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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1906-12-14, Page 7there le atc--when late and scalding— * Bladder Irritation. If urine is dourly, highly , or offenieve-4t indicates ey 'Trouble. the danger signal*. Take um 4 ENTLIE KlbNEY n -Ju" stimulates and ngthens the weaken ed. ed, overworked Kidneys to thy action—and heals end thea the irritated bladder Bn-ju" mum We guarantee and yon esm get your money if "110-111" disappoints. hsore " Bu-Jn " or will or you. tonne essesonaa GO. IJIIITED vinument. T. 1 Addreee 'n. 'jr. Sheldon to the gration From India. NOT SUITED TO CANADA. 41. THE CLINTON NEW ERA, h Mazoomciar OppoSed Central int "Butinese Buildine R eu m ti m MAN 911iLOING. ORMAL DINNER. — . kr to Arrange the Table and Serve the Meal. ranging the table for dinner there are soup, meat, vegeta- lad anddessert to be served d o placing the silver and Is the same as for a formal cept that there are fewer ware la the covers and e service plates at on which the soup plates ced, this course being now rved outside, the soup be- n by the waitress. silver as follows: On the ates place the forks, laid in which the dishes requlr- 111 sereed, starting from e. The knives and oyster the latter are served, are the right of the plate, the ns In front of the plate or knives at the right. The e forks and spoons should up, the edges of the oward the plate. Large lald on the fable, the one when necessary In and pepper boxes are tamers, within easy two people. Napkins, ngular shape, are laid and al piece of bread, cut mg and one and a half laid in the fold. -• served Otter the roast or tance and before the des- Ily In by the ate prepared for the With the salad are ese straws, crack - In the event of a est for, the serving one at a side table, e host himself will le table, the wait - York Telegram. • ----- ...I Recipe. rocila; is said by a nal to be that of a svptiau queen. It lEt siirects that dogs' es h ds be belled with rkeetan custom. estan girlsbecome engao. custom for the fiance to nts a sum of money.. If later the parents must bey. g Plaster. s exeellent for an ob- s. up ••tr more green .figs I, and their contents. are The plastic mass is ied and spread upon linen, m applied to the boil and ion for several hours. It aw" the boll to a head. emt Wooden Ship. t wooden ship was probs.- . by Ptolemy Philopater, long, 38 feet broad and t carried 4,000 rowers. Jug Floors. under should see to it or gallery floors slant can then be washed minutes merely by us. as the water drains ou brOom nor mop 18 re, r.. "I 'have written to everY prominent shave found a tried and tested' eure for Rhea. neeespaper in the l'imiaub, advieine Matism Nota remedy that Will traighteisthe th editors to use every effort to stop •distorted limbs of chronic cripples, nor turn bony Is the emigratio- of —Indus to British growths back to flesh again. That is impossible. C'olumbito My report to the communi- nut 1 can now surely kill the paius and pangs of ties , ' ii—• 1 that sent me here to ills this deplorable disease. veetietite %till be of exactly the same - In Dermany—with a chemist in the Olty of nature." ' Darmstadt—I fond the last ingredient with "Phis was the'1 remark made by Mr. which Dr, Shoop's Itheumatic Remedy ws9 ms:de T C M minder of the University of a perfected, dependable prescription. Without Bisatils ney's Perfectjon open ---yon will ght in these dainty to surprise yoursel4 e a treat avid' aey's 91 eft Sodas All -Imbed. who has been investigat- that last ingredient, I successfully treated many, ing the eonditions as affecting emis many cases of Rheumatism; bet now, at last, it uni. grants f rove Hindostan to this pro- fo.,--s4dY cures all curable cases of this heretofore vince fr sozne considerable time, much dreaded disease. Those sand -like granular writes th • special correspondent of wastes, foundinitheuxnatielneod, seem todissolve The ( 11( ate at Victoria, 33. C. Mr. and Pass away under the action of this tweeds as Mazoonidar is an educated. Bengali, freely as does sugar when added to pure water, t.1.) came here to look into the pros- And thee. when dissolved, these poisonous wastes peets and circumstances of the Hin- freely pass from the System, and the cause of dits already here, and of the many ;Rheumatism