Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1906-10-05, Page 6SISTER AND BROTHER attiorConsumptIon,butthistkdelt . WIT OF THE WO -----iadrused-tsychine-andis- strong and well . "Dear doctor, I heard Slow: Lune. - anisette ehhheieiir end Aisetria, " illy mother, brother and sister died of Illoinntption," says Ella 11. Cove, of Lins leo, N.S. "and! myself suffered for two aline from a distressing cough and weak gage. I suppose I Inherited a tendency sa this direction ? "But Omit God I used Psychine and it built me right up. My lungs are now *tong. I enjoy splendid health, and I owe t k all to Psycbine." Consumption, whether hereditaryor con - *acted, cannot stand before PsYclline, t Itsychine kith, the germ, no matter how it attack's the lungs. Psychine builds up the body and snakes itstronand able to I resist disease.g. Psychine is an aid to 1f digestion and a maker of pure, rich blood. The greatest giver of general health is schltil atty. that you are a Veterntety surgeon." "He is quite right." "rtainier. Don't you know that I am atteuding itIotto per Rider°. Young .WiclOW—011, Herr Tim, MY Ilt le daughtee- is perfectly. enraptured with yo. Visitor—Indeed. wbat .ffid, she say, hen? Youug Widowe;She said, "Look here, mama, thete .is man I ehoUld like or a papa."—Saion Witzblatt. lowste.1 .11/uele Prosdoebeo, lookine at his two PSYCHINE (Prommosit Slista) 50c. Per Bottle eraser 1611111111011111d 42—an druggiste. IL T. 0.. 8LODUM, Limited, Toronto. LE:PROSY. peculiarities of This Leathsome and. Deadly Disease. The tact that many persons come in- to intimate contact with lepers for years without becoming affected is not strange when one reflects that the same applies to the closely allied dis. ease—tuberculosie. . Men have volun; tarily submitted themselves to direct inoculation with material from the sores, discharges, etc., of lepers, yet , in only one ease (that a a Hawaiian convict • who, when condemned to death, subtratted 'to the alternative of inoculation) was the actual disease pro- duced in this artifieial manner. There is no cure for leprosy. All the remedies proposed after the disease becomes well seated have been of lit- • tie use. The utmost attained is a pro- longation of life and a mitigation of 1:1(.4.ing. There is a tradition whleh has of kite obtained some selentitic support that fish diet is one of the necessary pauses of leprosy, either through taint- ed fish containing some substance wilich stirs the bacilli into activity or tineugh the bacilli growing in the fish ;mud thus being taken into the stomach.** This luntie,y may have :originated in the belief that the scales of the leper and the scales of the fish are analo- gous. • Leprosy exists among inland peoples who never eat fish and does not seetn specially prevalent among those of the coasts who eat most fish, A curious thiug nbout leprosy is that Only one women is affected. to every four men. African Blood Brotherhood. The method of making blood broth- erhood among the Gana and Somali bas its peculiarities. It is described by 'William Astor Chanier in "Through Jungle and Desert." Lokomagui on behalf of his people and on behalf of my own each seized in our right bands a round stone. Upon the stones we lib- erally expectorated. Each then passed his stone to his follovring, who did Ilikevvise. We then exchanged stones, and each, holding the stone in his right hand, with his left dug a hole in the soli, meanwhile uttering words of sup- posed magic import. In these holes we finally placed the stones and covered . them with sand. We then grasped bands and assured each other that we iwere the best friends possible. The Editor and the Tramp. Bret Harte's first stories appeared in the San Francisco Overland Monthly. Then be was appointed editor of this :magazine. That was in 1869. About this same period two or three weekly newspapers were struggling for exist- ence. One day the office boy went to the editor of the Soaring Eagle and said: "Tbere is a tramp at the door, • and he says be has had nothing to eat for six days." "Fetch him in," said the editor. "If :we can find out how he does it we can run this blamed paper for another Week" ' ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Cenuine Carter's Little LivGr Pills. Must 130ftr 8Ignatittils fole Pao -Shull. Wrapper Doom 'Wray small ant it s easy 'attain) at Moat ."