HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1897-04-23, Page 3THE CLINTON NEW ERA `prii 2; 1890
TIIE TEST or TI1t
BETTUH.EIi SHOPS.
CENTRAL BUTCHER SHOP
FORD & MURPHY .
We aro doing business on the cash princi-
ple, and will supply our pustomers with
e best meats at the lowest paying prices
FORD & MURPHY, CLINTON
Business Change.
The undersigned desires to intimate to
the people of Clinton that he has bought
out the •utohering business lately conduct-
ed •itj,. Bros., and will continue the
e old stand, Huron St., Clinton,
strict attention to the wants of
his cue .. era, he hopes to merit and receive
a fair share of patronage. He will sell for
cash only, and at the lowest prices.
Chas. J, Wallis, Clinton.
CITY BUTCHER SHOP
I wish to inform the public that I will not
be undersold by any other person in the
bnsinees. I am a practical butcher; and
underst end all the branches of the business.
We keep the very best meats, and a full
stook always on hand, and will sell at the
Lowest mash Prices. Bring along your
money, and get the meat at the cash price.
We will give oredit, but not at cash prices.
Please come and see what you can do for
Cash at
R. FITZSIMONS'
FLOUR AND FEED STORES.
Produce Exchange
Headquarters for all kinds of
FIELD tt GARDEN SEEDS
We have a choice stook of FEED CORN
OATS, BARLEY, PEAS, &o
Highest market price paid'for coarse grain,
or taken in exchange. Cash paid for Eggs
HILL & JOYNER
HURON ST., CLINTON,
C00I-CS
Flour & Feed ,tore
BRAN & S ORTS
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 lM.Molsoiis Batik
Incorporated by Act of Parliament 1885
CAPITAL - $2,000,000
REST FUND - $1,400,000
•
HEAD OFFICE, F CE MONTREAL.
J. H. R. MOLSON, President
F. W. THOMAS, Genl Manager
Notes discounted, Collections made, Drafts
issued, Sterling and American exchange
bought and sold. Interest allowed on de-
posits Savrxoa Bervx—Interest allowed on
sums of $1 and up. Money advanced to
farmers on their own note, with one or
more endorsers. No mortgage required
H. C. BRUIN ER, Manager, Clinton
G. D. McIAGGAR,T*
BANKER
ALBERT ST., - CLINTON-,
A general Banking Business
tranaacted.
NOTES DISCOUNTED
Drafts issued. Interest allowed on
deposits. •
FARRAN & TISDALL.
+ BANKERS,
CLINTON, ONT.
Advances made to farmers on their own
notes at low rates of interest.
A general Banking Business transacted.
Interest allowed on defidaits.
Sale Notes bought
J.. P.' ISDALL, Manager.
• THE TOWN HALL
BOOT AND SHOE
REPAIR SHOP.
James. Young,
The well known Boot and Shoe Maker, has
oned a Repair Shop in the Clinton Town
it and will execute ail orders entrusted t0
care on short notice and at satisfaotory
a. Ordered work a specialty. Give him
a call•
P MUTUAL FIRE
RAN_CE CO.
fSOLATED TOWN PROPERTY
ONLY INSURED
Otartos.
Watt President, Tfartock p '0,1 dames
cot, 'b'lco-Pres., Seaforth P. 0.• W. J.
n, $ecy.Treas., Seafortb `O.; rd;11Turdie
tol'oflosses, Seaforth P. 0.
nrnEormet
Jas. Broadfoot, Seaforth; M. Mnrdio, Sea-
forth;Geo. Dale, Seaforth; Goo. Watt, Harlook;
T. E, Hays, Seaforth; Alex. Gardiner, Load -
bury; Chas. Carbutt, Clinton; John McLean,
Kippen.
AGENTS,
Thos. Neilans, Harlock; Robt. McJ41l1an, Sea.
forth, and J. Curings, Egmondville.
i'arttes desirous to effect Insurances or tran-
sact other business will be promptly attended to
on applicatiopn to any of the above officers
adreseed to their respective offices.;
i„„,,......„.