is gone forever. There' is now no who had hoped by selling their farms to come to this province. Despite glowing reports from Hong Kong that indueed the invasion, this competent investigator has decided against Brit- ish Columbia and Canada generally as an outlet for the overplus popula-. tion of India. "Oh, not only the cold. weather you have in the mountaius caused me to come to my conclusion," he said, "there ere teeny other things. T.IverY- thine here is so different. eunjabis do not know your manners and eus- earns, and besides religious and other considerations arestrongly against - them. There is no organized effort to send Hindus here, and the rumor of 1,000 coming in one steamer is, I am sure, erroneous:" "How many have come ,to this con- tinent already?" "The exact figures are 1,482," was the reply; "but not all these are in• British Columbia. There are a few in • Seattle, about 40 around San Fran- cisco, and a dozen or so in Oakland. Of the balance, roughly speaking, 1,400 at the most are in Vancouver and vicinity, although a few. are en.. the island and Victoria. • • Of these in Vancouver, about 900, are at erode. while others are idle. There are 46II out of work." "What is the reason of .so many being unemployed?" • "Well, those who went to the mills near Revelstoke found the climate of the mountains too cold. They came •.back -to Vancouver, and, though some got jobs, Many are destitute. .Anether, reason why some are out of. work was .. trouble with the Royal City planing mills. There .are 200 working there, and an arrangement, was made that they sheult. get $1:50 A day, but when pay day catne they only. got $1.25. 01 course they quit. Many others ,have never secured employment." "And what is •the prineipal work' of the employed?" ' " - "There ate about 200 at the. Aineri- can mill, and most of the rest work on the C.P.R. traek running „east from Vabcouver. I like British Columbia very much, and believe .eould get along. well here. as: I 'have received an English education,"..Ms: lViazoom- der emellided. Very Prevatent In Young -Women. 74 Condition of "WhateARloodeda nesa" is Past increasing. • • It is always asseelated .with longour and sensitiveness to cold. ' All the mucous surfaces, such :IS the gums, lips and eyelitle, areblanched And waxy look.ng, the Skirt' •is pallid and. eolorless.. The is beccanes rapid ifficl feeble.; there s also loss of atmeeite and feeble(' digestion, palpitation • of the heart, breathlessness zincitetidency to faint. In •exereme cases ther'e, is cein- plete disappearance of the. menstrual flow and dropsical swelling of the limb. Physicians know of no remedy so • prompt in results as Ferrozone. whieh contains all the elements -.lacking in debilitated blood. . •. . . Ferrozone not only. • improves the present quality of the blood., but 'acts ually forms more blood—the rich, ..itsci kind that nourishes and feeds the Or- gans that require assittande. "About a• year ago,-,' Writes Mrs' S. G. Stanhope, -of Rochesay, "my, daughter complained of feeling tired; . She was very pale and listless, and kept hieing strength until top weak Ito attend. school. • "We read'of a similar'case, that of Miss Descent, Stirling.• Ont.,being cured by Ferrozone, and. this . induced us to get it for Elaine. ' It tookthree boxes of Eerrozone to make any de- cided improvement, but when six boxes were used my daughter Was he- ginning•to be her old sett again. It didn't take • much longer to make ae complete cure. It :lute made a. •neW girl of Elaine. She has gained. ten pounds in weight and looks the picture of perfect health. , She is strong and enjoys the best a • Writs." . Every growing sort and young wo- man can make herself .strong and healthy with. Ferrozonte Price 50c per box, or eix for $2.50, .at all dealers, real need—no actual excuse to suffer longer with. Out help. We sell, and In conedence recommend • Dr. Shoop s Rheumatic Remedy W. S. R. HOLMES. Peonllar tight Giving; Antosnis. A peculiar light gi \lug animal found In southern Callforniau waters is Cie heteropod. The heteropods, daz.:11:1;: white. and almost shapeless, can often .be seen floating on the clear water Their bodies are almost transparent and they have In addition to a long tall a powerful sucker, by whielt they cling to seaweed. When these crea- tures are