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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1900-06-22, Page 3, e •
•
Can Eat
What I Lika.”
•
Vfav people suffer terribly with
pain In the stomach after every
mouthful they eat.
Dytpepsia and indigestion keep
them in constEnt MiSery. '
After trying the hundred and one
new -tangled remedies without much
beneat, why not use the old reliable
Burdock Blood Bitters and obtain a
perfect and permanent cure?
Here is a case in polite:
"I was troubled with indigestion and
dyspepsia for three or four yeas s, and tried
almost every doctor round here anti differ-
ent dyspepsia remedies, but got little relief.
"I then started using Burdock Blood
Bitters, ami when I had lin ished the second
ottle I was almost well, but continued
'iJjing it untljI had completed .the third
bofe, when I was perfectly well. Before
taking B.B.B. I could scarcely eat any-
thing without having a • ,,, ;
pain in my stomach, Now It •
I eat whatever I like with-
out causing me the least
discomfort. -- Mrs.
Tiv*ts CLARK, Brussels,
Ont.
HIS TEETH WERE HIS OWN.
And Tet the Facts Were Rather Out
01 the Ordinary. •
Four or five traveling men around the
hot e,1 stave had been talking about teeth,
when one .of them got up and, saying
"Good night," went Witte bed.
you notice what fine teeth that
party had?" said, a man from St. Lends.
"He won't acknOwledge they are false, or
rather he insists that they are his own,
and yet he doesn't' quite tell tbe truth.
My brother is a dentist in Kansas City,
and this man lives there, and my brother
does his work for him. Not that he tells
me anything, but merely as an incident,
for everybody who`Jenows the man knows
the eireurastances. . • ,
"His teeth are his own, and at the
same time they are false. You. don't un-
derstand, so I'll explain. He alWaya had
unusually fine teeth, but about five years
• ago they showed signs of .1tiggs' disease,
an affection vvhieh causes the gums to
recede from the roots, leaving them ex-
posedsome distance down from- the en-
ameled surface. In aggravated 'eases or
where the person is very sensitivethe die -
ease h very painful, and it is almost- im-
possible to relieve it: To cure it is- Prac-
tically impossible, for the gums will not
grow beck again. . .
"This man svas of the sensitive- kind,
and although. physicians and --deatiste
tried their skillon him they coiid do•
nothing, and he suffered so that at last:
he told my. . brother to extract. . every,
tooth in hip month and mit false Machin
for . him. As nothing else could be done,
• my brother followed . instreetions • add.
pulled every tooth. They were; all in per-
fect condition,' and as my brother fooked
them over, 'regretting that . his patient
was forced •to give, them up, .a novel idea
occurred to him which. he at once told to
. the other man, who agreed to it willingly;
This was that instead �f making, artificial
teeth, as was the usual custom, these
same teeth be used exactly" as i1. they
were artificial. .
. .
"My brother, who is a first gloat den-.
tist always, was .more than ordiearily •
•
careful on this job, and when. he bad
mounted the teeth le n plate measured to
a hair's breadth and slipped -them into his
patient's eiapth they fitted as if they had
grown there, as it were,. and now there
isn't oats/pan in a thousand eel tell that
they are false, .11 indeed false they .are•
At the same time there Isn't any 'mole
•Riggs' disease to trouble him."L-Wash-
Ington Star.
Glimpses of Browning,
. 1 In thelife ofthe late Archbishop Ben-
i
son is. given the following 'extract, from
' his diary, written just after .Browning's
funeral:
"I wonder whethet I have enywhere
put (Lawn a walk with Wadleysand Ten-.
nyson. Bradley had been 'reading me • „
'The Grammarian's Funeral,' and.. he •
said, 'We'll ask . Tennyson . whether: m
Browning's writing at Istrge is poetry or e
no.' Tennyison's answer . was, 'I'll. think . a
about it.' In a Walk ..a week later,. apro- *
- pos of nothing, he observed, 'I have
thought, and It is.' We had no Idea for s
- the moment as to what he spoke of. ••• . s
. • "In' my last 'talk with Browning him- . r
self I said, 'What -all want is more 'Men d
and Women,' nots� manyriddles Of lan-• e
guage. He said,„ quite with surprise, 1,
'Men and Womenr. I've got thousands4 t
of such things in my ifortfolies.", I hope, i
we may now taste tb-eni.. . • • .
