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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1897-12-31, Page 3OWr ` 1 B A yl'Tt1;:t8`', DANQE.RS OF WMPERING, g s cold in the bead, and care the most stub- lto do tome sketobing from nature. Sqme an incline reaching to the ice covered river. Load after load of logs is thrown '% 00111101A U Alwayo Near *t Hand *ptl, V< V- 1 B A yl'Tt1;:t8`', DANQE.RS OF WMPERING, g s cold in the bead, and care the most stub- lto do tome sketobing from nature. Sqme an incline reaching to the ice covered river. Load after load of logs is thrown '% 00111101A U Alwayo Near *t Hand *ptl, V< V- down upon the lee, until the river to cov- RHO and we wanted to take advantage of it during thewarm vacation months. There S CONYEM EXPERIENCE ON THE ally Ie Areadtal Form. w logs extend perhaps a quarter of a mile A Child's Question. A stagecoach line ran from the town to OF, A PREptpice,. The Story of a Pine Hoard" Is the title down so heavil that the crush througb it and at last rest upon the bottom the r of an article by W. S. Harwood in Sk -- "904"'4Tiohilsh Job In the Nioholas. Mr. Harwood says- ays;rmies"t; The train draws the loge to the landing, The People of Canada Are 4.4.1414 Eagles serlonelyOb- e'1'lnulnt which may be 100 miles from the plana where our pine was felled. The landing ` Satisfied and Convinced oPaMedfoine Adver• >}, the. Front of Their Some. is the bank and surface of a large rivet, from the trains there to great danger that a "chaser" may get after them -•that is, a moment, George. There's some the Mlasiseippi in its upper course afford- a log which suddenly springs down from VqA Neos, .who is now a per. in this city, once bad an un- ing fine landings. Death to near aro hand at the lancing_ ALL WILL TESTIFY supe. Mr. Van Ness says he indeed, it Is near at hand always among the lumbermen from the time the tree is — <$>l Y to forget the first and only +� o. painted, for it was while g n' nt medicine advertisement selected by the undereutter until it gets the last touch of thetowoon and Is piled That Munyon Has IKept Faeith a face; f a.preoipicelathe Adirondack up in the lumber yard of city or tdwn. In felling the trees, in loadingthem upon With the People and Mad o insthat he made atoo intimate ac- gnaintance with a colon of American Y the big sledges, in rolling tem down hs Good My adventure in the Adirondpclus oo- slddwaye at the landing, on the drive down the river, in blue mills, death comes — ourred save) al years ago," said Mr. Van N'eoa, "but I 'remember often and usually in a dreadful form. The � lace. landingis a y p pnload l 11IS PROMISES it just as well as � it it were only yesterday. I had gone to } of cgs ar di Where file trainloads of loge are dumped from the wide oars they tumble down an )bass on the skidway that it must be re• Hie Remedies are Becoming the Safeguard of the Home—The People Have Trusted and Have Not Been Deceived. Mrs Mary Moss, No- 26 Chestnut St., i Toronto, Canada,says:-`•I have used Man - yen's Dyspepsia Cure with splendid results I was so bad with this disease that food would lay for hours on my stomaob, oans- ing me great pain and agony. I also had severe pains in my back and was frequent- ly troubled with soar stomach. I had to be extremely careful whatI ate, but after rising one vial of Munyon's Dyspepsia Cure I am now able to eat anything withotit dis- tress afterwards. After suffering for years with this disease it is a pleasure to be again able to eat anything I desire. Thanks to Munyon." Munyon's Rheumatic Care seldom fails to relieve in one to three hours, and cores In a few days. Price 25c. Munyon's Dyspepsia Cure positively cares all forms of indigestion and stomach troubles. Price 250. 