Are you
a------r
Public
speaker?
....,....,
If so you cannot find anywhere a preparation
to equal DR. CHASE'S SYRUP OF LINSEED AND
TURPENTINE for the throat and respiratory or-
gana We have hundreds of testimonials from
public speakers, singers, ministers and others.
One rev. gentleman says: " I never think of
entering my pulpit without Chase's Syrup of
Linseed and Turpentine at my side." Such in.
dorsations from the ministry should give con-
fidence in Dr. Chase's Medicine.
If you are troubled with that tickling sore
throat. so common among speakers and
singers, you will find DR. CHASE'S SYRUP OF
LINSEED AND TURPENTINE a positive and per-
manent cure. Teaspoonful dose, price z5 cents.
Edmanson, Bates & Co., sole manufacturers
for Canada, 45 Lombard street, Toronto
T•• •N.......N.N.,,
V 1 rC The only food
the
Baby �
that will build
up a weak con,,'
a titution gradu
Chance ally but surely is
Martin's i♦
Cardinal Ford
a simple, scientific and highly
nutritive preparation for infants, �►
delicate children and invalids. A
KERRY WATSON & CO., P.OPRILTOe., Q
T••••••••••••••••••444;0•44,
WO 'DO l3 PI3OL3pHODINE.
The Great English Remedy.
Six Packages Guaranteed to
promptly, and permanently
cure all forms of Nervous
Weakness, Emissions,Sper n.
atorrhea, Impotency and all
effects of Abuse or Excesses,
Mental Worry, excessive use
Before and After. of Tobacco, Opium or Stimu.
lants, which soon lead to In.
firma y, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave.
Has been prescribed over 35 years in thousands of
cases; is the only Reliable and Honest Medicine
known. Ask druggist for Wood's Phosph°dine: ti
he offers some worthless medicine In place of this,
Inclose price in letter, and we will send by return
mall. Price, one package, $1; six, $6, One will
please, six will cure. Parriphlets free to any address,
The Wood Company,
Windsor, Ont., Canada.
Sold in Clinton and everywhere in Can-
ada by all responsible druggists.
For Twenty-seven Years
DUNN'S
BAKING
POWDER
THECOOK'SBESTFRIEND
LARGCST SALE IN CANADA.
MCLEOD'S
System REAOVATOR
AND OTHER TESTED REMEDIES
SPECIFIC AND ANTIDOTE
For ' Impure,,; Weak and Impoverished
Blood, Dyspepsia, Sleeplessness, Palpate -
tion of the Heart, Liver Complaint, Neu-
ralgia, Loss of Memory, Bronchitis, Con-
sumption, Gall Stones, Jaundice, Kidney
and Urinary Diseases, St. Vitus' Dame,
Female irregularities and General Debility.
Laboratory, Goderich, Ont.
J. M. McLeod,
Prop. and Manufacturer
Sold in Clinton by
J. H. COMBE, and ALLAN & WILSON
�acii�ue Operators V/anted
—UN—
SHIRTS & SHIRT WAISTS.
Beginners Taught.
Apply at once
TRE WILLIAMS, GREENE &ROME CO
BERLIN, ONT.
J. C. STEVENSON.
—THE LEADING—
UNDERTAKER
—ANA—
EMBALMER.
Asi'f't]t. 'Lib El or
GOODS KEPT i11 STOCK
ThebeatEmbalming Fluid ,used
Splendid Hearse
Residence; river store '
n w
OPPOSITF TOWN HALL
LOV E -I N -A -M 151-.
Love-in-a•wist in every garden grows
Beside the hollyhock, beneath the rose.
Love -in -a -mist makes every rose less gay
And takes'the lily's geld and leaves her
gray
And turns the poppy pale as winter snows.
Sir Bumblebee will none of it, but goes
Straight for the sunflower in tb,e garden
close,
And spiders' webs of silver will not stay
Love -in -a -mist.
Who garners it we wtst not, nor who sows,
Nor to what end its misty blossom blows.
Only its blue eyes meet us day by day
Till half we wish the miata would blow
away.