irritated they seem, to emit light from all over the body, though one writer describes one in whiell the light—red inthis ease—seetned to radi• ate from the center of the animal. Of all the light giving animals, the snipe Is said to be the most wouderful. Like the heteropod; this animal is provided with .claspers that enable it to fasten to seaweed and 'rocks. So plentiful are they In Californian waters. that the Santa' Catalina. channel, which is from eighteen to twenty miles, wide and about forty-dve wilco long, is at thnes literally covered. with them as far as the eye"ean reach. Covering the entire Surface. and• gleaming like gems In the suellght, they present a 'beautiful pic- ture. .These 'animals constitute t .del- • lcacy much sought for by .whiles. .Sonie• of them shed e silvery light, while others ,yield blue and:othets red light •. • One Legged Girl Dancer. In a combination concert garden and dance .hall near the entrance to Pros- pect park, Brooklyin may be seen near- ly every night a girl with one leg dant- Ink merrily over the polished floor. Her dexterity with,a crtitch Is almost marvelous, and there is never abreak In her perfect time ,with the music. Waltzes, twosteps and otber round, dances are Indulged in, and the girl never lacks for partners. In Jed, many who have danced with her say she is lighter on her feet than most girls with a full set of limbs, The girl Is pretty and, for that sort of place, very ladylike. In many re- speets she Is a mystery, as few know her name or history and why She re- tains her love for dancing despite her handicap.—New 'York Press. COtton Paper'. Some recent experimente have dene onetrated that all 1. grades of paper ran be manufeetnred from cotton stalks and inntddition to, this a variety of byproducts, ineluding alcohol, cotton, fiber and -smokeless powder, can be se- cured In commercial- quantities. On the estimate that an twee of land pro - (invites ri field of eateit will also pro- duce one ton of stalks, 10,000,000 or 12,- 060,004) tons of raw inatorial can be de - fulfilled upon atom:illy. Some enthusi- ast claims that in addition to int•roaa. lug the value of the soutlee mutual cot- ton crap by $100,04,0,000 the removal of the etelks from the fielt1s. early, in the NVIII INAS I t11.0 extermination of the 1 es Varmints, . Toreni.o Oanadian..01u.b. "The Science of Modern Businesa le the subject upon which Mr. A. F. Sheltie'', :president of She elene.ci eehool, Chicago, addressed the Canadian Club in Toronto recent- ly. • The speaker at the outset drew a. distinction between 'science and art. the former being, in the words of fler- bert .`nencer„ organized knowledge, while art 4.i the other hanJ is doing, .or performance. "in praeticing the art o' anything. titan applies the knowledge gabled. •the science of it," observed. Mr. Shel- don. • "All knowledge is Ipct scientifi be that it must he organized—es- vidusly it must be "tested truth. 'By the term ‘business beilding' I mean so adding to a business .already begun that each customer IF made the, -first link in an mulless chain to briug more."lsioess building implies the get- ting 'of besiness, but the getting of it in such a way that it is continuously :added to .by the influence of those al- ready dealt with, There . was. a time when the 'businees of trad.e was look - 0(1 And shunned as an oc- cupation: 'unworthy . of re•fined intel- lects or gifted natures. That day is stow paseed by in. the March of pro- gress, and the besiness manis coming to be looked uponmore and more as ! trofeseional man. A. profession Is ,s,cTiletiei.c:m ractieed, and ft, seleime as we have seen, is organized truth— classified. comon Sense. • nutervial unit in each busi- ness Community is the business house or coneern, be that an individual bus - imps, a partuership ot a corporation. Thnainia in the buainess house is the individual. Make' each . individual right, and the institution as a whole will be all tight. System, order, -is one. of nature's first laws. Great en and • 'great institutions- these laws. ,,but yeti May have the -best me- chanical 'systems which the:thinking, remembering .and imagining -powers-pf . man cari invent; and still they will be a failure in operation unless the man or Men and women back of the, system . is right. If it were net. for • !there