11lanyon's Cold Cure prevents pneumonia and breaks up a cold in a few hours. Price 260. Munyon's Cough Cure stops coughs, night sweats, allays soreness and speedily heals the lunge. Price 2Kc. Munyon's Kidney Cure speedily cares pains in the back, loins or groins, and all forme of kidney disease. Price 25c. Munyon's Nerve Cure stops nervousness and builds up the system. Price 25c. Munyon's Headache Cure stops headache n three minutes. Price 25. Mnnyon's Pile Ointment positively cures all forme of piles. Price 25c Munyon's Blood Cure eradicates all im- purities of the blood. Price 25o. Manyon's Female Remedies are a boon to all women, Munyon's Catarrh Remedies neverfail. The Catarrh Cure—price 250—eradicates he disease from the system, and the Ca- arrh Tablets—price 25o,—cleanse and heal be parts. Munyon's Asthma Remedies relieve in hroe minutes, and cure permanently. Price $1. Munvon'e3Vitalizer restores lost vigor. Price $1. A separate care for each disease. At all druggists. Mostly 25o a vial, Personal letters to Prof. Munyon, 11 and 3 Albert St., Toronto, answered with free Medical advice for any disease. g c rou bio with the eagles, but to be on the safe every hundred have the taint. Dr.A.gnew'aCatarrhal Powders will cure the sli hte t Keene Center, a little town in the moun- tains of western New York, with a friend g s cold in the bead, and care the most stub- lto do tome sketobing from nature. Sqme an incline reaching to the ice covered river. Load after load of logs is thrown '% lOf the mountain scenery there is very fine, down upon the lee, until the river to cov- and we wanted to take advantage of it during thewarm vacation months. There ered for a otty square in width and the whole, was 12 feet wide and the lines of was then no railroad at Keene Center, but logs extend perhaps a quarter of a mile A Child's Question. A stagecoach line ran from the town to away. There is thus an immense weight upon the ice and the logs frequently prose ` Westport on the banks of Lake Champlain, about 80 miles away: So we had an ideal down so heavil that the crush througb it and at last rest upon the bottom the r location., One day there came to the little hotel whre we were stopping the agent of river �• The logs may be piled up per- "' of a wsll. known patent medicine con- haps twice as high as an ordinary city dwelling house, over 100 feet. for breakfast. When his papa had finished P8113 , 4 was accompanied by two sign painters land we, informed that these While the mon are unloading the loge + ° were two m+RPero going to paint a sign on the ea from the trains there to great danger that a "chaser" may get after them -•that is, a moment, George. There's some face of a preoipieo about 000 feet high, a log which suddenly springs down from a lr,l; r liar Evhiel; Was located about half way between Keene Center Westport. The the load where it has been held by a and preci- plop t'Faa high iu the mountains and in .chain, and, without warning, tumbles down the declivity of the skidway at a y. laln view of the stagecoach line which P g tremendous rate of e peed. Woe to the to g. wound around lower down and almost ger who stands in the way of the chasers s two Xrhos.away.. Once in awhile it may be necessaryto dis- -` g "'Cho modielne people were sharp enough lodge a log which has become wedged in motlone with his head as if he were try- ing to `get the paint out of his eye or to know` that if they could have a sign such a way among the other logs in the �:. painted'ondthat stone wail in letters large to �e )bass on the skidway that it must be re• 4 enoilgh road from stagecoaches pass- leased to allow the others to move. Get• Ing it would be a great card for them. ting out this log is called "killing the So two painters were brought out to do Dutchman." The men who clamber down -; the Job, The agent took them out to the the skidway, aided by their sharp pointed v-•�� precipice. They took one glance down the peavfes and cantbooks,. take their lives in mage. Again one of them flew 840 feet of perpendicular rock and abso- their hands many a time �rhen they go to above me lutely refused to go down the face of the dislodge this log—the key to the situation. f: Mountain . to palnt the advertisement. Oftentimes when such a log is wedged in• When Dr. R.V. Pierce, of Bnfialo, N. Y., The'mediolne man came back to the hotel to a great jam fn the middle of the river !,, a berating the mer. and wishing he could after the spring drive has began dynamite any bettor find somebody who would tackle. the job. mast be used in dislodging it, so great is I told him I would do it if he could make the pressure of the thousands