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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton New Era, 1894-03-30, Page 6rob 00, 18Q4. ti Writ1 City .Blutclier bop s 1ITW$ LUCE, H> ,1 ?QS PEKOE,,.014:ATO1`T QPFOSxTpI T The undersigned. having opBened out in the pth Die*, desires to stetettlxat he will keep on it the very eholeeet Neater having no: ex" Pease Oat -side of himself,hei%in a position to sell 110 W0 very0000eet prices.. Be will at all timet' be prepared to pay the ;#lighest mar4ot price ter E*POZt Cattle, T.IVI+I' HOGS always wanted icor export. dive b n e, call. ' AO.BT. FITZSIMONS H,HRQ1 ST.31JTCHRR SHOP t s desire most coraially to thank e.,;those who lgaTo favored us with their patronage since I Eamenged in kusineas, and to assure them and elpyblio generally that we are in better shape n ever to ot;,teer to their wants, having added an improved refrigerator and other conveniences our shop, W. W HEATLEY Clinton MEAT Market BUSINESS : CHANGE. The undersigned desires to intimate that he has bought out the interest of Mr Couch, in the butchering business lately carried on under the yle of FORD & COUCH. He will continue the ams at the old stand, and tracts by giving the closest and most careful attention to the busi- ness straightforward and courteous treatment to all, and handling only choice moat, to merit and receive a fair share of public patronage. All s J orders oaretuily and promptly filled JAMES A. FORD . Central Butcher Shop Subscriber desires to thank the public general- ly, for the patronage bestowed upon hun ; and at the same time to say that he is now in a bet ter position than ever to supply the wants of ail. As he gives personal attention to all the details of the business customers can rely on their led Hisers mo to is `good treat at and reasonablesatiofapricey d " Choice Sausage, Poultry, Ste.. in season.. Cash paid for Hides, Skins, &a. JOHN ACRt ETON, Flour and Feed Stores Flour, Feed & Seed Store L. •. ' The undersigned having formed a partnership, desire to intimate that they will keep on hand he very best FLOUR and F EED Of all kinds, also the choicest variety of Clover, Timothy & Small Seeds Which will be sold at close margins for cash. SALT also kept on hand. They will also keep a choice variety of all kinds of TEAS which con- sumers will and to be excellent value. HILL & PROUT, HURON ST., CLINTON. COOK'S F1ouriFeed Store BRAN 8; --SHORTS In large or small quantities. OIL CAKE and MEAL OF ALL KINDS. 10 pounds Choice Oatmeal for 1 bushel of Oats. D. COOK, CLINTON. BANKS The Moisons Bank. Incorporated by Act of Parliament, 1855 CAPITAL, $2,000,000. REST FUND, = $1,175,000 HEAD OFFICE, MONTREAL. J. H. R. MOLSON President. F. W. THOMAS,.. - General Manager. Notes discounted, Collections made, Drafts is- sued, Sterling and American exchange bought and:sold at lowest Ur ent rates. Interest al- lowed deposits. F ELS. Money advanced to fames on their own note with one or more endorsers. No mortgage re- .rnired as security H. C. BREWER, Manager. GEO. D. MOTAGGART, BANKER, ALBERT ST,m - CLINTON. A general Banking BusinesN tet ansacted NOTES DISCOUNTED Drafteeisened. Interest allowed on deposits. FARRAN & TIS9ALLL BANKERS, CLINTON. O NT Advances made to farmers on their own nates at low rates of interest. general tanking Business transaotea Inte-e st allowed on deposits. ile Notes bought J. P. TISDALL, Manage . THE COILED SPRING Wove Wire Fencing. vv - 11111111111 Meats Stanley and Steep are agents for the above fence, which is claimed. to be the .best- fe oo ngwire aittnatotured of. the kin STANLEY & STREP, • Clinton wA'._1,"t'Sr4 f it All t7 eit4n L.. A Ante nand Tortoise Auewto to Be as Least 420 Years Old. When the island of Mauritius oanie into pResession of the British in 1810, among the ordinance stores handed aver to and taken in charge by the Royal Artillery were two huge land tortoises, The eurviv- or is still alive, and has been a denizen of 'Artillery Place and .the.. barracks in Port Louis ever since, having survived many accidents and cruel experiments. Its ehell is nine feet three inches in circumference and it stands two feet six inches high. It is a matter of record that this tortoise was alive 126 years ago.