-"!•"""ireg MACK 1111 mums. CARTIR8 rtal sluountst, tosplusto, FM C.MATEPATION FO MILDWIKIN. IlleCOMPLEX100 111411,..2. josinway......0;tat toviZZNCW* 1 DURK SICK HEADACHE 1 ttle nephews playing at taking a fort. plounsed 2 cents to the vic,tor minutes after the fort was taken) •"Well, one of you is- a clever.captain. How was the fort taken?" "Oh," eald 'ones "1 promised -Gig! a cent if he, would surrender."—I1 Monde Umoristio. M. Duraplat—Why have you taken ouly one return tieket instead of two? Mme. econozny's sake, my poor Jules. *Yon see, you are so III. To take a return for you would be Pele Mele. Would Be Tenant—yes, this little flat is not had,, tiot 3,000 francs is dear. Haven't you anything tinder that?. ' Janitor-4here is the eeflar.—Itlee. • , . Mistress—,How .could -you be so • stupid as to staint.thIngs on afreshly painted table? Servanth-Please, 111f1A/112.; masterdust put something there.. • Mistress (in great wratb)--If themas- ter is a foe!. then at least he. has the 1. right tobe, but 'yon. haven't, you silly. girlee,Wiener Salon Witzbiett. • A. Dtiteh woman kept a'tollgate, One. foggy day° a' traveler asked, •"Madam, how far is it to A.?" • " "Shaost a leetlee ways,Was' the re- .• Ply. • "Yes, but hew. far?". again asked the. traveler. • - . •"-Shoost a leetle ways," 'more em- phone:11y. "eladene is it. ene, tWo, three, fotir . —Now York 'Press. or five miles?" . Arneitean:.:Varnit •In Parte.: . Patigitui correspondents have . heft. Ilstening to sotue queer yares told , ,^ Menai/erg of Betnhaidt .cotupa ny. after their return from the 1,"nited States. One geetleman declare1 that on the banks of the :Mississippi he Saw . a child. .ridhig . In .'place of 'a whip , the Meant bad a long. stick- -With a piece of meat at the end .of • %thick be held just in 'front of then111- • • ga toe's smile to! induce him • to hurry. At Chattanooga the. inhabitants offered . to lynch, a colored citizen If Sarah and ; her treube wouldwait and:see it•done. ; At San Francis-. eo sine or the troupe had. a long talk 'with a Young ivoman who i had been living. on hie Joi1 door of a .: hotel when the' earthquake oceurred. The earth' opened and 'awitlioseed up -- all the•botei exeept the chlinneye, and it. was tbrougle the chinahey of b.er • reoni: that- the young woman escaped. I THE CLINTON NEW ERA. Does Your I ELECTIO HEROIc TRAINING. Digest Weil ? eree mien t to clammy hillitnry ..--...,—e— When the food is imperfectly digested the full benefit is not ilerived from it by the body and the purpose of eating is de. I:Gated; no matter how good the food 0 how carefully adapted to the wants of thi body it may be. Thus the dyspeptic oftee becomes thin, 'weak and debilitated, energy I'3 lacking, brightness, snap and vim are lost, and in their place come dullness, lost appetite. depression and langeur. It takee no great imp wlecige to know when one has indigestion, some of the following syrup- otus generally exist, viz.; constipation, dour etonsaoh, variable appetite, headache, heartburn, gas in tho stomach, ete. . The greet point le to mere it, to get IAA bounding health and vigor. I BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS Is constantly effecting ogres of dyeperieh beeseme„it, acts in a natural yet effee filr way upon all. the organs involved in the process of digestion, removing all clogging inperities and making easy the work ,Of digestion and assimilation. - Mr, R. G. Harvey, Ameliasburg, Pate Writes: "I have been troubled with dys- pspsia ,for several yeers and after tieing three. bottles of .113urdook Blood Bitters was uompletely oared. 