HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1900-11-30, Page 3•
WOMEN WILL TALK.
on't Blame them for
ling each other about ]Dill-
burnt Heart and Nerve
,'i
` TOE ROOST REMEDY
`" R-WEAI( NERVOUS WOMEN.
•
It's only natural: that when a woman finde
e
remedywhich cures her of nervousness.
and weakness, relieves her painsand
aches 'tints• color in her cheek and vitalityin
iter zhole system, she should be anxious
to Writer suffering sisters know of it.
Mrs. Hannah I•Holtnes„ St. James Street,
St. John, N.$,,. relates her experience with
this remedy as follows :-" For some years
I have: been tronbted with fluttering of the
heart and ' dizziness, accompanied by a
!mothering feeling which prevented me
from resting. My appetite was poor and
I was•much run down and debilitated.
"-Since I' started using Milburn's Heart
and Nerve Pills, the smothering feeling
bas gone, my heart' beat is now regular,
t e uttering has disappearese and I have
been wonderfully built up threfegh the tonic
effect of the pills. I now feel stronger and
better' thao fop many years, and cannot
tray too much in praise of the remedy which
restored my long lost beagle"
THE DOMINIE..
Individual commenters • cups are com+
tug into use in Free churches In England,
Dr. George A. Gates, who recently re='
signed the presidency of Iowa college at
Grinnell, Ia., expecte to .engage in church
Work among -the misters of the far west
There is a church in Charing Cross
,road; London, which bas had strange
vicissitudes. Its' 'first 'occupants were
Greeks, under Charles II; then Hugue-
toots till 1822 afterward Calvin Poedo
Baptists till' 1849,` new Tlpiscopaltans.
Rabbi Henry Iliowizt' df the Adath
.Jeshurun congregation of Philadelphia,
twbo has decided'fo retire, is well known
ne the •anther of setreral books, among
Which are "Sol," a poem,' Herod, a
tragedy"
agedy in five acts,. Joseph," a drama',
"The Quest of Columbus, an epic poem '
In 12 cantos "Jewish Dreams and Reali-
ties," and "Saul," a Biblical tragedy.
HOUSEa-IOLD::HINTS.
To prevent whitewash from rubbing off
astir a quart of thick, hot flour starch into
every pelletal of the whitewash.
kin bee
cleaned y
Elastic stoc gs may n by
rubbing with thoiiouglijy.dried dour and'
then brushing theni witha soft brush.
When wishittgto paint'walls, first strip
off ail tbe'old paper and fill up holes with
plaster. Next size •tilewalls; rind when
dr apply a very . thin coat of paiet,
Men this is dry, apply two or three
more Coats pts required. '
Rise starch ; d in laundering fine
linens, cambrica' lawns,1s made from
• pulverized rice'~ is niixed like ordinary
starch, and Fr ch laundresses some-
times add a feta' drops of lavender 9r
/ - orris root to scent, the dainty articles .to
which they apply the starch.,
ANIMAL LIFE. _
Horses, giraffes and ostriches have
lafger eyes than WI other Creatures.
The golden eagle has great strength: It
ti fs and carries off with ease a weight of
pounds.
The lobster Is his own most deadly me-
nu. The young ones scorn' all other food
when they have a chance to eat :one'an-
ether.
The beaviest bird that Ales 'is the great
bustard. In size it exceeds the Norwe-
gian biackcock, The oldmales weigh
about 85 pounds, but when food is pieta
weigh 40
' tiful theyoungmales may g
y
pounds. Great bustards were formerly
as plentiful in western Europe aspar-
tridges.
arfridges. Now they are rarely found.
Sir Arthur Sullivan, the famous
composer, died suddenlyy, heart -failure
being the cause of death,.
THE 'WONDERFUL IEUICIINE
Is a Marvellous
Health Builder.
PAINE'S CELERY COM-
POUND
The Tried and Trusted Re-
Iinedy'in Thousands of •
Canadian Homes.
Cures are Speedy and
Permanent.
•
roes of Paine's Celery Compound soon
ggraze the important fact that tie great
aiding quickly regulates the bowels,
lepra the complexion and brightens eyes
hat before iiad a dull and jaundieod look.
nether proof of the stimulating and invig-
sting power of Paine's Celery Compound,
its immediate e'i:eeiJf on the pelee, whioh
• roes firm, regE�pIrn jint1 full instead of
bright and feeble,,
sines Celery Compound literally feeds
nerves, the tiaenes and brain with the
r elements of nutrition. and thus
countless linen 'and women from
iia neuralgia, rbetenetism, dyspepsNo
net end felling rental power,
y in the world is so riob in flesh -
g and ebergyproducing virtues as
s Celery Compotund, Mr C. B. ldol-
2 King St., lfamilton, Ont., rays :
g troubled with a tough, debility
erel deppression of spirits' 1 need a
ot.modieinef but received no bone-
them, t Was then advised to use
Celery Comdound. I ;procured the
tion end began to nee it With won.
nefit. 1 am now oenvinced, after
arai bottles of this unequalled
, that no other can oompare with
respect, is am now a changed
health is renewed, depression of
ai my appetite ib' good, and r can
ON MONEY IN MAINE,
THE OLD TiMSR8 STILL RECKON IN
YORK SHILLING?.