—Loudon Daily Gra- nhic. A Little Daughter Of a Church of England minister cured of a distressing rash, by Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Mr. RICHARD BIRKS, the well-known Druggist, 207 McGill st„ Montreal, P. Q., says: I have sold Ayer's Family Medicines for 40 years, and have heard nothing but good said of them. , I know of many Wonderful Cures performed by Ayer's Sarsaparilla, one in particular being that of a little daughter of a Church of England minis- ter. The child was literally covered from head to foot with a red and ex;, ceedingly troublesome rash, from which she had suffered for two or three years, in spite of the best medical treatment available. Her father was in great distress about the case, and, at my recommendation, at last began to ad- minister Ayer's Sarsaparilla, two bot- 7tles of which effected a complete cure, much to her relief and her father's delight. I am sure, were he here to -day, he would testify in the strongest terms as to the merits of Ayer's Sarsaparilla Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Cures others, wil l cure you ColtoIeRe A SHORTENING. -Down ,the street through the busy -way A lady passed on marketing day. Who, pausing at a grocery ,store, Stepped quickly in at the open door. With bated breath and anxious mien She queried : "have you COTTOLENE?" The grocer, leaving off his work, Interrogated every clerk ; But none up to that time had seen An article called " COTTOLENE." "What is it?" said he to the dame, "That answers to this curious name. What is it made of? What's its use? My ignorance you'll please excuse." "You're not the merchant for my dimes, 1 see you're quite behind the times. For COTTOLENE, 1'd have you know, Is now the thing that's all the go, An article of high regard ; A healthful substitute for lard. Its composition pure and clean ; For cooking give me COTTOLENE." As from his store the lady fled, The grocer gently scratched his head— On his next order, first was seen, "One down cases COTTOLENE." Ask Your Grocer for it. Made only by K.•.FAIRBANK & CO., Wellington and Ann Streets, MONTREAL. POWDERS Cure SICK HEADACHE and Neuralgia in 20 MINUTES also Coated Tongue Dizzi- ness, Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation, Torpid Liver Bad Breath. to stay cured also regulate the {vowels. VERY NICE TO TARE. PRICE 26 CENTS AT DRUG STORES. House Panting and Poor Hanging The undersigned is prepared to promptly ere - cute all orders for PAINTING, KALSOMINING PAPERHANGING, &o. He is a practical man of ong experience :and guarantees to do all work in a manner that shall be satisfactory, while prices vitt] be exceedingly moderate. Orders re 1peotfully solicited. GEO. POTTS, Kirk St., Clinton Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is the Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. SoldWegtitarzera'dyo tan ole. U. T. lesalttne Warred 'nit: CLINTON & W ZRA ONLY ONE.OF ITS KIND, THE CRYOLITE MiNE OF FAR AWAY GREENLAND, A Curious. 11'ind of Ninety Years Ago Now Used in the Manufacture of Alu- minum—An Odd Camp, Where Only Three Women Are Allowed to• Live. In the month of April of every •year a curious fleet of vessels that at that time is usually scattered about at the widest In- tervale in the ports along both ooasts of the Atlantic Ocean pate to °sea and heats away for a point in the lee of Cape Desolation, on the southwest coast °of Greenland. The ships of this fleet have the strongest and best of canvas end gear aloft, while the hull is not only unusually strong everywhere, but is built solid at the bows, covered with an extra layer of plank there, and then armored with steel plates. The passage before this fleet is at the beat, one - of the most arduous in the world. The destination is but a few miles south of the artic circle. An oeget river sweeps along the coast, bearing masses of field ice' hundreds of miles in extent, and into and across this barrier the fleet must fight its way to the harbor for which it is bound, and when loaded there the fight must again be under- taken in order to return. It is a fight fit to turn a landsman's hair gray even under the most favorable circumstance; but when .the gales arise, and especially Galea from the south, and their black fogs, the posi- tion of the ship as it tosses about between the threatening ice masses is so frightful as to be beyond the power of man to des- cribe. During last summer, out of a dozen ships that attempted the passage one suc- ceeded, after beating about in the ice for over thirty days; two failed to get in and returned with Crews almost worn out and starved, while a fourth was never heard of after leaving port. The rest had very suc- cessful voyages, happening to find the lee fields open. The voyage is