Who knows true love; be sure he also knows
Love -in -a -mist.
—Borah Hopper,
• air''"HOTELS IN GREECE.
inngle Rooms Are Rare, and the Furnish.
lags Are Painfully Scant.
In Greece the hotels of the interior fol-
low one general type—the Italian. There
is no. common sitting room. Why should
there be? There is no office, but that does
not seem to interfere with the presenta-
tion of bills. The ground flour is given up
to a cafe or restaurant, if the innkeeper
goes into that line of business. Very of-
ten, however, the master of the Apollo has
only rooms to let. The sleeping apartment*
on the floor above are often approached by
an outside stairway, and, as is to be ex-
pected in a southern climate, they are
scantily furnished. Overfurniahing is a
vice anywhere. Under a southern sky it ie
a crime, of which the Greeks are not
guilty. There is usually a mirror, though
that tribute to human vanity is sometime*
lacking, and, like the Turk, the solitary
Turkish towel bears no brother near his
throne. The bedstead is invariably of iron
and does not offer the same vantage
ground to the assailants of sleep as a
wooden framework would do, but the ouch•
ions are there, and the walls are there, so
that small comfort is to be derived Prom
that slight reduction of possibilities.
As in primitive United States within
my memory, single rooms are rare. Two,
three, four, five beds are put in one room
or strung along thecorridors. A fastidious
person who desires to occupy a room alone
has to pay for all the beds therein. In some
places special charges are made for sleep-
ing in the daytime, and there is a fixed
rate for sleeping on the floor. That a man
should wish to be private when he is asleep
seems absurd to a race that sleeps at any
time and in any place irrespective of on-
lookers. But in this whole domain we
Americans, who submit to the abomina-
tion of the Pullman sleepers, have no right
to find fault with any other nationality—
we have no right to be fastidious about
undressing in the eyes of the world, and a
large charity ought to cover the divergen-
cies of different regions and different pe.
riods in this respect. In the good old times
people used to go to bed utterly devoid of
raiment, and the bedclothes, as we. call
them still, were the only clothes.—Profess-
or B. L. Gil:1 rs•lervc in Atlantic.
Forty-one residents of Woodstock are
over eighty years of age. One colored gen-
tleman ie 110 years old.
The Independent Order of Foresters have
decided to admit women as members of
the order. Special lodges for women will
be organized.
WHERE REIEUMATIS,`i IS UN-
KNOWN
No matter How Intense the Pain South
American Rheumatic Cure will 1 e.njvs;
it ui k] —
A Lady of Highgate Tells
What it did for Her—Permanent Cure
,of a Case of Years' Standing.
It has been declared by scientists that
every disease bas a remedy. The difficulty
is to always find tbe remedy. In rheuma-
tism South American Rheumatic Cure has
been found a certain antidote for tins pain-
ful disease. It is always effective. Mrs
N. Ferris, wife of a well known manufae-
Curer of Highgate, Ont, says: "I was ser-
iously affected with rheumatic pains is my
ankles, and at times was 'almost disabled.
I tried everything, as I thought, and dos.
tored for years without much benefit. .I
was induced to use South American Rheu-
matic Cure. To my delight, the first does
gave me more relief than I had had for t.vo
years, and two bottles completely cured
me.
The Choice of'a Color.
The choice of a color for a gown or rib-
bon is more important than is generally'
assumed. In looking over an assemblage
of expensively dressed women recently it
was noticed that a very small percentage
wore tho colors which suit=ed them. A
woman reals or is told that shades of ma-
genta or tints of green are fashionably
worn, and she forthwith selects them, of-
ten with most trying results to her good
looks. Colors matching the hair tint in
some shade are safe. A red haired woman,
one with the bronze red hair, looks her
best in sables and reddish browns. A
golden haired blond, with blue eyes, should
select a gown of 'some shade of her hair
With a bit of her eye blue at her throat.
This intensifying the color of the eye by
a throat bow of its predominating shade
is a hint to be remembered, particularly
by wotnen whose eyes have lost some of
the youthful depth of color. Edmund Rus-
sell gives his formula for artistic dressing
to be. "Match the hair as nearly as possi-
ble for day and the eyes for evening wear."