would be no bitsitieak...Make the man right . and his businees• will -be, right.' The work of making elle • man -right,the- problem of •eelf . de- velopMent; of s eienti ft 6, hunt an '.cul- - , ture, is ,the prOblein of problems,,,not alone in business, but in all welke.ef "Each •individual in Infsiness;• em- ployer or employe; should study self 'to Ihn end of developing iedividnal - power to the highest possible degree. Man isa bundle. of wonderfulpoesi.; bilities, :these 'being looked np in. the ' positive. facultieS;••.body, •mind. and • soul. Seecess' of Ile' fiel,ffikiient- -and Rivera That Flow Baelcwardincreasing kind' is net a 'natter JI Near -Argostoll, a town 'on one of the .luck or -chittic,e,.. Itis. governed " l' • t .11 1 Greek islauds, four - little torrents of sea water, relliog on an average .fiftan. five gallons a eecond, penetrate 'into the. fissures' 'of the cliff's, flow' rapidly inland and finally gratinallY disappear Into the creeiceS. of. the soil. Two -.of these water courses :are sutficientlY powerful :tosturdall the. year round•the wheels of' two °mills Constrected by an enterprising Eaglislinnin,- -This Seema tit first sight nbenrd on the face *but it Is quite .ea.stly • explained: T.he hillsbf the Wand are 61' Soft; cal- careous rock, full of fisSitre's,:tnisl suck up water like immense sponges. 'In. consequenee the pools in their subten; ratieati cayeriis 'are 1 ways lower than .the. surroundins, see: to restore the., balance these little -brooks,' fed •by the.. -Wavea, are rilwees• • Tbe , curnsee yet natural. -result .or the 'constant eVapOratiOn• of the sea water Is that.gigantte masses .pf salt crystals -are constantly -ill the caves.— Strand: Maga zipe. , • straw-pSvvions. Korea. Is. perhaps the oldest oolintry in the world, and the customs, and 'ac- tions that t� make up the daily life of the people are not . at all governed by, the logic. or tradition whieb moves • us on our enlightensid.Wa*. They have. no Aleaely regulated sitorts. not hi ng pa rently nett .coula be Moiled to a natioaal game. 'They pass most of 'their reerealion hours. swinging :In Straw. rope swings -and seem- entirely_ leippy in lie-. stain. The Straw rope, it well made,..is extvemely durable and can Stamt vonsiderable Weight. as may be Judged • )vhen three ablehodied young men impose Oelr Acetglit. upon the •stVing, Standing on . the' shoulders, of .one another atter 'tile.: ilianner of • acrobats.„ It may be very 'flue pastime,. :but the average Americari, It sa fe to say ; would find in it very little appeal, The Old Greek rilvoree • A. clergyman was railing against di- vorce. '"We ought to Inive: the 'divorce law that wee enforcer' anelent (4recce," he sattl. "lf -that old Greek: elaustewas lucked to eVery separation,' - I am pie's:I:Idea that divorces would fall oft' do to To 1.1t.l' eent. • Thin law was time when a nine got a divneve lie , 011111 1111 nal Meier nny elrennisteneee man.y timelier weinan youliger than • his ex-teile; itmoeeut law, a. brief law, not inueli to hiels at, but how many divorea • suits would .be nipped • in •the bud If all husbands knew that after the seihiration they .could not Marry 'younger women than the wives they hadeast offl"—Philadelphin, Bul- letin. Water on the Veldt. • Water is sometimes very scarce aand precious on the South African,' veldt, -itederiling to a writer,;. who Sue: 'In our veldt cottage we had no Well, only large tanks, and, about August our condition usually became desperate. If you washed yout hands you carried the precious fluid out to pour it on some thirsty plant or vegetable; the bath Water the same, Inlet 0!' It being first sued to scrub floors. Cribbage Rod p6tato Water was allowed to eo01 and then used for the garden or to wash the dogs le first, Se that these waters did three duties." Matiiiissinsit o tIse An etithuslastic Toren& physielan, while dying, made careful observa- tions of his condition, detailing his symptoms to his son and attending physician in order thst they might make a record of them. At the very end, when he was on tte,point of paSS. Ing away4 he surprised the friends at his bedside by saying wfOu See 1ant dying." na • observance of these laws is a .big problem. We • can but touch unott..1 bests', but here are a few. though, - which eaph Of us as business builders. should consider. •• • . "First—F,flieiency a• the individual dependS upon the degree of supervi- sion his work needs. "Secend—SuPervision. is made no,- •dessary 'iv, reason of twoclasses of errersf -1st, errors of ontisslon.; .2n1, . errors of compliSsion. • , ."Tliird--Errors of beth .kinds are traceable. to .the negtitiveS • in human nature, , • : • • "Carel ulne.ss (the. positive) has as • -negative, • ea imlessness, . truth 'and falsehood; ',honesty awl dishonest y--;, fa ith.. d (1 ou •ain bit i on and iiid ferenee • eneresi 'and laziness:. ietelli g.