undertaken by the flee` in order to carry to civilization the product of the cryolite mine in the Arsok fiord. This mine is so odd that it is unique. There is no other cryolite mine in the world. It is worked in odd fashion, by the leen of an odd mine camp. and it was discovered by an old prospector. • In 1803 a German prospector named Gie- secke went to Greenland, landing at Cape Farewell, where he lived with the Eskimos, and with whom he traveled up the rugged coast in the skin -covered comiaks until he reached the Arsuk fiord. An Eskimo who resided there told him that a few miles up the fiord was a curious stone, which his peo- ple called the ice -that -never -melts. They use it in dressing pelts, rubbing the stuff on the flesh side, where it acted somewhat as soap might. Giesecke went to the place and found at the water's edge a cropping of white, soft rock, that when wet looked exactly like wet, snow -mixed ice. It was an entirely novel substance, so he gathered samples, prospector fashion, and he had hard luck with thele, which is also after the fashion of prospectors. On his way home in a Danish ship a British cruiser captured the outfit, and Giesecke lost. all he had. However, the chemical world learned that Giesecke had found the floride of sodium and aluminum, and it was nam- ed cryolite, which means ice -stone, No one but chemical students took note of it, however, until Prof. J. Thomsen, of Denmark, made some experiments with it about 45 years after it was found, and demonstrated that chemically pure alum could be cheaply made from it as well as sal -soda, bicarbonate of soda and some other useful substances. _ So a company -to work the mine was formed, and, about 1860, men and materials were sent up there to mine the stuff and ship it to Copenha- gen. Thereat Ivigtut oame into existence as a mine camp, and it is to this day the only white settlement in Greenland. •It is, of course, a Dutch settlement, for Green- land is one of the colonies of good old King Christian. First of all they built a house to live in, using timber and boards to build up walls and stuffing, the spaces between ceilings with moss. Then most of the houses were shingled oyer all, but that built for the superintendent was covered with smooth , Norway pine. There were double doors and double floors and double windows, and the bestof coal -burning stoves, while huge coal bins were erected close hy. So. the storehouses to hold other supplies suffici- ent to last three years were erected and filled, and they have been kept full con- tinuously. The cryolite deposit was walled in and covered over with gray granite. When the covering had been cleared off they found a mass of pure white cryolite about 600 feet long and 200 feet wide. Investigation showed that this was the top of a pocket or chimney of the material that plunged down to an angle of 45 degrees with the horizon into the mountain that rises there. It was also learned that the cryolite, though pure on top, was mixed with much car- bonate of iron in the chimney of ore. For several years the working of the de- posit did not. pay, but in 1864 a Yankee firm, contracted to take two thirds of all that the mine could produce, and since then the mine men have been getting rich while paying the crown a "royalty of one- fifth. The most interesting use made of the stuff is in the production of alumi- num, the metal that has made such rapid strides in the arts recently. Not only are the homes of the ruiners odd. It is an odd onmmunity. It consists of 130 men and three women in summer, and sixty men and the three women in winter. The women of the camp are interesting. The superintendent only is allowed to have his wife and children and a maid with him. Two children have been born in the superintendent's home in this odd camp. The first, it is interesting to know, was Dan Smith, the artist, whose father was the first superintendent of the mine. The third woman of the camp is Maria, a very fat and very jolly old Eskimo. She and her son Julius have a little stone house by themselves, and both are employed as servants. No other women are allowed there because, in the estimation of the authorities, the presence of numbers would arouse passions and jealousies that would lead to crimes difficult to punish in that far-off '• lana.