of logs above viser, be announced that after 660,000 cop- sufficient inducement. "The it. "Killing the Dutchman" under snob i he shot past me. Then the agent offered me $300, and we each circumstances is a novel as well as a dan- ` posted a forfeit of $50. The two painters Qerous act, who declined to make the descent agreed , as good luck would have it, I ' to handle the ropes is letting me down, blazed a y with my revolver and hit and as soon as I was ready we made our him, and way to the precipice. I looked over the ALONG LIST. edge, ,and I'll acknowledge the prospect w. None of the eagles came y % looked pretty scary. About 200 or 300 feet This Whole Column Would Not Contain 1 ~ down there were projecting ledges, and here and there on the ledges bald eagles the Names of the Many Prominent Min- t termittont had their nests. And they were good big inters, Members of Parliament and Pro -t eagles too—none of your owl size, fessional Men all over this Continent who g The men tied strong ropes to the spruce trees growing at the top of the precipice, Have be n Cured of Catarrh b Dr. A t ®y g - . .. and the other ends of the ropes were tied to new's Catarrhal Powder — It Gives Re- ,:+Y a big basket, into which I cliipbod with lief in IO Minutes. my bucket of paint. Then they dropped the basket over the cliff and let me slowly Volumes of testimony have been written r r* down until I was about 125 feet from the of its curative powers. Catarrh is an a;. mailing only, and the book will be sent 1 t d It ' 't Ll d' I1' top, which I had calculated was about the gravating malady, insignificant in its be- 1 ', 4 ' int where I wanted to begin painting. Po g P g• I hadn't t'xilculatod on havin mn h t ginning—a little cold in the head — neglect it and soon you're in its thrall. Eighty in Hie Remedies are Becoming the Safeguard of the Home—The People Have Trusted and Have Not Been Deceived. Mrs Mary Moss, No- 26 Chestnut St., i Toronto, Canada,says:-`•I have used Man - yen's Dyspepsia Cure with splendid results I was so bad with this disease that food would lay for hours on my stomaob, oans- ing me great pain and agony. I also had severe pains in my back and was frequent- ly troubled with soar stomach. I had to be extremely careful whatI ate, but after rising one vial of Munyon's Dyspepsia Cure I am now able to eat anything withotit dis- tress afterwards. After suffering for years with this disease it is a pleasure to be again able to eat anything I desire. Thanks to Munyon." Munyon's Rheumatic Care seldom fails to relieve in one to three hours, and cores In a few days. Price 25c. Munyon's Dyspepsia Cure positively cares all forms of indigestion and stomach troubles. Price 250. 11lanyon's Cold Cure prevents pneumonia and breaks up a cold in a few hours. Price 260. Munyon's Cough Cure stops coughs, night sweats, allays soreness and speedily heals the lunge. Price 2Kc. Munyon's Kidney Cure speedily cares pains in the back, loins or groins, and all forme of kidney disease. Price 25c. Munyon's Nerve Cure stops nervousness and builds up the system. Price 25c. Munyon's Headache Cure stops headache n three minutes. Price 25. Mnnyon's Pile Ointment positively cures all forme of piles. Price 25c Munyon's Blood Cure eradicates all im- purities of the blood. Price 25o. Manyon's Female Remedies are a boon to all women, Munyon's Catarrh Remedies neverfail. The Catarrh Cure—price 250—eradicates he disease from the system, and the Ca- arrh Tablets—price 25o,—cleanse and heal be parts. Munyon's Asthma Remedies relieve in hroe minutes, and cure permanently. Price $1. Munvon'e3Vitalizer restores lost vigor. Price $1. A separate care for each disease. At all druggists. Mostly 25o a vial, Personal letters to Prof. Munyon, 11 and 3 Albert St., Toronto, answered with free Medical advice for any disease. g c rou bio with the eagles, but to be on the safe every hundred have the taint. Dr.A.gnew'aCatarrhal Powders will cure the sli hte t FISH AS FOOD. Easy of Digestion and a Mlholesome Artl- nf Diet. It has been fro., r --sly stated that fish diet, by virtue of the ,• 1.9pliorus which It contains, is pro -eminently adapted to nour- ish the brain, and that those who subsist on