- • m
"A. told me *at he stood by Browning .0
at a late funeral in the abbey: and that a
•Browning said,: 'Whet the Lord's Prayer 0
began I looked at Huxley and grinned.
I said to myself, "That means.something t
to me, and to you It.fneans nothing." ' " • t
- , -,... __,..
. .
en .....',.:- -
ters and the Reporter. ...
7, • t
"General Nelson A. Milos always did sr
like to have fun with new reporters," . b
said an old, newspaper man. "I remem- . a
ber seine years ago he told an unfortU-
nate Washington corespondent a long
story. about a new gun metal that some
genius in 'Oklahoma or Kalamazoo was
supposed to haveint. discovered. It
wasa wonderful alloy, whieh Was' tie
tough as steel and as light as aluminiuni.
By its use, the general said, it Would be
- possible to build . guns which would
Weigh no more than the immense' projec-
tiles which they fired.
"The earrespondent wee delighted and
• went off and wrote a Umtatal article,
which produced -spasnis ef, laughter
throughout the entii•e artillery • service. .
You see, it doesn't require a very pre- ,
found knowledge of ballistics to know. !
that if a gun and projectile both weigh t
exactly the same Amount they weld fly 1
. in opposite directions with exactly the ..
same velocity when the piece was fired."
-New Orleans Tinies-17emoeret.
BYRNES AND CROOKS.
THE METHODS OF NEW YORK'S OLD
CHIEF OF POLICE,
THE CLINTON NEW EU.
A Case In While's System of ,
Keeping in Touch With the Move-
ments of Crooks Saved an innocent
Mau From Conviction.
• A group of old New York pollee and
Ore offielels Were 'chatting tba other day
when the- talk veered around to ex-Su-
perinteudent of Pollee Byrnes.
"Tom Byrnes," staid an ex -detective
sergeant, "was a bright man, but,be real-
IY gained his reputation through tho tal-
ent of the men under him. Tile men did
the work, but he got the credit and the
notoriety. He was shrewd in this re -
SRO. He surrounded himself with the
best men in the department, and every-
thing they accomplished he took the cred-
it for." • '
"That's your side of it," • said a fire
captain, "But Prn. going to tell a little .
story about Byrnes which will show you
just how the man worked and which will
prove, I think, that he didn't get any
more credit- than he deserved, When I
was a deputy fire marshal, I got to know
a number. of the people around IR:lice
headquarters. About that time a well
known society leader - call her Mrs,
Jones -was 'living at- her country house
on the Hudson not fir from Tarrytown.
Iler husband was in Europe, and, be-
sides her servants, she had stopping with
her a Woman friend. To make matters
easy, we will say her name :is Miss
Smith, One night a burglar got into the
house and filially landed in the room of
Miss Smith. She was awakened, but be-
fore she could move she was told by the
burglar, who, by the *ay, was masked,'
that .if she kept quiet she would not be
harmed. He kepthis word, and she Was
too seared to open her eyes for nearly an.
hour after he had gone. Then she set
up a big yell. • But nci trace of the in-
truder could be found, er course. Strange
to ,say, ; however, for a •womtin, she re-
tained a good description -of the burglar.
And what impressed her most . was -his
voice, which, she said, she would recog-
nize at any titne.
"The local pollee were notified of the
burglary, but unthing came of It until
two weeks 1ater',-7-Onesafternoon Mrs.
Jones and her guest drove to toven and -
stopped at a store where newepapers and
stationery were on , The proprietor •
of the place 'wag a young • mcin. who had
worked on • a, train selling papers,. candy
and books and, being an industrious chap,
had saved ' enough money to, start hi .1;0810
nese for hinisielt:' He waited on the cus-
tomers, and naturaliy there.' was • Some.
-conversation. over their purchases. • On
leavitig the store the two women got into
theircarriage and started or .home.
Staith appeared ;,nervous: and the
ether asked what the trouble was. .
•• Tye found out -who the man was that
robbed- us:' was the startling reply. • 1
.'" 'Who? asked her friend in minutia), • •
"'The man who waited on • us in 'that
• store•
. •
„
"'Nonsense!' said. Mrs. Jones. 'That'e
impossible. . He owtte:theLstore and is t•
respectable man: .He s -married too. --I
think you're very much mistaken,' • • -
"But Miss Smith .was positive in her .