-nree find 'ignorance: :strength; Illta , health •tand sieknees; no- tiit and inactivity, and so it goes:. everything in the analysis •Of man in .. nil his fahultios." and . qualities. . His c,rors are all..traceable:to his riega- • "Fourt11,,-The •negatives are banish- . .ed as • thP .1t0SitiVeg-.8,r0 developedee, just art darkness •must go when, the lieht comes., • positives are developed through two processes; first; 11)• -due- • i n d re wing out — pins instruction, fil I ing in.• Together these. processes vonstitute trile• education, which is- a -Me-4011g Proves's. - • • -Fi rr; t . The 'result of , these combined iwbeesses as applied to, weit'e body is endurance, Second... '11ie reottit• as dplied to his objective-, vded Ability printellectual dap-. -aeny. Third. The result as applied 1 l neibility, or the eniotion side nf his mentality is and; /to aPplied to the will, the result a r`i ifin.rl (1.ur..ane- plus ability plus • , p1114 aetion equals ,with abig "M "-- the liina-of men and women needed in every business, erywive , • . "w; -un •• Burbank iatif • make- the -seetee. ti i,tlp.6 .1111.1111. • • s • •• Dec. 14, 1906 (Wet-Proof—Cold-Proof—Almosi Wear-Proo When you want a pair of rubbers that will last until you're tired of them—rubbers that will keep your feet bone-dry though you wade all day in slushy snow—rubbers that will wear like flint and fit like slippers—go to a live dealer's and buy a.pair stamped 'Duck Never Break "on the soles. Up m the lumber camps they swear by Duck Never Break Rubbers. ['respecters and miners wear them; teo. So do people who want rubbers that will stand pretty much any abuse. It simply isn't possible to make rubbers any better than we make Duck Never Breaks --isn't possible to make them any stunner,. any stauncher. or any more wear -proof. They re made for ;service and give service—great se,nrice. Get a pair and see how a pair of really good rubbers can last. THIS IS THE GEORGIAN DUCK NEVER- BRUM NEVIMBRE DoubletWea,r Ill Every Pair • Tell your dealer you wantl those better rubbers made by ▪ The Daisy Rubber People. At Berlin Ontario • • "I The Georgian is lined with tough tan -colored cot. ton. Interlined with heavy can- vas duck be- tween the tubber upper and the tough Cotton inside ' lining. Outer tollal sole and heel are double . heavy pure gum, corm - gated. Inside is an insole of solid leather, so you can have thiii ho a • te.soled. Does. Your 'FOOD Digest Well? Virhen the food is imperfectly digested the full benefit is not derived from it by the body and the purpose of eating is de- feated; no Matter how good the food or how carefully adapted to the wants of the body it may be. Thus the dyspeptic often becomes thin, weak and debilitated, energy Is lacking, brightness, snap and vim' aro lost, and in theirplace come dullness, lost appetite, depression and ingrain, It takes no groat kno wledge to know when one has Indigestion, some of the following quip - Sams generally exist, viz.: constipation, .our stomach, variable appetite, headache, heartburn, gas -in the stomach, ete. The great point is to cure it, to got back bounding health and -vigor. • mut me latteness-nety. r„ IT VA I11110 IOr the It:P»T to =Wont to the fact that he need not o through life a slave to the in.lnevee; •of heredity, 01 environ item t. flu t these play a part in the life of each, but knowl- edge of the laws of metal and phy- pieta growtlf. plus the conscious itp- lineation of them the problem of self- dtvelopment., n take present ezwiron- ment more potent than heredity, which is but the sum of all past environ- ment. "The solution of business building is, 'in final tmlysis, man ,building. rt pays to cultivate the human plant. Witness•the iestitution which has not