it largely are distinguished for their brightness and intellectuality. It 1s per- fectly true that small percentage of phos- phorus enters into the composition of the healthy brain, and while it is also true that fish contains more or less pbosphorus that may and probably sloes pass into the circulation it is yet to be proved either by theory or by eaperiencb that a diet of fish is on the whole bettor adapted to supply the waste of the brain than a liberal vari- ety of other alimentary substances and especially of moats. Fish is easy of digos- tion and creates little vascular excitement and consequently forms a light and whole- sorne article of diet. Salt water fish aro the best of any, as their [IL -9h is more solid, more agreeable and healthy, less exposed to putresconoe and less viscid. They pos- sess tbese excellent qualities when fresh. When salted, thoy have all the propertice of salt fish and consequently its disadvan- tages. Those fish which have scales aro in gen- eral the most easily' digested land the best, and of all these fish the fresh herring ap- pears to deserve the preference. The hor- ring, codfish, turbot and flounder are per- haps the most digestible and beat of fish. Salmon and mackerel, lobster and most other kinds of shellfish are more dif Drat of digestion. The mode of cooking fish is of considerable importance. Frying them I oil or lard is an objectionable process. In general the process of boiling is best adapted to render them wholesome. Stewed fish should be avoided by the dyspeptic. Aoid sauces and pickles render fish more wholesome for tlW stomach, while butter has a tendency to prevont digestion, while spice and salt used in moderate quantities facilitate the digestive process. One of the beat sauces that can be used with fish Is else 1 soared them out, for they did not pox -pal . is a vert a e me roc Ib- anon juice.—Now York Ledger. bother me at all after the first day. rary, compete in one volume. Contains side I had taken a club and a revolver with me in the basket. Well, the first day I tell g s cold in the bead, and care the most stub- you those bald old fellows made it mighty born rases of catarrb. "Its action is instan- taneous,"says out). "I feel it myduty to red hot for me. illy basket hadn't any more than stopped in its descent when the birds commend it to the public," says anothe, . set up a terrible racket far down below '•Never got relief until I used it," says an. other, and so on and on. Acts likes magic whole, was 12 feet wide and the lines of me. They screeched and screamed as if they were holding a terrible indignation and always curse. old by Watts & Co. A Child's Question. meeting. I watched thein for a minute or Two Failures. !/ ';t two, but as they didn't appear to be flgur- ing on committing assault and battery I Fuddy—Tandem has been married he fore, hasn't be? r dipped the big whitewash brash I was using into Ithe paint and started to work. Duddy—Yes. ]3e was young and inex- "' A minute or two later I thought I heard a looking perienoed when he married the first time. Fuddy—But how about this second mar- for breakfast. When his papa had finished swish in the air, and up I saw a riage? rt � big eagle that looked about the size of an ostrich swooping down on me. He Duddy—Oh, he is old ezlough to be a moment, George. There's some was so olose that I didn't have time to childish now.—Boston Transcript. ?; grab ether my club or revolver. I made Then He sleeps. a pass, at flim with my big brush as he „ „ Williams has a now cure for insomnia. came, down. I hit him a kind of a glanc- ''What is it?" ing lick, and I think I got a little paint in his eye or in his mouth, for he sat down „ He takes a pitcher rip stairs with him s '„y on s •'ledge fora minute and made queer and goon to bed under the impression that he has to be up in time to catch a milk- y ” motlone with his head as if he were try- ing to `get the paint out of his eye or roan. —Chicago Record 4 . m°utly Then anot'hereagle came to his assist- '.Phe Arabs use camel's milk -in place of ,, allee; and tb�e two began gyrating around that of the cow, and in all parts of the in ,rny neighborhood in a manner that I cast sheep's milk