Conviction. • She said that .the -burglar
Was of the same height and build, and, to
make. the identification. complete, she, was
sure that the • voiees..41.• the burglar and
the proprietor of the 'Stare' were exactly.'
alike, She eouldo't be Mistaken. "
"The next day Mr. 'Jones'. husband ar-
rived 'from Europe..: Hewas told .Of the
burglary and what had happened subse-
quently .and was So .impressed With lilies.
Smith's convictions -that he had the. 'man -
who ran the stationery store .' arrested
and lodged in jail to .await the maven -
Ing of the, county grand jury. Here was
.niee -mix I'll tell you it looked
mighty bad for the Prisoner, for the pee,
,pla who caused his arrest had a good deal
of influence.. However, the prisoner had
many friends in the town, and thy in
terested theniselvesin the ease. They de-
elared • that it was ,ridieulciuss.: to lock a
Man up on nth filinsfy eVidenge, but Miss
Smith .positivelY identified .' him ns the:
burglar,' go what could be done? • It hap-..
ened that one of the .prisoner's 'friends
vas 0 :friend of .Tom Byrnes.- SO one
otning he dame down to thiaity and •
xplained the whore' thing to P,Yrties,
thing his help.. Byrnes promised to do
hat he Could.
"Some title before this 'Byrnes had !s-
ued an order that • caused a: lot of. die-
ension ainong hie deteetiv•es. The order
equired. them to give him a report each
ay of every crook they nwt In. their. tray -
Is. Spode! Mention. was to he made
•here.they saw the cro04. end. they Were
o follow him • fow blocks and find out
possible where he was going. The
en thought thie. uniteeessnry. 'but, mot
.them complied svith it, They were
Ise requirer to keep a record for their
wn use. .
."The morning after Byrnes' Tarrytown
riend heti visited hini ha had his Men of
he ease,' detailing the deseriptien of the ,
lift* tlIi‘itts giesertry-Misant
he younger members of the staff, who
as a very bright fellow and- is in the
usinesstoday, soak out his notebook
nil searched through IL On the date of
the robbery he found this memorandum: •
"'Saw "Red Jac*" on West One Hun-
dred and Twenty-fifth street; took a train
for White Phials; looking very seedy.
"A few Pages farther back in the both
he cattle across this memorandum: • . :
•"-'Sitsv- "Ited J tick" on Broadway; look-
ing swell; Must hove made a strike.'
"That was .dated one week -later, than.
the other. As 'Red Jack' anstwerecl to
the description of the burglar, Byrnes
gave the young detective instructions to
bring Jack • in, and two days later 'Red
Jack' was at 001i00 headquarters, What
happened down there 1 don't know, Mit
I do know that Jack confemsed to !myths
committed • the robbery. 'Tied hide' and
the Stationery man were ringers for eneli
other, • and that nematode:1 for Misi;
Smith's error. Their voices were &meat
identical .in tone too. 'Red Jaiit" got live
years for that job.
• "Now," concluded the fire martin, • "1
think that Story, whirl I kilo* is tree,
apelike for itself. Bytnese &weaves may
have (1otte the work. but Ryrnes tnepped
out the plans. That syetem of keeping
bibs on crooks, woe tinlY elle or 11)1111)!
cleverthings he ittaugureted."-New
'York Sun.
- The Poet s Woe.
"I have always been tt render of your
poetry." began Mrs. Guehe.
tun • replied Algernon Charle.s
Mystic, "that some one understands
"011, but that is what 1 have been
hoping to meet you for. I wanted you
to explain." -Philadelphia North Ameri-
can,
Mrs Gladstone, widow of William
Ettvt.,Elladptone, is dead.
Sinallpot in Port Arthur has been
effectually wiped out.
Work on the woodentvare establish
merit and planing mill of B. Dads, &
co.. Hull, will cAntnence at.once.
Wm. Christie, the well.known To.
ronto biscuit, manufacturer, died Wed.
'today in his 72ad year.
IT DAZZLES THE WOULD.
No Discovery in medicine has ever tweet-
osd One quarter of the excitement that has
been daueed by Dr, King's Now Discovery
for Consumption. Its severest tests litLye
been on hOpelese shame of Consomption;
Prietunonik Hemorrhage, Pleurisy and
Bronchial:, thousands of whom it law re-
Otored to perfeet health.' For Coughs,
Colds, Asilrna, Croup, Ifay Fever, Hoarse -
nese and Whooping Cough it lc the quick-
est, surest me in the world. It is sold by
allwaruggists who guarantee, satisfaction or
10,0111 money, Large honks 50o and $100.