—Frank Leslie's Weekly. Propelling the Whale. What is the horse power of a whale t This is the problem which has been solved by a brace of Scottish mathematicians. A whale was stranded on the western coast of Scotland some weeks ago, and the interest- ing calculation was made that power equal to 145 horses would be required to propel the whale through the water at the rate of 12 miles an hour. The Shoe Heel. The German mother says that should aloe by accident lose the heel of her shoe one of her children will die before the year is out, while should a French lady meet with such an accident to her high -heeled i, 1,ppers.disappointment. in love is sure to follow. W11101,uIp'1viltnre's elieuotuena,. The western Indian's, belief in a great spirit is written over the map Af thenerth- west. Manitoba is one record, and Lalree Michigan and Huron have ,patty mimeo that commemorate the piety er supers i. tion of the Indians. A ooneiderable space in the northern'part of Like Miehigan is called Manitou, anti here are North and, South Manitou Islands, A considerable island in Lake Huron Is the Grand Mani. ton. Colorado also has its Manitou, and It coeurs, doubtless, elsewhere in the wept. Take This With Salt. A curious animal captured on the Afri. can coast in 1854 was called the "talking fish," though it was really a species of seal. Among other innumerable tricks it was taught to articulate the words "mamma," "papa" and "John." No Dudes in Theirs. Single eyeglasses are prohibited in the German army. Even if a soldier has one good eye, yet needs glaesce, he must per- force cover both eyes with them. HOW TO GET A "SUNLIGHT PIOTURE. Send 25' "Sunlight" Soapwrappers wrap- per bearing the words "Why Does a Wom- an Look Old Sooner Than a Man")to LEVER Brtos., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto, and you will receive b} post a pretty picture, free from advertising and well worth fram- ing. This is an easy way to decorate your home. The soap is the best in the market and it will only cost Io postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write your address carefully. Sheep "•-eating. Comparative trials of sheep shearing by hand and by machine, made in Australia, resulted largely in favor of the machines. It was found that a thousand sheep could be sheared by machine for about ten dol- lars, and the yield of wool ie about eight ounces per head more than when sheared by hand. Coffee Growing. Coffee planting is being pushed in the British colonies of North Borneo and Central Africa. In the former Liberian, suede and seedlings are distributed among the natives, who have each to plant fifty trees, selling the produce at a fixed price. TENNYSON ON SPRING. We have the word of Alfred Tennyson for it that in the spring the young man's fancies lightly turn to tnoughts of love. It is sin ;ularthat the great laureate omitted to mention the fact that it is in the spring that a considerable portion of the human race turn to taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Probably nothing but the difficulty of finding a good rhyme for that ;`invaluable remedy deterred him. Certain it is that the old-time domestic remedies are gener- ally discarded in favor of the standard blood purifier, Hood's Sarsaparilla, which has attained the greatest popularity all over the country as the favorite Spring Medicine. It purifies the blood and gives nerve, mental, bodily and digestive strength Tana vvnsto 10110W.s. A permauent memorial is to be made of the famous herd of wild white cattle at Cadzow Forest, the property of the Duke of Hamilton. The Duke has given instrno- tione to have presented to the Kelvingrove Museum, Glasgow, a collection of speci- mens representing the herd. These will consist of a Knifed bull, cow and calf, and the skeleton of another bull. The herd has recently been partly crossed with the equally famous wild cattle of Chillingham Park, andit is, therefore, likely, that. the pure Cadzow breed may not long be awe& able for preservation. Fat Sheep for the British. New Zealand has twenty-five establish- ments in which mutton is frozen for the British market. The output is ,some tack) million fat sheep a year. The sheep used for this purpose are chiefly crosses of Merino and Down, long.wooled breeds. Shropshire Downs and, Lincolns are in' much favor for"rich, level pastures, while in hilly and broken situations Border Lei. nesters have proved quite successful for crossinn on Merino ewes. 160 WOELD'S FAIR PHOTOS FOR 51. These beautiful pictures are now ready for delivery in ten complete parts -16 pictures comprising each part—and the whole set can be secured by the payment of Oae Dollar, send to GO. II. HPAFFOBD, General Passenger Agent, Chicago Milwau- kee & St. Paul Railway, Chicago, Ill., and tfie portfolios of pictures will be sent, free of expense, by mail to subscribers. Remittances should be made by draft, money order, or regsitered letter. T Intti„y .. During the last - area de- voted to indigo in Loi„ has betel about 300,000 acres, but in 1h:r1-.” 