French women, it may be added, wear
white in the evening, after 40, almost in-
variably.
DR WOODS 1
NORW4Y
PINE
SYRUP.
THE MOST PROMPT,
Pleasant and Perfect Cure
for Coughs, Colds, Asthma,
Bronbhitis, H9arseness,
Sore Throat, Croup, Whoop-
ing Cough, Quinsy, Pain in
the Chest and all Throat,
Bronchial and Lung Diseases.
The healing anti.00nsuinptive virtues
of the Norway Pine are combined
k this medicine with Wild Cherry
and other pectoral Herbs and Bal-
sams to make a true specific for all
forms of disease originating from colds,
'Price - 25o. and 50c.
MUNYON'S
TRIUMPHS
Electrifying results of His
New system of Medicines
DISEASE BEING CURED
Inithe most Marvellous Man-
ner by Munyon's Homce-
pathic Remedies
Every Druggist Has Them
Mr H. A. Gibscn, Mount Brydgea, On-
tario, says:—"I doctored with many doc-
tors and used different remedies during the
past sixteen years for neuralgia. It first
appeared in my head and gradually work-
ed its way to my stomaoh. I could not get
relief until I tried Munyon's Neuralgia
Cure. Two bottles of that wonderful rem-
edy oured me three months ago, and 1
have had no return of the pains."
Munyon's Rheumatic Cure seldom fails
to relieve in one to three hours, and'oures
in a few days. Price 25o.
Munyon's Dyspepsia Cure positively
cares all forms of indigestion and stomaoh
troubles. Price 25o.
Munyon's Cold Cure prevents pneumpnia
and breaks up a cold in a few hours. Price
25o.
Munyon's Cough Cure stops coughs,
night sweats, allays soreness and speeuily
heals the lungs. Price 25c.
Munyon's Kidney Cure speedily cures
pains in the back, lions or groins, and all
forms of kidney disease. Price 25c.
Munyon's Nerve Cure stops nervousness
and builds up the system. Price 25c.
Munson's Headed Ie Cure stops headache
in three minutes. Price 25.
Munson's Pile Ointment positively cures
all forms of piles. Price 25c
Munyon's Blocd Cure eradicates all irn-
purities of the blood. Price 25c.
Munyon's Female Remedies are a boon
to all women,
Munyon's Catarrh Remedies never fail,
The Catarrh Cure—price 250—eradicates
the disease from the system, and the Ca-
tarrh Tablets—price 25c,—cleanse and heal
the parts,
Munyon's Asthma Remedies relieve in
throe minutes, and ours permanently.
Price $1.
Munyon's Vitalizer restores los*, vigor.
Price 81.
A separate euro for each disease. At all
druggists. MostI4 25c a vial.
,Personal letters to Prof. Mnnyon, 11 and
13 Albert St., Toronto, answered with free
medical advice for any disease.
Parsee Burial Cue ars.
A Bombay correspondent of the New
York Evening Post, writing of the burial
customs of the Parsecs, says: "The ap-
proach of that transition we call death is a
signal for the relatives to leave the Pres•
ence of the dying one, the priest alone re-
maining to wMsper Zend-Avesta precepts
into his ear. He, in turn, passed out of the
room and admits a dog, who is trained to
gaze steadily into the face of the dying
one. A dog is accounted the only living
creature that can terrorize the evil spirits,
so rhe `sas-did,' or 'dog stare,' is the last
sight the Parsee hos on earth. No human
shadow must intervene, otherwise the
guardian virtue of the dog's gaze is an•
nulled."
Oshawa.
WOMEN AS THIEVES.
A QUESTION NOW IN TME REALM 9F
SCIENTIFIC DISCUSSION.
Is the best test of the merits of an article. Soap is In daily use ;ay r iQ
that. stands this elafly test for years must be good.
There must be something to it.
Women Steal *rush Less Frequently Than
Bien De -Differences Ix;, the Impulses
Which Actuate the Two-l+Yequently the Cooper's Soap4
Woman Steals UndeY• w loan's Influence.