only a erect . department, a buying :department. a selling department, a, shipping department, • etc., with all the regular departments, but which' has also it hem anity •department, the • object of s• Well is to ,cultivate the • human plant, and you will witness an instinetioe destined to progress along the lines of natural • law, one : in. harmony with the eternal laws af progression."' . • OtitD POISON on account of its terrible effects, blood disease Is called tho king of an oiseasea. It .may be either hereditary or contracted; BO while it may not be a crime `to have the disease, it is a crime to permit it to remain ill the system. It may vmanifest itself in the form of Scrofula, Eczema, rheumatic pains, stiff or swollen joints, itchiness of the skin, eruptions or blotches, ulcers in toe mouth or on the tongue. sore throat, falling out of hair, 4isordere1etornach, and a general depression of the system. If you have any of hese symptoms don't neglect yourself, 'You have no tune to lose. Beware of ,o d fogy treatment—beware or mineral poisons— beware of Quacks aud Patrice. 01.7s* NEW fiZOTMOVIS TrilliATMENT is guaranteed to cure this diseas , never to return. Bank Bonds will ero:ect you. Our treatment la not injurious in any way, but reaches the very root of the disease and eliminates all poison froni ttvj system, "'he symptoms of disease gradually disappear. The blood beccnies pure and enriched .the whole system 18 cleansed and purified, and the patient feels prepared anew for the duties and the pleasures of life. CORNS G13.5.11A5TRED OR NO PAY. 26 Yearn 1st Detroit. 250,000 Cured. Cousultation Free. Question Blank tor Home Treatment and Books Free. DRAENNEDY & KERGAN -*or. altionteren Ave, and SholOby VIC. Detroit, anon. :goys fall ancl, bruise, themsel*es. Gro wp p athletes sprain m oicles by overdoing wholesome • exercise. .1 he aches and soreness- are taken out with Perry Davis'Rut • it well into the. throbbing•Jlesh". arid relief 'le innuedia. e. • • . . seees The Ministers of 'Port ArtillIr are. exerting themselves an the direction of funeral reform. Features to which • objection are taken. in present day . funerals are :!, Extravagant tures for flower's, carriage's, etc., wisei • the family 'hivenot money in hand'fp pay the bills: exposure of the living to tty honor to the dead—very often Ono uneral bnnging oil anothen; 'adelen .tising the hour' of the funeral: 'consulting the minister ; 'selecting Sun- day for the funeytti. beeartse "grentar parade and nunthrrs ono be gamed; too much erepe •and •loa then gioGrri; exposete of the reinains'„ farewell .ef. the relatives before ft gaping •croWd.; •want of promptness, and • enseendy 'display of any kind. Funerals ore not bad in these respeets.as thoy winy roem for inli>"P•vell1""' some years ago, but there- is otill . • AIN HOW, ABOUT VOUR . WALL -PAPER? Nothing adds so Much to the • 'clehora- tion of a, hoose as good Wall Paper. I Amin a position tu show yon the Very iSeet, and choicest .pntterns, as I an agent for .the ' • • - Empire Wall Paper Co. ot Toronto. ' The samples for 1008 are entirel3 new. Prices run from 50 a roll to 3.5c, . with borders at same priee. Every roll of paper guaranteed to contain 8 ya,rdss Samples gladly shown • to in- . tending"purehasens. at any time. GEORGE POTTS, liouSe Decorates and Paper Effinger, Cor. Queen and Princess .St., Clinton ossilmisim :Winter 'Ternx opens Jan. ond BURDOCK '* BLOOD BITTERS. Is oceistaetly 'effecting cures of dyspepsia because it aets in a natural Set effective way upon all the organs ihvolved in the process of digestion, yernoving all °leggin ,g impuritiesand making easy the work 0/ digestion and assimilation. Mr. R.. G. lIarVey. Ametiesburg, Ont.. 'writes: "I have. beers treated with dys- pepsia for several years end after using three bottles of Burdock Blood Bitters I was uompletely cured. 