Trial bottles free,
• Tim O•year-old son of Henry Lawsert,
Dominion Oity, was drowned Thms-
day in the !tessera! river.
It is reported t hat Oscil Rhoden in
iniete6ted in a s,ellemo' ior systetn of
railwayn in Nexieo.
Lionel Croeltor,of Toronto, a jockey, was 1
killed at Hamilton while schooling a hems
over the hurdled,
$111111110 CONS
are noted for hanging on.
They weaken your throat
and lungs, and lead to
serious trouble.
Don't trifle with them.
Take Scott's Emulsion at
once, It sciothes,-fieals,
and cures.
SOc. sad SI. All drunitits.
Aill4MILRAMMANIFARP,
MOWS NOTES.
TheAsiebeoCtovernment hats contributed
$1,000 to the sufferers' by the fire at St.
Ettenne.du Saguenay.
complimentary dinner was given -at-
the balsa Sotel, London, to welcome hbtrie
Sir Henry Irving after his American tour.
TO CURE A COLD 1N ONEDAY.
TakeLarative Brom° Quinine Tablets. .All
druggh.ts refund the money if It fells to cure
E. W. Groves signature is on each box.
Charles G. Campbell, foradarjy of South
111iddleton, Ont., and John Moran, bailing
from Quebec, were eirownedat Indian Head,
A PAINFUL SCALD
Ana.
Colonel Aylmer, Adjutant -General, in.
Benito -11h 'militia canape this week. He
will go first to London and afterwards to
Stagers, Deseronto and Kingston.
Hoarsenesss is a common trouble during
the sumnier with those having weak throat
or lungs. It min be readily cured, and the
throat and lungs strengthened by -Dr.
Wood'sNorway Pine Syrup. Price 25o.
John Donley,of Carleton Place,anti John
Frenub, of Beaohburg, were killed at the
io oria niokel mint near e, Fish by
the fall of 0 log of wood down the shaft.
Mrs T. Wannainaker, Frankford, Ont.
says : scalded my hand very badly, then
took oold in it. It swelled and was very
painful, buthalf a bottle of Hagyard's Yel-
low Oil cured it completely.
Dean Willtarne,of Quebec, has declined
the position of coadjutor Bishop of 'Ontario.
and another meeting of the Synod will
have to be °slide to make an election.
attempt to wreak eleotrio street
car on the Penitentiary hill, Kingston, was
made by placing a large boulder on the
trick. The oar was derailed but no one
was hurt. .
igAt Niagara Falls a Wormers named
Mabel Williams, aged twenty, of Plata-
oemmitted suicide by jumping into
the whirlpool rapids from the platform of
the inoliae railway.
. The Vnited Strait, • is to build war.
ships aggregating over $100,000,000 in
cost as soon as builders are prepared
to undertake the great prograni,whieb
calls -for 11 'annoyed ships. ,
. -Brantford chimes carried by-laws to
raiee $25,000 for flood prevention work and
012,000 for hospital extension: •
Japan is buyingAmerioan and European
battle to. introduce among the native herds
and improve the general stook.• .•
Premier Farquharson has given notice
efahe probition bill to be introduced in the
Prince Edward. Island Leeielature,
A WIDOW'S LOVE AFFAIR:
Receives a setback, if she has offenaye
'breath through Constipation, • Biliousness
or. Stoniath ID:Miele, but Dr. King's . New
Life alwhys oure those troubles ;
(lean the system, sweeten the breath, ban-
ish headache.; beet. in tbe world for liver,
kidneys and bowels. Only 26o at all .drug
stores.
• •
Lord Salisbury has .cabled. congratu-
lations to GI ezr.. Roberts.
- -
Mr Gilbert Parker has subsotibed $100
to the Belleville library. •
The trouble among the Iroquoitt Indians
on the Bt, Regis Reserve, over the eon-
struotion of a lock-up, his declared by the
officials to be greatly exaggerated.
TO SAVE HER CHILD.
From frightful dieligurement Mrs Nan.