The British Medical Journal of i
that oases of stealing by women who
more or leas kleptomaniacs have beco
of late so numerous and so distressing
it might be expedient to employ ape
deterrents, such as visiblelin
the shops which prinelpII vita
kind of semidelirtous action. Our cont
porary, after reflection, however, dism
es this suggestion as impracticable,
shopkeeper who resorted to it being n
certain, to lose all oustom, and we rat
doubt, from thepoltcerecoi$s, whether
offense 1s increasing es much as the wri
fancies. Every form of interesting cr
seems to increase nowadays because it
more commented on. Women of a oar
kind have always been addicted to sh
lifting, and their inclination has al
attracted attention, partly from its
treme inconvenience to shopkeepers, wh
very business compels them to expose th
goods to this risk, and partly, we imagi
because mea are so accustomed to trust
the honesty of women that this particu
aberration from their usual habits exoi
a sense of surprise. Women have mu
lees opportunity of stealing Wk.: nen,
they could hardly take to burglary, hi
way robbery or the work of the footp
women, we notice, being rarely acou
even of snatebing jewels or purses fro
other women, though they can approach
them so closely. They are, besides, we feel
surd, more honest. They feel the tempta-
tion of money less and the sense of its im-
portance and of their own trusteeship in
regard to it much more.
That is the universal opinion of the con-
tinent, where women are implicitly trust-
ed with the till, and we notice that the
practice is spreading here, so that charge
of the cash receipts of shops is becoming
one of the most frequent of female employ-
ments. If they would get up their arith-
metic, a little more perfectly and be a little
less irritable when overhurried—men un-
der such circumstances display a silent'ob-
stinacy rather than irritation—they might
-obtain a monopoly of this sort of work,
greatly to their own relief, for the occupa-
tion sults them, and to that of the men,
who suffer both in health and spirits from
confinement in little glass boxes where
they can hardly stretch themselves and
from an oocupstion which, though most
respectable, allow no scope for energy or
for the exertion of physical strength.
There are bold female swindlers, but
they generally swindle by using their ca-
pacity for hlstr1onios. ,Tho charges of em-
bezzlement alleged against women are ex-
traordinarily few, while their honesty as
servants, when they must often be griev-
ously tempted, is really marvelous. The
ordinary well to do housemistress takes no
more precautions against her maids' thiev-
ing prdponsitles than against her daugh-
ters',and if she is a shrew dilates upon ev-
ery fault possible except this one. Nine
times out of ten when a maid steals it is
under the influence of some man outside,
a remark which experienced policemen say
is true even of the street girls, who are so
frequently charged with the offense. Wom
en, in fact, steal much less frequently than
men do.
The fact, as contrasted with the other
fact mentioned by our medical contempo-
rary—viz, the addiction of some women
toshoplifting—suggests
aII rn
UI
q ry of some
intellectual interest. Is it pdssible that the
animus furendi, as the lawyers call it, the
actual motive fur stealing, differs in the
sexes in kind as well as in degree? We
have, an idea that this may bo true and
that the woman's de.virs to thieve is ex•
cited by a wish to possess the visible arti•
cle stolen, while the man's is aroused by e
craving for the pleasures or the idleness
hich the article stolen will purchase. He
mks money, in fact, while she seeks
ings. Only an old and experienced re-
iver of stolen goods could answer the
elation with any exactness as regards the
rme e
are
that
oia]
Liles '
em-
iss-
the
early
her
the
ter
lime
is
tain
op -
ways
ex -
080
eir
ne,
in
lar
tee
oh
gn
ad,
sed
w
s
th
An Interesting item. O0
qu
The following history was related to oar th
reporter by Mrs Jas. McCaw, wife of the
well-known shoemaker of Oshawa, Ont.
This is what Mrs McCaw says: "I was ser-
iously ill for a long time with my heart
and nerves, and had a very severe attack
of la grippe, which left me worse in every
way. At times the "'palpitation of my
heart was so bad that I feared death. My
heart seemed to go right up in my throat,
and caused a feeling of suffocation most
painful to endure. Then at times there
was a great fluttering of the heart followed
by a sinking feeling, dizziness, etc.