1 cannot praise 13,B,B. enough . or what it has done for stnineo.e.! have not had a 'sign of dyspepsia Do not accept a substitute for B.B.B. There ienothing."just as good." I A6x11,68111/06. '1.6.010 or mere mom Something original in the way of a dining room table has been made by It skillfte cablnetettalter for Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney's home in Newport. ;In. Its first form it is a Perfectly plain round table, six feet in diameter, made of the finest and most beautirully grained niahogany, with Simply carv- ed legs. Belonging to it are a series of pieces of the mahogany, 'the shape of eight seething of pie; With the point Cut off in a curved line. They are matched so beautifully that a series may be added to the table, making it ten feet in diameter, without any one not acquainted with its mysteries knowing it was not made in one piece. Still another series Of pieces to be add- ed In the same way make the table fourteen feet in diameter. The legs ere arranged so that their tops unfold and extend to, support the added pieces. The geed W01111111 ineeennotisly replied,. "I dinks it le."—Lipplueott's Magazine. Bow It LOOked:to Der- • ' The 1-riend—I hear You are going to marry yoting Wilde to reform hi:12. .. The Maid—your hearing is..good., The Friend --Well, if yon. don't -suc- ceed you won't be able. to keep him out of jail. . • Tlfe Maid—Thai's all right. • If he doesn't reform- I'll mit waet to keep hini out.—Cbleago News. . • • Subject For Another Lecture. , dear, exclaimed Mrs. Slapdash when they were finally seated in the carriage, "I've only got one of ray ear- rings on! I left the other on my dress- ing, table." "Huh!" grunted her husband, "Just like my lectures •on your carelessness— in one ear and out of the other."—Phil- ad e pb • la Press. . . . - • • • • 1 . • •'1717hat Callers. Are Por. "Now, Ilanneh, just look at these amine There must be. an inch of dust on them.". "Well, Ma'am, you know' yourself you haven't 'hail it caller for nearly a week."—Judge. • Food. "Balt fOOd. value. Has : your come pound. a*food valuer ^ "Certainly. Don't 1 tell You It cart be cooked in less than one minute and eaten in less than another ?"—Puck. iteethinted For. "Bliggins believes' that we are In duty bound to overlook people's faults." ' "Iudned,"•sald. Miss Cayenne. ...quo accounts in -sroxie n,icasure :fer his self esteem."—Washington Star. . . • " An tnnecessurr (Ineetten." "Is there rem for me above?" "'YOU °light ter know best abOtit 'that, .guv'uore'—Tatier, the Time ot Terror. "Are you afreld of mitrobee?" "Not ordinarily," field the unselett- title person, "Not until it O01:1308 to trying to Spell or pronolinee their natties."--Houtiton Post. • Tin 14 (MO of the °Meet known met. ale, The Chinese used it in the Mil- eatioti Of their brasses and brotize4 from time itamemoteal. In the book of Nunthere it is among the Mit of metale of which, among other thlegs, Moses and the /graeliteg despoiled the people a %Mittel; The atietent no. rates used it for coating the Inside of coppete and brass veaSeis • Vile old Santo F.e Trn/l. . 'The old . Santa' Fe trail is to be marked this summer. The school chil- dren di Katmaihave contributed near - Ly $3,700 to buy market's for the route. The trail dates from 154ft, but was chiefly used in—the. huildiug up of the southwest. The distance from Kansas ' City to Santa The was 800 miles, and a round trip cone:timed about 110 days. Day and night in all seasons the cam- -Vans pushed their • way. In spite of ; • strong military escort the teen Was bloodsoaked foe many years and was • • : arls.ed by hundreds of graves of the vietims of the Murderous Apaehes and other tribes. Neatly every Mite of the trail has bad its ambush, its surprise, its attack and torture. The last Wagons were sent out in ISIZ. Since then the I trail has been a memory. Centimes Senator Matt. , • • Senator Platt of New York was asked to write his personal remitiseences