is extensively used as a substitute for cow's milk, while in Spain •didn t like. I dropped my paint brush and'wout to hunting, so to speak. I shot the goat is the domestic substitute for the at them a ,line or two, but didn't seem to cow, that country having 4,530,000 goats. ' do muofi mage. Again one of them flew A GREAT BOOB FREE above me and, folding his wings to his sides, ogm down with a swoop. If he tn- When Dr. R.V. Pierce, of Bnfialo, N. Y., " tende'd..to it we squarely his aim wasn't published thefirst elition of his great work, any bettor han mine. I shot at him and The People's Common Sense Medical Ad - it, missed', sit he opened a wing that knocked viser, be announced that after 660,000 cop- n`y hat a he shot past me. Then the lea bad been sold at the regular price, $1.50 Isj other ono arn6 at me with a scream of per copy, the profit on which would repay rage. Ba , as good luck would have it, I him for the great amount of money and blazed a y with my revolver and hit labor expended is producing it, he would him, and o flew back wounded to the distribute the next half million free. As family bel w. None of the eagles came this number of copies hasalready been sold j'j,'" i very close ftor that, but I kept up an in- he is now giving away, absolutely free, termittont firing to lot them know that I 500,000 copies of this mos . complete, inter- ,proposed to hold the fort. It was the time eating and valuable common sense medical g I of year when the young eagles were in the work ever published-tbe recipient only be- " nests, and the old ones probably feared that ing r+quired to mail to him, at above ad - I had Como to rob them. They either dress, 31 one -cent stamps, to cover cost) of learned that my mission was peaceable or mailing only, and the book will be sent 1 t d It ' 't Ll d' I1' FISH AS FOOD. Easy of Digestion and a Mlholesome Artl- nf Diet. It has been fro., r --sly stated that fish diet, by virtue of the ,• 1.9pliorus which It contains, is pro -eminently adapted to nour- ish the brain, and that those who subsist on it largely are distinguished for their brightness and intellectuality. It 1s per- fectly true that small percentage of phos- phorus enters into the composition of the healthy brain, and while it is also true that fish contains more or less pbosphorus that may and probably sloes pass into the circulation it is yet to be proved either by theory or by eaperiencb that a diet of fish is on the whole bettor adapted to supply the waste of the brain than a liberal vari- ety of other alimentary substances and especially of moats. Fish is easy of digos- tion and creates little vascular excitement and consequently forms a light and whole- sorne article of diet. Salt water fish aro the best of any, as their [IL -9h is more solid, more agreeable and healthy, less exposed to putresconoe and less viscid. They pos- sess tbese excellent qualities when fresh. When salted, thoy have all the propertice of salt fish and consequently its disadvan- tages. Those fish which have scales aro in gen- eral the most easily' digested land the best, and of all these fish the fresh herring ap- pears to deserve the preference. The hor- ring, codfish, turbot and flounder are per- haps the most digestible and beat of fish. Salmon and mackerel, lobster and most other kinds of shellfish are more dif Drat of digestion. The mode of cooking fish is of considerable importance. Frying them I oil or lard is an objectionable process. In general the process of boiling is best adapted to render them wholesome. Stewed fish should be avoided by the dyspeptic. Aoid sauces and pickles render fish more wholesome for tlW stomach, while butter has a tendency to prevont digestion, while spice and salt used in moderate quantities facilitate the digestive process. One of the beat sauces that can be used with fish Is else 1 soared them out, for they did not pox -pal . is a vert a e me roc Ib- anon juice.—Now York Ledger. bother me at all after the first day. rary, compete in one volume. Contains FRO] ffMOUL EXMIEKL Maw+ have tried * r• years to thereover a ro<n34y tankabb to their own Dane for the Co�ipatSomBi2ionsaess, ilil3igestlon, Headache, ttxid Liver oompfaints aHsiag frooal .roar Dttpeat3ow, Weald $tovmlcb, To these we eW.l ft tkomw wedk*w- c 7 "! 