11 ..ii11k nearly one-third. A favorable sen..011 and a rise in the price of• indigo at t'r.,otut n, led to a great extension of the industry in 1893, and the area of sill!ivation way estimated at 350,000 acres,` The output w.,s about eight per cent. above' the average rail ex- ports for the last twelve y,•n•s. Chinese in Russia. Large quantities of tea 1,1,11116 purl „poli• anees for the manufacture of ten, together with Chinese laborers, oro „cin uun.,l,ort• ed froti} China with n• w of e,trll,;i.,lung plantations in file Ura egion of ~Huth• eastern Russia, which ha. leen found v•a•y favorable to the growth of the tea plant. The Chinese trading classes an not favor the projeot, as they fear it will to'ome, like tea culture in India and Ceylon, itn- other serious rival to the native industry. Palms In Australia, The government of South Australia some years ago caused its explorers to plant seeds of date palms at their camps, The palms from those seeds have grown to tall, pro- ductive trees; and well -matured dateshave been received at Adelaide. The Queens- land government is planting cocoanut palms on the islands along its coast. Sheep Breeding In France. Notwithstanding the fostering care of the French government, sheep breeding has declined in Algeria, and official reports show that for several years past there has been a progressive decrease in the number of sheep. The present number is esti mated at 8,896,000, the estimates being based on official figures, When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she dried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When eho had Children, she gave them Castor/a. Easily, Quickly, Permanently Restored, WeAkness Nero ousoess, Debility, and all the train of evils from early errors or later excesses, the results of overwork,• sickness, worry, etc. Full strength, develop- ment and tone given to every organ and portion of the body. Simple, natural methods. Im- mediate improvement seen. Failure impossi- ble. 2,000 references. Book, explanation and proofs mailed (sealed) free, ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y. City BAKERY OPPOSITE FAIR'S MILL. i The undersigned having -bought out the bakery business so successfully carried oil by Mr Win. Young will continue the business at the old stand He will endeavor by supplying a first olass'arti- ole, to merit the liberal support of the people. Bread delivered anywhere in town, Wedding Cakes, Fruit or Sponge Cakes supplied on short notice. JAMES YOUNG, • - CLINTON S. WILSON, GENERAL .DEALER IN TINWARE HURON STREET, QLINTON Repairing of all kinds promptly atteuued to reasonable rates. A trial solietted DO YOU WANT A First-class Step or Long Ladder ? A Handy Wheelbarrow? A Splendid Churn, or anything of like nature? Then call onI W, SMITHSON, a shop, No.7 Frederick St„ or E. Dineleys Will be atiDinsley's corner every Saturday afternoon,. Clifton Plaiting Mill —AND -- DRY KILN! The subscriber, having the very latest improved machinery, and employing the most skilled work- men is able to do work in his lino in the most satisfactory manner, at reasonable rates and on the shortest notice. A trial solicited. FACTORY NEAR G.T.R. STATION, CLINTON THOS. McIIENZIE ROBERT -:- DOWNS, CLINTON, Manufacturer and Proprietor for the best Nana NMI Dog in use. Agent for the sale and appli- cation of the /2rFienaa PATENT AUTOMATIC BOMBE CLEANER. STEAM FITTINGS furnished and.app ed on short notice tlotters. Engines, and all kinds o1 l[nohlnery repaired expeditiously and in asatisfaetory manner Farm implements manufactured and repaired Steam and water pumps furnished and put in positipn. Dry Kilos fitted up on application Charges moderate. hiallI>7i11 AND [BRUCE URA & _ Investment -Co!y This Company is Loaning Money on Farm Security at Lowest Rates of Interest • MORTGAGES - . - PURCHASED SAVINGS BANK BRANCH. 3, 4 and 6 per Oent. rnterest Allowed on Deposits, according toamoun•t and time left. OFFICE—Cor. Square and North St., Goderich HORACE NORTON, Manager J. C. STEVENSON, —THE LEADING— UNDERTAKER —AND— EMBALMER. A FULL LINE OF GOODS KEPI in STOCK •I'hebestEmbalming Fluiduaed Splendid 31elti'se. d1 LBERT ST. ,CLINTON Residence over store. OPPOSITE TOWN HALL Perseverance m using n soil give retret. even is cases of long mending,- where a cure seemed impossible and Irk seemed hardly worth hying, Per Bottle,25c,50c,or$1.00 k .