of. polities for the last half '.century. "Would you want me to write this his- ' tory as I know •it to be or as some- ' body else inight Imagine it to be?" he said. The reply came, "I want elle • act truth,"- To this Platt answered; "My young Mend; eome arouad about • CoantIle ,Seint-Sarens Comliag.a. Of the, rnesical evente or next nete• son will be the first visit to Ameeivit of .the eminent French 'Mush:huh Camille Saint-Sae:is, ivlie Is uow seventy -One years old and for it time - her of yearr 110"-Tutreved from• au affectioa of :the throat 'or lungs, which has made' him:$penci tutieh og his time In warin climates- Ile is one of :the, half doZen Or SO -greatest. living eon:- Posers and a brilliant pianist AS Vkall. He will 'appear at only twenty. con - teas thie country, so that only the largest cities will he distinguieheri by a.vlsit. • New Lite Sterling Appitrittari, M. Pierre Sainote, who has.invented a ne* life saving apperatui, went to the LOuvre.switeuning .batim a day ot two ago batest It. The apparatus con - rests of twO snialeelreular metal buoye; through. which the arms are passed, 'A belt connects the buoys, which are constructed in such a Way as to be praetically Unsinkable. M. Samols' he. vention Was put to many severe tests by expert awl/et:nem none of When/ Was able to remain • under water a Moment while 'wearing the apparent& *London Globe. t • went yefite ve years after I adead. It might be safe and proper. to do it then, but not now—by all meane, not now." The Signs Of Heart Trouble You can Surely Secure Heart Health and Strength through Dr. Shoop** . Restorative.- Start 'weakness which can be dealt with at alt is nerve weakness. Jest as your hand.trem. bless whee its nerves are weak, when your heart nerves are Weak your heart flutters and pitlpi* Wks, Other Signs aro shortness Of breath after Might exercise; 'fainting apella; pain or tender - 11068 about the heart eausea by irregular hears 601i. Oh, 0801111V sense tton as if the heart was al theothrotatwnesisy Sanaa ti on in the - Chest, shOwinr that the heart isn's *arising riglit; tom when. you lie leeling. eolutely on* right' litielet:Iiii ..\4:96.,r'''' bre t, kelf 0 it t I y the 'usually the left a 0 a difficult smothered Theretis ab, en one side— e1de. but fre* hatUriVI WO *hitt 16 t° ,ffent bringbabit weak Moro. ly one waif - ii tie crest a poet:tenant serene th to its% .-,/ nerves. Can yen line bow any. thing else earl be A otter Dr. sheep's Beattarative Wilt beteg n'atoc the /titrengh td boort eerves &lean. There is nothing in Ms remedy to stImte late; nothing that leads ti variation. Th e Strength that it gives Is natural and permanent, , It is Justthe sate* LS:smith ati Nate e owlet° them Wu, ate well. . Sheen% Restorative creates strength width Wendt over the whole inside nerve erotism -see ePreftetintit the cause of the troOld• as elallitta Ito mom Per tele Mad recommended by .. W. S. R. 1•10j4M1IS. • Code Pre.serlinet. -Chinese military training el t:)day strews a impels mixture of aucient and Modern Malteds. A. eorrespoitdent writes. front Hunan: 1, hewever, stw a performance welch I doubt wiesther meny foreigners have seen. I te WAS to males alie body strong and else in5ensib1 to pain,. ft was. 17most greWsoine shrift. The men came- for- ward In threes. stripped to the 11'.114:4 baring tied their turbans tightly round their waists. Itlaelt Welted up sort or Iron truneheou lout • twenty es long, eveighing zit least filteeu tbere being; three sizes, Tele truuelesee VMS made at two Imre of reit inetelitel together. The operator. haviug 103,10 his hoev to, the commaudiag °Meer, seized the. I1run1jeo iii ooe swung it round a .