4s� ly an inch antl.-a half in I'll cut It off." period at the end of the ad- A tow days later the ound happened to made as big as the head Of noise tBe gold- filling W -lila iildtlior's W. TAYLOR &, SONS, SOLE AGENTS FAIR CLINTON 1, but from the road it looked tooth. 120 of the bead of a rhatoh. "Oh, mamma, dero'segg on your toofs," PILLS 0_=M�--- n the stagecoaches would fro- he saki- Head w a Heke it is. n't ' , height of the letters, "My, myl" she replied, pretending to Mrw R. LAS Moncton, N. B., says: '�' �^�g� AND thbinl anyw11 near wipe the imaginary egg off. I wonder n They oared Ise cf Oonst3y�ion and sick (' U ' 1 1 'ERS S,LEIGMS Thatwas my flrldb, hotW it got thoreP" headache." V .L. L Obicago emcee: The boy was silent for a few minutes, M J al. tits N{�ae HOW,. p,M;}- ,p during whioh he seemed to be thinking tnu} O; , ym "TbOy WO api'� , gape f3C�t;iiA hard; At last he asked: find ell cure for aanatripatfon, dygpepslbtlt We Keep in Stock And make to older ofV a YSeuad ' " Ammo, why don's: oo gay darn too?" abd t heado,"" abl >tni4a ! the World' AO eland Leador. Mie M. g, t f3au0h $ ,Ont.; Cutters and Sleighs Of all l lndf3 i sty iMoolll b a i f +• Liver' M an excellent - sick- r Ixt, s al>ale�, °fir ea2leal + fbti.eato. +, r cauaftxg no rain or grtphng." EtlC*� bOgle 7Co#, HtlnriiStvia, Onba iiir4t. r AUMBALLnevePMtipblto ad ypmob llQtA fblf e60nn the 1r r. CLIN'i 41 F 1 • Her Atanueoript. Into tbo ground #loot gMoo of a maga- It zine noted for the red tapelry of its methods a ru}Bhed a woman. In looks bearing and li clothes she was the typical l�terag orank, and walking up to the rail especially de- signed to head off such, as she she Bald, "I want to know whether your magazine will print this for uta right away." "This" was a bundle of manuscript which, how- ever it may have looked in those faroff days when the woman firat began hawking It about, was now tattered and grimy. It wag rolled. "We don't,-er-we don't oon- older manuscripts down here," said the. young man behind the rail. "You'll have to take it up stairs. " " tJ p gtairs, " repeat- ed the woman. "How far up?" "Ob, only four flights," said the man. "No, there is t no elevator. I'm sorry, madam, but even our editor in chief uses the stairs," The woman glanced at the stairs. "Four flights counting this one?" she asked. "Counting this one," said the man. "Tbab's too much," said the woman. "I don't care if all the editors in creation . climb them, I shan't." And she turned to go when something caught her eye and back she came. "Loon here," see. said, "Isn't that a speaking tube oOer in the corner?" The man admitted that it was., "Why can't you call up through it an ask them if they will print my manu� script?" The man explained that the manuscript would have to be read first, "Well," went on the woman, "why can't you read it to them through the tube. Then they can tell right off and it'll savb• we climbing those stairs." The man o:�- plained "some more," but, although be did his best, it was in vain. Before he was half through the woman, manuscript in hand, had flounced out of the door with, "And some folks wonder why literature is degenerating,"—Now York Sun. HOW TO GET RICH. We refer' to richness of the blood. If you are pale and thin, you are poor in strength and nerve power. Scott's Emulsion drives away thinness and pallor, and brings rich blood and nerve power. The steady .ncveasu in Dor trade, fa, good pro aur prices lower thwn those of othev d, Wb ma,nrnfaaftm furniture ora a large scale a from us, we serve for you the profit, av the retail dealer. Thia week we have passed into stock some o' to to quo -to pricea, but come and see I Ret2lenrbeni we ewe determined that our prig UND►I WFARINA ru aho deapwrtw-gnt our steel§ N com2lmN ter. Outfit in trh�ej �wa°ty. One prices are e P R--Nlgbt rand Qonday calls attended to lr, Diceotor) residence, 1,MIMA ay 4 � � • h. - How about that suit you want inade to order? Call in and see our tweeds before you buy. $10 buys a nice suit. 12 buys a better one. 13.50 gets you more style. 14 leads you to higher grades. 15, splendid value. 