•ill: ,. \` , -.� •—.due t`"ai1dlM� KIN ®NDE °THE 'OO CSBESTREND► MoKIllop Mutual Fire Insurance Co F4RM tIr IDQTiIi'•i•' ;D W into ,'EET'It PK INilUii�A. commits, P. Roes, I'r1eident, Olintonl•Geo.. Watt VIce Prss, Oarlock; W. J. Shannon, Secy-Treaei, Seafartb; M. Muzdie, inepeator Of Olaigas, Seaforth. ptaEOTone. Jas. Broadfoot. Seafortb ; Gabriel lilllott • Clinton;Joseph Emma, Beechwood • Thos. Oar. bet, Clinton ; 0. Gardiner, Leadiiury ; Jelin Hannab,8eaforth, AGENTS. Thoe. Neilans, Harlook; Robt. McMillan, Sep forth; J. Oumingo, Egmonnvllle. Geo. Murdie, auditor. Parties desirous to effect Ineuranoee or tran soot other business will be promptly attended to on application to any o1 the above officer, adreesed to their respecitve offices. A ri 47a Ili Sfilr cal :144;4 .1,,.. 13eumilller Nursery FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL TREES, NORWAY SPRUCE, SCOTCH AND ASTRACHAN PINE, The latter of which we make a specialty. LARGE STOCK ON HAND. Ths above ornamental trees and shrubbery will be sold at very low prices, and those wanting any thing in this connection will save money by pur chasing here. Orders by Mail tails be promptly attended to. Address, JOHN STEWART. — Benmiller. CLINTON MARBLE WORKS. COOPER'S OLD STAND Next to Commercial Hotel. This establishment is in ull operation and al orders fill. d in the most satisfactory way Come. tery and granite work a specialty. Prices as reasonable as those of any establishc.ent SEALE & HOOVER, Clinton, im PUMPS : : PUMPS If you want a first -plass, well -made pump, one that will give you satisfaction, send your order to the undersigned- Ho wt:l dig and Olean wells and do it at the clnsost prices. He also handles a first-class FORCE PUMP JAMES FZRGUSON Opposite Queen's Hotel - High Street, Clint rWhenweattr1iviive,,„ive.. Kidney Pills Cure Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Brigli,s Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed y the testimony of all ho have used them. THEY CURE TO.STAY CURED - By all druggists or mail on receiPPt of r',ce, cents. Dr. L. A. Smith 8t Co., Toronto. .111.i11.11.1.1111 —TEE— Royal Electric Co, Amend Ineendescent Eieotrir Llghting, Electric Motona and G,nerator., CONTRACTORS & BUILDERS OF ELECTRIC LIGHT ANC. POWER STATIONS Throughout the Dominion. 64 to 10 Wellington St. a 4 MONTREAII. 94 rArza MILLS CO: News Printing Wrapping SandforSamples 1r PETERMAN'S ROACH FOO1 NOT A Z POISON FATAL TO COCKROACHES AND WATER BUGS. wawa, If not kept by your Druggist. we will give MT? DOLLARS whore It has proved a fanurei 1 properly apphe4 EWING, HERRON & CO.plae Merchants, " tole Mfrs., 570 & 151 St. Pant titre,. )NTREA.L '7afri.� Sole Proprietor of 'the LION oar r p gflOWB brand of fonds. Aof 'the bear INi Ing this trade mark are II ore, g 1 PORT Lion Brnnd Allcanto- LESArdd PORT, Lion Brnnd °A," Rocs- wH0 ;linen. SHERRY, Lion Brand, f!/ I N !r �b Pelldo. Ri1EaRY, Lion Brand, iii Es 0 Manzanilla. CLA flim, Linn s® R 1 R 1 T Brand, "A" hnlex EY, Linn i 11:r0, 11 nAN ny,Lion MERCHANT. and Liu u da yle. Atfo Joh a artson k SortsSeotrh whiskey r James so ns, Glasgow 1 lioulI,t & Delamaln Jarnae- Cognac,Franco. Cif AMPAON E,Val do Pencase, land' Eta 416 St. Paul Street, Montreal. Montreal • o•CN.'TRADE py Wall W COLIN 9L Paper 6McARTHURo Factory l 4 CO. .rrurnsrarSSMIMMIN CANADA TRUSS FACTORY j Est. 1850. F. 05088, Prop. Appliances for all kinds ofPhy- sica1 Deformities, Gross' Improved Pat, Artificial Limen —Send for-- BeforePRICE LIST and CIRCULARS After Using 712 Craig street, Montreal Using MUCILAGE & LIOUID GLUE MANFR. E. AULD Prices Right. 759 Craig OSTRICH FEATHER MANES. W. SNO W, Feathers Repaired, 1913 Notre Dame SAFE MANUFACTURER S. 0. SIMBALL,Farmora'8ateaaSpeeialty.577Cralq THE -EQUAL OF LUBY'S PARISIAN NAIR RENEWER Cannot be found, for restoring grey bat to its natural oolor and beauty ; it keeps the head clean and cool, and free from dandrua, it stops the hair from falling out, promotes the growth, and gives the stair the gloss, beauty and strength of youth ; when usod as directed It was never known to fail. Sold for half tho price of any other preparation, and is much butter than any known hair toilet, Sold everywhere -at 5Oos a Bottle: 01..,m.e,e..,IM• Y. r