'ole Galleger, of La Grange, Ga., applied
Buckleri's Arnica Salve to great, Sores on
her bead and face, and wates it -quick
cure exceeded all her hopes. It works
wonders in Sores, Braisee, Skin Emotions,
Cute, Burns, . Scalds', and Piles. 25o.
Cure guaranteed by all druggists,
It is reported from Pretoria that 3,750
British gneoners, including 150 officers.
were rescued at Waterval, and that only
900 have been taken east by the Boers,.
Prof. Robertson, who has returned to
Ottawa from Pane; says that Canada's ex-
hibit is one of the best at the great show.
A new atrethip invented by Herr Weiss-
mann bag been tried at Berlin. It ascend-
'etascifetiwye.oty metres and flew fifteen landing
TWO WARNINGS.
-Liming flesh is one and a hacking oough
is another, If 'they oometogether the warn-
ing is a loud and hard one. Soott's Emul-
sion does some of its bestiverk in just:these
cases, It prevents consumption.
General Pio del Pilar, tbe Filipino leader,
big beenioaptured by the Americans near
Mande, •
Mr Menier'st agent has entered an notion
for dement. against Rev. Dr. Griffith,
pastor of the 'Methodist Church in Quebec,
fin connection with the Fox Bay settlers
troubles,
William Hendley, of Guelph, attempted
feticide at Hamilton. .
Tbirty men employed in the harbor itn-
provemente at Port Colborne have prat on
strike.
William Lang and Robert Scones, of
Sundridge,were drowned by their boat up-
setting in Stoney Lake.
Colonel Aylmer inspected the London,
Ont., military oamp athi spoke in cone-
-plinientary tetms of all be saw.
S SITDN YEARS IN BED.
,,Will wonders OVAr wage ?" inquire the
Mende of Mre 8, Pease, of Lavorenee,Kart.
They knew ehe bad been unable to leave
her bed in seven years on account of Ryer
and kidney, trouble, nervous prostration
end general debility ; but, "Three bottles
of Electric Bitters enabled me to walk,"
she writes, "and in three months I fell
like a new person." WOMen suffering
from Headache, Backache, Nervousness!,
Sleepleesnees, Afelaneholy, Fainting and
Dizzy SIAN will find it a priceless Mon.
ing. Try it. Satisfaction io guaranteed,
Only 600 at all drug stores.
• THE PARIS EXPOSITION.
A fountain throwing up wheat will be
one of the featUres of the Cauadien ex-
hibit at Paris.
By the middle Of May there will not be
a thing left to be done on the exposition
oglreottenidd.s, so nearly is everythlug com-
A locomotive works at Crewe, England,
• has just completed its four thousandth
railroad eugine, and it is to be sent lo
Paris for exhibition.
Boston is proud of the Model of that
city whith Is to be exhibited at the Paris
exposition. The model will show the
city and the surroundings for 12 miles:,
and every house, tree, water coarse and
road will be visible.
1aris wiltuttract
citizens wearing the costumes of the mid-
dle ages, the renaissance period aud the
!seventeenth and eighteenth eenturies.
RAILWAY ,RUMBLES..
, attention of
,.
thousands of visitors. The buildings,
churches and streets ere Peopled with
HOW TO HURRY;
June 22, MO
1. Do nothing that you don't him to
do. Out out the nonessentlalso
2. Both hesitate. Begin at once. When
You are through, stop, and begin On the
next thing.
3. billet be too particular what part
01 the job you begin with. Other things I
being equal, do what's under your hand
first and the next nearest thing next.
4. Deal Pause between jebs.
5. Don't go from one Joh to another
until the first is done, "Do one thing
at a time." It takes time to change your
Mind.
* 0, Do sour thinking while you're act-
ing. And think about the work in hand.
7, If you have assistants, use them. At
, first do only what they can't do, and
afterward help them out.
8. Do nothing twice. This makes it
necessary to do it right the firet time.
. 9. Don't lay down "one tool except to
take up another.
40. Beware of looking out the window.
What west .distraction lies.
It costs $550,000,000 every week to • ii, Don't put things Off. Do the
you think of them
If you'll follow these rules and a few
more that you •ean. make yourself, you
will be able to reduce your office hours
about one-half; you won't think you're
hurrying and •you won't be hared and
worn out by your work. -New York
World.
- •
krugerle American Accent.
One day Odin Paul had to travel from •
Pretoria to Cepe Town in ' a company
.composed in part of Germans, In- part of
English. He said to his secretary:.