1 cantiolioltelle BL 1L enough for what It has d • for nie.X havenot had a alga of dsigepstoi Do Ad 60,61104 a subititut* to* Statik ffitao lor it it just as gook, TORONTO,' ON.: • ?Pi:team:am sent)01 of business' training. Out of the last 2.50 cans from business arms, we have filled. lillorEEN Of the' poffitions; We had no one else readY to send,- Our graduates are in great demand. This fielt001 offers unexcelled advautages. Write •to -day for our largo catalogue. • . L W. .1, BLLIOTT, Priit Corner er venue and AleXnatder Ste wessisrmsesasnWere. CO.A.2.1 Before placing your orders for your season's supply of Coal, get our prices. The very best goods carried in stork and sold at the lowestrpossihle price, Orders may be left:at Davis St Ilowland's Hardware store, or with W. J. Stevenson, At Electric Light Plant. .siounmainimmolimair R. Fitzkimons a Son. We are "still in the But- chering business,and are in a position t() fill all or- ders for seasonable meets, invusted tc cu: cve Our new business sand is in the Combe Block. Pit Pitssimons Son liklike 76 Clinton When Children Cough give.them that old. reliable remedy that ,never failsto cure k*: BOLE'S PREPARATioN * Friaes,COugh Balsam It stops coughse-hrealts up coldseeandheals inflainina7 tide In throat and bronchiat tubes.. --Absctlutely pure -end Safefor. children. • pe, a bp.ttle. •At .6i:1A:de Or .frem • ••• ...• NATIONAL Dfilld•te mammal. Cfli Unite* LONDON, Ont. 31 " . . • Indispensable in Winter. There's a need in every home for • • • RAY'S SYRUP OF RED SPRUCE Cu • •A few closes, at the first sign Of a cold, will, alliy all throat . , Lows, •Irritation —take away hoarseness—check the inflammation-- strengthen the lungs ---ward off the cough. , •• CI . All the healing, soothing, curative properties of Canadian Spruces; •is4 • Gum—combined with aromatics. Pleasant to take. ' 25cts. bottle. • ' • .0' • , . . - Farmers Please Read This. Poultry, Butter and Eggs area good price now, For that reason you sboald pro- vide Jour poultry aud etcolt with somegood assistant, in the shape of prepared food. We sel Herbageum, Dr, Hess', flolumbian and Dr. H3woon's stock foods. We sell Dr. Hess' Poultry Panacea and Ooltimbian Poultry Food. • • - We also sell Libby's Cresra Equivalent, for raising calves, where milk is scam. We want a large quantity of 'Dried Apples next week. Please bring them along, Poultry, Batter, Eggs, Tallow and Lard 'also wented, Emporium, Londesboro, Oct. 31/06. R. Adams.. • C 0 A . . , • .. to . .•., . ott,,.., if , • ,,, \ . . , .. .""r -Littic drops or 'water. , v‘,..,„.„...:,,— '_es- *.'. ., .„ \ 1 ... , 7 '• Freezing on the walk, -•• • " writx..--,--_,, sst...• • •-• • ' Makes the man -who steps . thereon ,e •ip .- • Indulge in e naughty talk. ' ' ill ir'I Ill. • t s ..0 • , ‘,S , Si s• . Manyfreezing mornings, • v • •i" ..,.., ,. 1 • • Many chills—beware, • Just let us 1111 your coal bins, " . . And then you need not swear. SCRANTON COAI.• " THE 131IST TO BE II, D. JI 00AL DEALER NEVV THINGS WALL PAPE We have just received some hand- some designs for tall and spring trade, inexpensive, yet artistic in design, and a large range from which to select. We are up-to-date, and show many new things in the decorator's line, such as Sarittas, Crash Moth, Lin -o wall, Burlaps, etc. Sole agents for Muresco," the best wall finish made, superior to all other Calcimines or prep4red wall finishes; easilyapplied, will not rub off, crack or bits er; made in all colors, including deep red and green. Once applied, it needs no washing off, or sizing, to ap- ply il second NUL Window Shades, Curtain Poles, Room Mould ings, floor Finishes, rastc, Wall raper trimmed. FREE. W. T. SMITE ElEADACH Neuralgia and Watcousoias west se *let AJAX ntrittarintlA Joheartdeoressieis 1110WWeesersor rikrirreas Lookosiii Our stock of high art Pianos of lates case designs, and containing fines actions purchasable for money. See our very latest styles of sweet.. toned organs, at low prices. Instru. merits rented, tuned or repaired. Gramophones and music in variety it C HOARE'S MUSIC EMPORIUM. NEW GRUCERY STORE. We have opened up a choice, 'fresh stock of groceries at -elson's Old . Stand and now ask a share of the patronage of the citizens of Clinton andthe surrounding community, Clot od Quality a Fair 'Prices are our special cares. ustornerS -will find our stock the best value in town. The Red iveathitte b:ands in Teas and Canned Goods re samules of the values we handle. We are strangers and must getacquainted, It will pay those who sell'fartu riro. uee to sea us, before disposing of their butter, eggs Alia potatoes, 'elsewhere.. • We will buy, at it good price, what yon have to sell, and will sell at a fair %trite, what you have to buy. BYARD HILL, 'Phone 114