• brought,it dowe .whitek out itle Owe „Thee double irons gave a resoinefin The beads of petspirathat 0,r4t1 OUt. • - . "Witee: -.WOWS were' delivered on th right breast, then three, ore the tof with -the .other baud,. Then the - mem cles of the arms WOre 1:11'1141. same, way. Thee.' both hande wee, used, and the clue. wes swung wee tie bead doeve the baler. Then thefore head .was stileiected to three stunnin blows, This Was followed by subject Ing awe' thumplug the hewed ed thighs, where the. tun, weight or the •lostrument came. dosvn, whatever: it dia: In the other parte. "Setae added varlatione, and ex.teas,, but all finished by taking .the tione chetin In both hands; .untl; v1n8- the big end deep into their•abdomeue. Tele also was done thrice. It wile theplaineti to nad flint if they could Wand this in- tiletiou of pain, for it was •Self • evitiene- ly a tremendous ordeal, they would Unmoved by any ordinary kneeking about This I am willing to, greet, but F seriously Inesiiou 'Whether the hti- mon ,body can go en etanding Whit then eaeyeeheblettgo News. -Bessie Moves Slolv4,•.• Observers of the west were. soLne.. ' what surprised that the dis.solutien of the donma WaS llot immediateiy figs ' lowed by :a popular UPrislitg or.an. h • mediate. panic in Itnesion securities. Tien, forget thee Russia is ini rigrlenh tural 'emit ineut rather than a kingdom,' • (I that ye eapitaI ie. fettered *in bonde of• ' steer,. that its sneriest means of litter: • nal conmamieation are in, the hand's of, the gore:I:meld: alone, - and that, With its denim stippresSiel,.. its people, the peaSairtry -especially,. have ne organ through *Well their milted will can be • •expressed. From the moment of the ebtivocettlen ot the states: general .thi people of France were .neveg withoet Mouth; Mid, mitil the "[mime artillery officer" shot 1.101V11. the "deetiona" they 'Were. never Without an "army of.revo Iption," The, Itusslan people move: heavily and .inay take years before: their general will- is effeetiVe,- theli inov,i'Ment -.being that. Of the' glaciei iettlieselthlin the heal:melte, Still the, are movine ' d • $ r. ; Rest and Comfort i For the Kidneys. If yaw kidneye ate Ws* 1 Med—if there swe Sharp, shoot- ing pains in the emelt of the back and dull eche through tiathipeeeif there:4 e's0stant desire to urinate --•-if the urine is Mk and scalding --if the head aches and Specks float before the eyes --ion can't imagine what relies there is for you te THE GENTLE KIDNEY DUKE These wonderful little pills soothe and heal kidneya end bladder—take away allpaine* clear the' urinee—enablevere to • gel through the night Without. arising — and relieve every • trace of your kidney trouble., pure% Rheumatism Too. THE CLAFLIN CHEMICAL Co,, LIMITED& • Woussoft. Otrr, - Yam • , oceArt's 0E0. • *het D(.rorat:14 or . (411, a zas Which Siali'' i . to tile Boa a J.:Vnt ilee Sen.. What beenines of tti; W,i'p that sinlis• "..0..e77d wean? If It ls of Wood it eakes,• le the 1ir:4 place, considerable tliii for It to retielt the bottom. In a hull Ireil. er more fathoms:1r wati!:. o (inartor 0e , Mt :lupin will 01:1;,:0. before Clio ship. reaelie:: Loathe; It sinks slowly. and when. the buttOm is reitelied it '. falls: gently into the soft.'oozy bed, with no. CraStr Or tweaking. tif eottrse if it is hplen with Pig Iron er corre-otiatling subetanees or If it .1 ad !roe snip it *bilis 'rapidly mid some times strikes ;the bottnnn.. with such foree. Lis to grunsli le plecea, Once suirken a ship becoines the prey of the eorulth^ss inhaintatits De file ocean, ' . They-- Swarm .over and - through the great boat -and make it. their home. IlesIdee thee they eover every ineh or elle boat reitit it iniek lager of lime. T1114 takes. time, of. eourse, mid when one geueratiou dies /mother eontinues be work until finally tilt, 81110 Is 50 mien, with heavy ineruetittione, corals, ponges anti liarnaeles that .if Wood *he ereaking tlethers...fall : apart and lowly but stirely tiisr irbserbed in the waste at tile sea bottom. • . ' - • • Iron • vessel's ' are . demolished more uickly than those of weed, which may last fer centuries. , The' oniy Met - Is that,withstand-the ehemical 'action • • Wash hip; lo Fran.ce.. Only one Atuerietin washing roaehlne lids ever Open introduced. into Bor deaux, Prance; itecordlug • to Consul. Murphy.: "There -was," he • says, "rate suhh machlue introducedhere.. some years ago,: but as. it was not pro e I advertised or presented to the puling e in an intelligeat Runtime itseemedt4 make but little impresstrea,.