16, elegant styles, beautiful cloth. 171'0BT. C0 ATS &. SCS!`' A Porous Leather ` Mddtsek"— which evaporates - perspiration, keeps the foot dry, - ' warm and hardy, while shedding water like a duck's back. Can be had only in the $4 and $5 grades of the Goodyear Wdted— CATALOGUE race .Slater .Shoe. �I The subscriber desires be in Stewing Maclaine btisinea% 1 NEW HO51E SEWING MAC] To handle their machines, and am i duln"ity and the quality of woslc Yhoy wiA b chines on the market. I also have other g+mles tuaoal&actured, if de'ired. Noodlos and pars sn wAMUNG MAC➢HltG3-1 am agecti for 1 est ni anufacturers of Washen in We world./ still hand a the Improved Ideal and 34n•nitaba VW M. 1C®OI��, i THE EESt , k PSI al CSC R.i `'ARE •v• HORACE(�T T � A ' Ip' 8 r NARPEW will enter the coming year prepared to give to the the part quarter of acentury—contributions from world, illustrated by leading artists. A brief gi't OUR PACIFI Pao=CTe FOR A NICARA01YAN CANAL Till By lion. DAVID rIMPldr RAMRN a1TIVRIA AND TUR PACIFIC y bvr• By 8rt MUN DON8AL 7 RODEN'S CORNER -+-T by tritti t $STUN mifiMMAN, author or be contributed by such authors as W D,11 Frederic Remington, Ruth Mel;nery Stuart THE PROGRESS OF SCIENCE EUROPE ARMIES AND NAVIES STUDIES 1NAMEFf Portage free to all subrcribarr Sub. S4 a year. Addtead HARPER "& ilia` 4. Cen,.fe,i Wallace "Even without further molestation from the eagles'I had a pretty big job 'on my 1008 pages, profusely illustrated. The Free Edition is precisely the same as that lauds• The men bad to pull me up and sold at $;.50 except only that the books are down quite adistance, for I made the sign in strong manilla covers instead of cloth. letters 22 feet high. Each letter, as a Mend no x, before all are given away. whole, was 12 feet wide and the lines of the letters 83r in width. By ropes an- A Child's Question. ohoredfaraway from the point from which There is a little bit of a boy in this town the basket was suspended the men pulled who will probably gat his name in the pa - me in. the direction I had to travel along pers some day. A few mornings ago the the face of the precipice to continue the ' people who think he is the prettiest and painting. The rock on which I was paint- wisest child on earth had ham and eggs ing was °dark gray, so I palated the for breakfast. When his papa had finished Alin pure white, and it took three half and was about to start down town, the iiarrels of Paint to finish the job. It took -child's mamma said: "Stop mo Qp do I to complete my undertaking. 1 a moment, George. There's some g ec Id easily be read from the egg on your mustache." the letters appeared from "Darn its" exclaimed George. "I guess FRO] ffMOUL EXMIEKL Maw+ have tried * r• years to thereover a ro<n34y tankabb to their own Dane for the Co�ipatSomBi2ionsaess, ilil3igestlon, Headache, ttxid Liver oompfaints aHsiag frooal .roar Dttpeat3ow, Weald $tovmlcb, To these we eW.l ft tkomw wedk*w- c 7 "! 4s� ly an inch antl.-a half in I'll cut It off." period at the end of the ad- A tow days later the ound happened to made as big as the head Of noise tBe gold- filling W -lila iildtlior's W. TAYLOR &, SONS, SOLE AGENTS FAIR CLINTON 1, but from the road it looked tooth. 120 of the bead of a rhatoh. "Oh, mamma, dero'segg on your toofs," PILLS 0_=M�--- n the stagecoaches would fro- he saki- Head w a Heke it is. n't ' , height of the letters, "My, myl" she replied, pretending to Mrw R. LAS Moncton, N. B., says: '�' �^�g� AND thbinl anyw11 near wipe the imaginary egg off. I wonder n They oared Ise cf Oonst3y�ion and sick (' U ' 1 1 'ERS S,LEIGMS Thatwas my flrldb, hotW it got thoreP" headache." V .L. L Obicago emcee: The boy was silent for a few minutes, M J al. tits N{�ae HOW,. p,M;}- ,p during whioh he seemed to be thinking tnu} O; , ym "TbOy WO api'� , gape f3C�t;iiA hard; At last he asked: find ell cure for aanatripatfon, dygpepslbtlt We Keep in Stock And make to older ofV a YSeuad ' " Ammo, why don's: oo gay darn too?" abd t heado,"" abl >tni4a ! the World' AO eland Leador. Mie M. g, t f3au0h $ ,Ont.; Cutters and Sleighs Of all l lndf3 i sty iMoolll b a i f +• Liver' M an excellent - sick- r Ixt, s al>ale�, °fir ea2leal + fbti.eato. +, r