"I was feeling extremely miserable when
I got a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve
Pills from Mr T. G. Ryleys drugstore, and
commenced taking them. From the first
few doses I improved rapidly, and am now
much better than I have been for a long
time. My appetite is good and I am won-
derfully improved in every way. I oan re-
commend these pills very highly, as I feel
twat no other remedy could bave perform-
ed such marvelous change in so short a time
and is gives me pleasure to let others know
that there is a remedy easily obtained which
will cure them, and that very quiokly."
(Signed) Mrs Jae. McCaw, Oehawa,Ont.
Laxa Liver Pillecure constipation, bil-
iousness, and sick headache; 25c.
Evidence Enough.
Counsel For tlfe Defense — You hogve
heard the testimony of Mr. Brown forth
prosecution. Now, did you ever hear Mr:
Brown's reputation for truth and veracity
questioned?
Witness—Not directly, but he has a ba-
by at his.houEr, he owns a dog and rides a
bicycle, and he is an amateur dslterman.
W4 will do, sir," Theft to the Haag.
..
istrate: �,.«. ••-«
"We do not care to cross examine the
witness, your worship. "—Pearson's Week-
ly.
Probably the oldest restaurant is Lon-
don is Crosby hall, in Bishopsgate, street,
in the pity. This was built more than 500
years ago, was ono° the palaoe of Richard
III and afterward the residence of Sir
Thomas More.
The best fluid you can use in order to
get rid of sunburn is buttermilk laid upon
the face and let dry there before you retire
at night; than wash off in the morning.
CASTORIA
For' 'infants and Children.
The fao-
stian'
(denature
of . • /v
ieving classes, but among the educated
this is almost certainly the case.
Educated men embezzle, forge and *win,
dle often enough, and indeed it takes sone
education to be suocessful in those lines of
villainy, but they are rarely convicted of
shoplifting, while that is the special of•
fence of educated women who take to•this
description of orime. The latter very rare,
ly forge, which id remarkable, for, being
less controlled by commercial opinion,
they undoubtedly attach less opprobrium
to this form of crime than men do, while
they are quite as competent to commit
forgeries, but they take things out of shops,
the reason being that the things attract
them more than the abstract wish fol
money does. We do not mean that they are
influenced by kleptomania more than men
are. There le such an impulse, and it is
exceedingly strong in both sexes, as all
men know who are familiar with ships,
barracks, clubs or public schools, but it is
not ungovernable --the belts of the soldiers
govern it very effectually—and it is con•
stantly pleaded where it does not exist.
True madness which takes that form,
though it exists, is rare and is usually no.
corripanled by other recognizable signs.
But we fancy that with some,pomen
there is a distinct pleasure in acquiring
things without paying for them, in part
independent of their money value, to
which there is nothing corresponding in
the minds of males. There is liornetilng
of the spirit of adventure in the effort as
well as greed and•something, too, of that
overweening and indeed inexplicable idea
of -their own claim to the portable proper.
ty they want, which is so frequently ap-
parent eveir in women who are genuinely
respectable. --Lo' Standard.
APPARENTLY A HOPELESS CASE
A Kincardine Banker who Suffered Dis-
tressingly from Indigestion—Apparently
a Hopeless Case of Stomach Trouble
Until South American Nervine was
Used—His Words are: "It cured Me Ab-
solutely,"
What this wonderful remedy for all
!arms of stomaoh trouble oan do xis best
told in the words of John Boyer, banker,
Kincardine, Ont„ . "About a year ago, as
a result of heavy work no doubt; I beoam l
very much troubled with indigestion; also•
oiated with it were 'those terribly distress-
ing feelings that can hardly be described in
any language. I had tried various meth -
ode of ridding myself of the trouble, but
without success, until I was influenced to
use South American Nervine. The result,
]c to I and I gladly say it for the benefit of others
avert' —this remedy oured me, and I never heat•
wraFlfiiP, 1
tate to recommend to any person affected
with any form of stomaoh trouble."