• Washer: women from- the eountry monopolize .the washing husineSe, •gathering the shiled linen oue week itod returning 11 the neet. They beil. the, plotless, •tise, chemicals to whittsu then], rinse. them In the' -neatest strewn. and :spread the articles oyer grass, hedges and herbed Wire 'fences to dry, which does not conduce- to, long .wear of lintel. The Cleansed goods are* then returned to. the &frillier:h. who,seed them to an er, Where they are generally 1-eptelet • of the waves are gOld. and platineni,, and 'glass also seems. unaffiseted. No nlatter ;how...thug gold bitty .1.16:Ithiden in the ovedu, it will alWays be geld wifen'teroveved, and this filet explaing .the mitay routtuttic and fulyeuturons -.searches 'after. hidden Submarine ireaa-• Uresloet4 .in sill 'reclist, "'" .. 0 . .... • The heti,. Pure Vend' and Thew Law will mark it on the label of every Cough Clete containing Opium; Chior- oform or any other stnpifying or pois! 0n7ous drug. ' But it poses DreShoop's •Cough Cure as nettle for 20 years, vo- tively -tree, Dr. Shoop all along has bitterly oppesed the 11So 'of all opiates or itcoties Dr. Shoop's ,Cotigh. Cure is absolutely safe 'eventor the youngest 'babe - and it owes, it does riot simply suppress. Get a Safe . and reliable Cough Cute, • by simply insisting •rin hmettig Ur. Shoop'i. Let the law be your protection. NVe•cheerfully recom- inend and sell it. • W.S.R. Holmes. • • naming His QuIvertul, • A. farmer in an hengilsh tOW/.1 .hai, daughters,erho are named 'to ten - resent his feelings at the time cif •their birth.' • The. eldest:he called "Soy," and the second hears the name of "Sum- mer," es she was horn in Slily.The third arrived at a. time of financial die - acuities and would have been called "Seerow," but her metlier refused ,to' have the frame. 'So Sarah' Was subeti- • .tuted. Things . were brighter where number, four eftfne, tuni "IIope" was her portion, white five and slz—Awins—were respectiVely "Spring" and "April," this, last beingethelr birth friontb.'erhe sev- enth was styled "Harstest" arid the, yaungest "Co rn fort." ' 4.1 • AA 'Every -Day Lesson. ."1.16 thine own eelf• be true." Tr' the ,eireet-car conductor overlooks you hant him .youe nickel. If the groeery man undercharges you, can. his attention to the fact. A feell;eg ef .strict Ini:aor, and h inesty Is. better than any areeunt of cash, eroli 'know yourself to be • a genelernan _yeti ,can carry yoUrSelt•as such and yeti ean prove yourself th be 5uhto epee heIghbors, • If to- yehr•own, self .retu arr. true you "cannot theuhe false to any man." • • Pachetd at the Oven's Mouth • We d� things right at - the Mooney bakery. trackers are packed piping hot from the ovens. The moisture -proof paper and air -tight tins "retain alt the freshness and crispness, no Cheapness of. Swiss 'telephones. ".t was In Switzerland In June, before the riellt set in," said a globe trotter, "and what most strut Me there , was the height of the mountains and the lowness of the telephope rates. The government owns the SwlSs telephone system, and e phone cOSts only $12 a year, Tirta small fee glees you 800 calls, and for excess calls all you par Is 1 eeot oath." Alight Foe 100 )(oafs. On the promisee of a brick-in/Wiwi arra Athlete on. the Surrey Canal, North Camberwell, the knit firs hag never been p.vfnittott to go oixt onoteelhee it Wale lirst sacIt alight 100 years ago. During ea thee time It has been subleet to the heeviest rainfalls, It eon:lilts Of only a few fmt -deep of limo and 'mike, which ilea been constantly renewed. 