cauaftxg no rain or grtphng." EtlC*� bOgle 7Co#, HtlnriiStvia, Onba iiir4t. r AUMBALLnevePMtipblto ad ypmob llQtA fblf e60nn the 1r r. CLIN'i 41 F 1 • Her Atanueoript. Into tbo ground #loot gMoo of a maga- It zine noted for the red tapelry of its methods a ru}Bhed a woman. In looks bearing and li clothes she was the typical l�terag orank, and walking up to the rail especially de- signed to head off such, as she she Bald, "I want to know whether your magazine will print this for uta right away." "This" was a bundle of manuscript which, how- ever it may have looked in those faroff days when the woman firat began hawking It about, was now tattered and grimy. It wag rolled. "We don't,-er-we don't oon- older manuscripts down here," said the. young man behind the rail. "You'll have to take it up stairs. " " tJ p gtairs, " repeat- ed the woman. "How far up?" "Ob, only four flights," said the man. "No, there is t no elevator. I'm sorry, madam, but even our editor in chief uses the stairs," The woman glanced at the stairs. "Four flights counting this one?" she asked. "Counting this one," said the man. "Tbab's too much," said the woman. "I don't care if all the editors in creation . climb them, I shan't." And she turned to go when something caught her eye and back she came. "Loon here," see. said, "Isn't that a speaking tube oOer in the corner?" The man admitted that it was., "Why can't you call up through it an ask them if they will print my manu� script?" The man explained that the manuscript would have to be read first, "Well," went on the woman, "why can't you read it to them through the tube. Then they can tell right off and it'll savb• we climbing those stairs." The man o:�- plained "some more," but, although be did his best, it was in vain. Before he was half through the woman, manuscript in hand, had flounced out of the door with, "And some folks wonder why literature is degenerating,"—Now York Sun. HOW TO GET RICH. We refer' to richness of the blood. If you are pale and thin, you are poor in strength and nerve power. Scott's Emulsion drives away thinness and pallor, and brings rich blood and nerve power. The steady .ncveasu in Dor trade, fa, good pro aur prices lower thwn those of othev d, Wb ma,nrnfaaftm furniture ora a large scale a from us, we serve for you the profit, av the retail dealer. Thia week we have passed into stock some o' to to quo -to pricea, but come and see I Ret2lenrbeni we ewe determined that our prig UND►I WFARINA ru aho deapwrtw-gnt our steel§ N com2lmN ter. Outfit in trh�ej �wa°ty. One prices are e P R--Nlgbt rand Qonday calls attended to lr, Diceotor) residence, 1,MIMA ay 4 � � • h. - How about that suit you want inade to order? Call in and see our tweeds before you buy. $10 buys a nice suit. 12 buys a better one. 13.50 gets you more style. 14 leads you to higher grades. 15, splendid value. 16, elegant styles, beautiful cloth. 171'0BT. C0 ATS &. SCS!`' A Porous Leather ` Mddtsek"— which evaporates - perspiration, keeps the foot dry, - ' warm and hardy, while shedding water like a duck's back. Can be had only in the $4 and $5 grades of the Goodyear Wdted— CATALOGUE race .Slater .Shoe. �I The subscriber desires be in Stewing Maclaine btisinea% 1 NEW HO51E SEWING MAC] To handle their machines, and am i duln"ity and the quality of woslc Yhoy wiA b chines on the market. I also have other g+mles tuaoal&actured, if de'ired. Noodlos and pars sn wAMUNG MAC➢HltG3-1 am agecti for 1 est ni anufacturers of Washen in We world./ still hand a the Improved Ideal and 34n•nitaba VW M. 1C®OI��, i THE EESt , k PSI al CSC R.i `'ARE •v• HORACE(�T T � A ' Ip' 8 r NARPEW will enter the coming year prepared to give to the the part quarter of acentury—contributions from world, illustrated by leading artists. A brief gi't OUR PACIFI Pao=CTe FOR A NICARA01YAN CANAL Till By lion. DAVID rIMPldr RAMRN a1TIVRIA AND TUR PACIFIC y bvr• By 8rt MUN DON8AL 7 RODEN'S CORNER -+-T by tritti t $STUN mifiMMAN, author or be contributed by such authors as W D,11 Frederic Remington, Ruth Mel;nery Stuart THE PROGRESS OF SCIENCE EUROPE ARMIES AND NAVIES STUDIES 1NAMEFf Portage free to all subrcribarr Sub. S4 a year. Addtead HARPER "& ilia` 4. Cen,.fe,i Wallace