,
Has stood the test for nearly three years; todayit's sale is larger ;than eve
for no ther reason than that it beet pleases and satisfies the users of soap.':
WUOL?'SOAP—Have you ever used Wool Soaplfor washing flannels ? .$SIS'
water, blueing and shrinkage of geodedispensed, with. We have i$. ! '
OGLE
The
COOPER & CO., Phone. 23
Up-to-date Cash Grocery.
Businessi4,
Chag
The partnership existingjbetwoen J. McMurray and H. W iltee has been
u.ssolved, and the business will be carried on by the undersigned, who
will be please$ to receive the support of all old cuotomers,:and as many
new ones as may find it to their interest to give him a trial. All goods
to be found in a first rate Grocery, as good and cheap as any, will be
kept in stook."
Bargains for a few days in Dinner,
Tea and Toilet Sets. Cash for Eggs.
,
H , W I LT E, CLINTON, • Phone 40'
Important Notice to the [public
We have secured tbe services of MrJ, W. Chidley to take charge of our Furniture-
Warerooms and Undertaking Department, and trust you will call and examineionr'
goods before purchasing elsewhere, alis e show the finest and cheapest line of Fur-
niture in the county. A]1 goods are guaranteed to:give satisfaction and are at rock
bottom prices. Give us a 'Trial Order 1
UNDERTAKING DEP.ARR MJ T
As MR CHIDLRY has been long .and favorably known tc the public as an Ero-
balmer and Funeral Director, we can safely guarantee all orders entrusted to 'big
care shall be attended to in first-class style and satisfaction
guaranteed. A fire„ �,,:,zl•
class Hearse in attendance at all times. Prices right.
BROADFOOT, BOX & CO
J. W. CIIIDLEF, Nana
Don't forget the old stand, near Fair'e'I11i11, Clinton.
P S—Night end-Fcndaysealls attended to by calling at J. W. Chidley's, (Fan
Director) restdenoe,•
EA Hub Grocery
Tea was sold in England in the year 1660 for'60 shillings per pounds
To day
v
eve
we ca-ir
g you a dandy for 25c. Iu 1772 it was denounced ae:
a slow poison, but now it is considered as soothing to the nerves, and
you will find it so if you try some of our Ceylon, Darjelling, Beni Bur, -
or Japan.
Et). SWA L.I.LI►W,
(;linto
Clinton Sash,'Poor Blind Factory..:
S. S. COOPER PROPRIETOR,
General Builder and Contractor.
This factory is the largest in the county, and has the very latest improved ma-
chinery, capable of doing work on the shortest notice. We carry an extensile
'and reliable stock and prepared plans, and give estimates forjand build al!class-
es of buildings ors short notice and on the closest prices. .N11 work is supervise
ed in a mechanical way and satisfaction guaranteed. We aoll all kinds of in-
terior and exterior material.
Lumber Lath, Shingles, Lime, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Etc
Agent for the Celebrated GRAYBILL SCHOOL DESK, mannfactnled
at Waterloo. Call.end get prices and estimates before plaoing your orders
ZIE:1
Intellectual Feet.
Large feet indicate ability, •
intellect, perseverance and
integrity. -
Scores of distin•
-
guished men have
been as much noted
for their big feet as
for their -large noses. At your foolthoulds'ook.
George 11iot, Madame de Stae1 and
other supremely intelligent women had also
very large feet.
It is not the size but the shape of the foot
which makes it beautiful or ugly, and
the shoe worn decides its shake, as well as
its comfort.
There is more care used—more time
spent—in sha/ing " Slater Shoes," and in
taking the stretch out of the leather so it
will retain that shape, than in the entire
making of ordinary shoes.
The Goodyear Welt process admits of this
fine modelling, and the stamp on the sole
ensures to the wearer these hidden qualities.
A tag on each pair of " Slater Shoes"
tells of the leather in it.
$3.00, $4.00 and $5,00 per pair.
9zr
gisW AY'LOR tt SONS, SOLE AGENTS FOR CLINTON'
r