16.0.0•41•161.44wkwieskoirmairord.viimigrowiimowl.eriamirtswiiiiirowo SejaS haute v Banat& CANDY CO 'STRATrORD CANADA , , . . matter where or when you buy them. They Come to your ta. hie just as inviting and de. licious as though you ate them at the ovens in the bakery. At aI1 grocers in air -tight packages. Oct. 5) 1906 .444.44-4E44.44444.44iiii4i444444WW. Reliable .G.00ds. IN no Jewelry Store inClinton, or urrounding.towns, will be " found a tnore 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. .ouritOti. JE-W.ELER • 11!!!!!Itti!!!!tilr.tittlt?!tftt?ItIt Clinton. Sash, Door, and, Blind Factory, The Town of Clinton is on the eve of a "boom," If you contemplate building„ let us give you our estimation, ete. tWileadquarters tor oil kinds of buijacrs' xnaterials.vi s 'e9. S. .000PE olinto4 The .efinton New Era ;From now till the end of this year, for 10 ents. e Anchor here..1 This is the port for ' High-class Confectionery, and Feeley Baking, • Have. .you tried our Oakes and Bread, if not 'why- not? • . . plume We carry a, choice line uf fruits, and 'our choeolates have no equal, we .handle GANONG BROS' • of New Brunswick, and HA.RRY -*EBB'S, Teronto; we beat them all in fancy box goods. • While met strolling don't forget to yisit our Ice CreamParlor, we are always pleased to see and Wait on you. Parlor open from 7.30 tie 11 'p.m. NIMENS' ear . • E actions purchasable for mg fines We 'W • Nimens, our very latest • styles of sweet-. money, See • Phone 42 Clinton, toned organs, at low' prices. . Instru- . ments rented, tuned or.. repaired. • Gramophones and music in variety it C. HOARE'S ' MUSIC EMPORIUM. 1.ease designs, and .containin0ur stock of high art Pianos of lates HOW ABOUT .YOUlz WALL PAPOZ? Nothing adds so much he the decora- tion of a house as good. Wall Paper. I am in a position tu show you the very best and choieest patterns, as I am agent for the * . • Empire Wall Paper of Toronto. • The sainplea for: 1906 are 'entirely new. Prices run from 5e ti roll to 35e, with borders at -same price, Every rein of paper gnaranteed to contain 8 yards, Samples gladly shown to, in-. teneingepurcha,sees, at any time. -GEORGE POTTS, • • Nouse Decorator and Paper Hanger, Ooze Queen and Princess St, clinton NEW 'GROCERY 'STORE. We have:Opened up a choice fresh s ock of Groceries at OISon's eld r Stand and now 'ask a share of t b! patronage of the citizens of Clinton I and tne surrouinlieg community. 1 Good Quality a Fair PriceS are Our special cares. eustomers will find our Stock the best value 'in town. The Bed Peather b.,ands in Teas and entitled Owed* i are samtdes of the yelues we h dl Are you one of the crowd to the Bus •Store ? Everybody. is now talking , of the beautiful designs of Wall Paper we:have stock, and. prices to suit th purchaser. • We also carry a• stock a Window Shades, Cuitair Poles, Cottage. Rods. • Room Mouldings, •Floor and Furniture Var- nish,. etc., of all descri,ptierisuiblerrh,ich. are sold. a prices never known before to the Painting and 'Peeler Haeiging done. Estimates furnished on job work, Smith's Wall Paper Store , —aLINTON- N.B.—Sign Painting clone, All Pape, trill:in:tell FREE. " BARTLIPP'S 'We are strangers and must get acquainted, • RESTAURANT • It will pay those who sell f duce to sea us, heforedisposillgofthejr utter, eggs and potatoes, elsewhere. We will laity, at a good price, what you have to sell, and will sell at a faii price, what you have to buy. BYARD HILL, 'Phone 114 COAL Little drabs of water Preezing on the Walk, • Makes the men Whe steps thereon Indulge ha haughty talk. Many freezing morningS, Many chillti—beWitte, Just let tie fill your coal bins, And then you need not SWear. SCRI$TON COIL THE MST TO BE AAA J. A. HAiVilLTON, 00At IMAZatiti Subscriber having moved his Restaurant to the store recently occupied by F. W. Watts, will be glad to meet.4: his old customers,and as mar new ones as may favor hlzn with their patronage. Raving also bought out the Xing Bakery, he will supply the public with first class Bread ;and Cakes. BREAD DeuveReams powiwRis • BARTLIPP READACEIE AJAX 111111111° h"tire.10016 Advertise is the Nov Eta •