ A'Ne.,111.42 Nile ...ie... Maohine-made Mattress. One-third of your life is spent in bed, str a good Mattress., Our machine -made Mattresses are free from bumps and hollows. They are square, plump ,and just the right weight to.,turn. easy. Prices according to quality $3,00; $4.00 and $4.00 • J. Hit etiELLEw, BLY111. • FU RN ITURE and UNDERTAKING, • ehnton New E From now.till the end of this year, for 25 eenti. madia.1•1141,.•-a16.-