"Hoe vei; is bet van hier?" •
• An Englishman and a German corn.
Pleted each the sentence according his
vernacular, each thinking the President
had suddenly tnefl to speak German or
English and had net quite but nearly suc-
ceeded. The German said:
run the world's railways, '
The Canadian Pacific railway Is sur
veying a new route fawn Ottawa to Aro-
prior.
A. new system of railway traction Imo
been invented by a New Zealander in
which half of the car its underground and
half above, It Is proposed to construct
a conduit . of sufficient capacity to re-
eelve the truck and running gear.
'Russia is getting .read to build ani
railway from the south of • European
Russia. to Turkestan: One line pro-
posed goes from Orenburg through the
Turgai country and Turkestan to Tash-
kend, Another starts at A•lexandrovsk,
-on the Caspain and follows the left bank
of the Amu Darla to Tehardsbui on the
transeaspian railroad.
m when
SPRING BUDS.
It is pretty nearly time for the man ,
. with tbe lawn mower to appear. -
Worcester Spy. -
It is an open question now whether the
new, kissing bug or the old summer girl
will get the first inning. -New York
Press.
The tree man. Is around with his bill of
$ for sticking up in t o lawn bean
pole that doesn't grow. -Minneapolis
A JUSTIFIABLE DESIRE.
•
' The large majenty et people vary natur-
ally have a justilleble desire that the phy-
sioian's prescription should be filled by a
nompeteut'druggist. Oar loag exp.erience
and our ample facilities for dispensing are
at your,00mmand at all hours.
It you have wisely decided to make
Paine's Celery Compound, that king of
medicines, we are always prepared to snp•
ply your wants. Our ?stook of this popular
medicine is storeys fresh and. pure. We
heartily recommend it. J. E. Hovey, Drug-
gist, Clinton, Ont.
"Herr president, you almost speak Ger-
man-Wie welt ist es von- bier?"
The Euglishman put in:. "How 'far is it
from here? Mr, President: you.
almost .excellent English, but you must.
getting the American accent" -
New England, Home Magazine.
Ring odt • •
She was trying to talk to her 'fiance,:
and the never used 'a telephone before:.
"Ring eff!" came a voiee over the mire.
"Oh, Charlie!" she cried. "Yes, 1. did
forget and leave my ring off this morning.
Can you really see my hand?' Lief It
Wouderfui?"-Pittsburg Dispatch: •
. .
Laeemaking, 'like 'its sister - arts, has
passed through four stagesr of designs -
the Mediseval, geometrical, renaissance
and rococo, It attained its greatest' per-
fection toward the mid of the seventeenth,.
century. • . • • ;
. .
•
Solomon was the wisest Man. - Who
was . the-. wisest. Fenian? Sotam•ville •
Journal. • •.;
Important
A
To Housekeepers
We are now Belli tg our oelebratpd Family Ficeir (one-half •
Manitobr) put Up in atiy Biqa parcel,
_ •
AT $1,70 PER CWT.
Delivered to apy part of the town. We he,Ve other breads
for special.purpoiies at equally low•prices, Int for general use
we reoemmend FAIrt'd FArilILY FLOLTIc,
• All goods monufactured by us may be bad direct frem
the mill or from any of she following grocers : 1). Cook,
Cantelon Bros., 0: Cooper & Co., G. Stewart, H. Wiltse, 0.
Olson, or S.W. Irwin. Remember, every pound is Guaran-
teed and money refunded if not Satisfactory.
Fair's Breakfast Food,
- .
makes a pleasant summer morning meal: 15 15 easily digested
and cooling -just the proper thing for the warm weather.
3. eir N. Fair,
AuPluittott-Y-Y-IPPPI-V-Y-4014-164411~Pf
CLINTON
Do You
Need Building up.
New in the time your system needs a good tonic. Blood
gets eluggish and laden with impurities, appetite is not
good and you feel all played out, if you want to feel
strong try our
COMPOUND IRON PILLS •
They contain in a condensed form all the elements
neoeseary to produce naw nth blood and nerve amines.
Two 'or three boxes will produce a maevellous improye-
ment In health.and strength. 26e a box 6 for 51.
J. E. HONTEY
..-. Dispensing Chemist, Clintou
The Allover
Overall
In White $1.25
Black $1.75 Buggies
- -
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•
!teeieer, ,,,Lu JLLL.
AregetablePreparationforAs-
shafts king therood aticiReg Lingtiumsw4Bowe1or
owels
ratidAti
•
PromotesDigestion,Cheerrul-
- nessanclitest.contains neither
_pimual,Morptiine nor IYrinernl.
NAity OTIC.
S..
.aCOVe al* 0 lx DAM= PIM=
.Pumpkin .feed-
dflx.renner
Rada4S.Tfr- .
"false Sett e
Ira ige a:foet, .
Worn, Seed
•
Aperfect Remedy for Constipo-
lion., Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Worms g onvUlsions.Feverish-
;toss and Lo SS OF SLEEP.
Inc Simile Signature of
(46/.16k-4-4,
NEWYORK,
EE
THAT -THE
FAC -SIMILE
S1oNATURE
IS ON THE
WRAPPER
OP EVERY
BOTTLE OF
ef .
EXACT COPY att WRAPPER.
0."'"••••
Oastorials put up in one-sise bottles only. 14
is not sold,ia bulk. Dent allow anyone to sefl
you, anything else on the plea or promise that it
is "just as good" and "will answer evorfpur.'
p itt ohs oem. fna 0/ • terpee that' you get fl -A -B -T70 -9 -I -A.
. .
denature
. of
is os
, °
o ory
wappor.
...6.4sisissitumeavakuriduiti.1 .
*100064,040e... 0411000.0041.
learing Sale cJ
f .BicyclOs
Entire'stock for sale.ai reclueed.price. NE.111! •
. LY MTV riVIIEELS to choose from.
cApici OR iNSTALIVIEN
.. _
We sell the TUE SIIAIIPLES SEPARATOR,
. the kind that nevi fails to give. satisfaction
We have in stock .one AMERICAN SEPARA-
TOR, new, capacity 300 lbs 'per hour,' which
we will sell for;$50 .caili.
EMERSON'S: 'BIOME it MUSIC 'WISE, Ggderith i
wattefineeci 0.0900 46.6470.0041.411.,
.
a,r Su
ar Sugar
jUst to hand, second car Eadpath Extra gtandara granulated and Yellow
sugsr. We sell in bbl lots ens than wholeeals sell in 50 Mils. Special price in 100 pound,
lots and dollars.
TEA
131ack
TEA.
Green
TEA
Japan
We have best 25o tea in tenni, extra nice :fame tea 20e,. agents fcr Bani
Lai's, Appleton, Monsoon and Bine Ribbon 'teas in packages,
. Exquisite Dinner, Tea, Toilet, dass and Water Sete. We expect this
week two orates direct from the manufacturers in Staffordshire, England, bought before
the advance of 15 to 20%.We are selling, at old prices, you will gave 26% by buying
from us. Call and examine goods and prices before yea buy.
J. W. IRWIN. Clinton
Exeter Flour
• AT NO EXTRA COSI'
All kinds Of Small Field Seeds, as Timothy,. :ited, and
Alsike Clover's. treadquarrters, for Turnip, lgongold, Onto
'Seeds. Fresh Groceries and Canned Goods.
4. Our specialty le Teas. Try3ur 1.6o Tea. Other Variogies,einally as cheap.
likiheat market pi
rice paid n oath for. eggs.
The principal feature covers the
wearer entirely, comfortable to
work in, needs no suspenders, quick-
ly ladjusted.
tenths to have ten paaaenver coulee built This is no. Exriteliment
The T., LT, & P. Railway Company in-
fer the excursion business.
Protable boiler entyloyed at the Adams'
waggon works at Paris, Ont., blew up, but
fortunately no ono was injured.
Ohildren Ory for
• STORM
•
Farmers and workinv men gm-
,.
gaily pror ounceit ft decided succocw
"\AT. iiiii
We are selling Buggies for three of the:best earring
Companies in Canada.
. GREY AND SONS, CHATHAM,
BRANTFORD CARRIAGE CO.
• CANADA CARRIAGE CO„ BROCKVILLE
• and the well known • •
BAIN WAGGON.
We ar(4) ;ening twine made by the very best makers
reasorale prices.
Also agent, for the Alexander and %Hem Oro.
Sept,rator, and Massey Harris Bicycles. Samples .can be se
at the kihop, Isaac Street.
.
Cozt',0,& "..\cra. 1 em rad litiaphuent. Dealer,