I reneh Canadlaus ruralist That Dole
Lara He Translated tato Fruits,.
Storekeeper" at Oltttown Obliged
%l
to Keep
Behlnd the Wey,
Oldtown eontalus a lunger transient 1.
population and u greater iversity of lan-
guage than any other city'in Maine. In
the autumn, when the choppers are going
to the woods,,and again in midsummer,
When the drives come out,. the little city ,
is filled with a babel ot tongues that is
not equaled .anywhere in "New' England
except in Fall River, Mass. These pee.,
Pie not only talk in strange language,
but they compute the pricpe of the goods
they buy In deaotninations.' that are un-
familiar. One evening a' French Cana-
dian walked into. a erowded grocery sem
after a rOund;'of salt pork.
'"You will to me sell 20 pounds le salt
pork," said he In his best English.
"Yes," replied • the trader. "Anything
else?"
"No. Bet Ise pork that alem bin want.
Row much?" '
"Eight cents a pound -$1,60 for the
lot,"
"One dollar sektyl Oui, ouit .' How
Much Neem , be? Ah'm no tcomprehen�
voila!" •
':Eight francs," replied tbe'grocer. •
"Eight •;francs-oui, Trainient! Ah'rn
pay hem, now," said the Frenchman.' He
took'a dollar in paper and a 50 cent piece
and. a 10 cent. piece. in silver from his
,pocketbook and gave them to the trader,
saying as he went out:
"Send heem pop,"
Later in the evening an old fernier
• who was'on his•way borne from Bangor
to Argyle put his head in at the open
door, saying:
""Let me have a pound of your a sbil-
ling tea."
"I'm sorry to say that I'm all out of 50
cent tea," replied the trader, "bet' I can.
sell you some that is a lot better for 62
Cents."
".All right," said the farmer.. "Wake it
`three . and ninepence: I guess I , can
stand it."
"'off the grocer lighted les As the evening grew late and trade fell
KIDNEY DISEASE
FOR .TEN YEARs.
The Mere ,01 *r larva.
One of the most popular uevels of the
day had a strange Watery which might
have been considered fatal to its.,success
had it been known In advance. - A. New
York author, whose books are always
sura of a certain degree of popularity,
finished an but the last few chapters ot a
novel. Try as be might, it was impossi-
ble for hint to complete the story satis-
factorily. So he put the book away, and
for two years it lay unfinished in his
desk, although the author thought of the
work from time to time without being
able to get any nearer a solution. of the,.
plFlot,
nall.y. he lost all hope of ever eom• •
eliding the work aid decided o end haat
a, point several chapters. in advance of
Oat at wbleb he bad cease to write.
With this abrupt .and uaexp ted ending
the novel went 4o a publieh , was ac-
cepted; and it turned out ons f tie moat
popular novels this author -hat ever writ-
ten. One of the most praised eatures. of
the book is .its unconventio al endings
which is said to be just explicit enough
to satisfy eveltwbody without going into
Inartistic detail. And the author was at
one time so discouraged, about the ending
of the book that he bad almo t given up
the idea of submit:t'ig it to an publisher.
M
ec
er,
0
H
f
n
i
h
s
y
flood Story of elaoat,lay..
The following excerpt from Margaret
Macaulay's little volume on her brother.
which was printed in 1864 'for private
circulation, shows Macaulay's catlike
ability always to fall on his feet; •
"One day TOM said jokingly that there
are some things which always inclined
him to believe in the predominance of
asbread
evil 3n the world. Such, be said,
always falling on the buttered side and
the thing yon -avant always being the last
you come to. 'Now, 1 will take up vol•
nine after volume of-this•Shakespeate to
look for "Hamlet." You will see that 1
hail come to it the: last of all.
"The first volume he took up opened on
'Hamlet.' Every one laughed.
"'What can be n stronger proof of
what I said?' cried he. Tor the first time
Ir my life I wished tint what I was look-
ing for would conie up last, and for the
first titne in my life . it has come up
erre:"
down upon' a stool back of liici'desk.
"It's .queer about these twos men," said
be. "To hear 'em talk you'd.think one
w as a native Frenchman and the other •
was a blooming Englishman; but they,
ain't' One was born in Quebec and .has.
lived • in Oldtown ' for more • than 20
years. The other is of Plymouth rock
stock and was born in the housewhere
he now .livesmore than 60 . years ago.
They are 'both:'bitixens and vote at every
election. They are fairly well educated,
too, but neither of them .eau talk United
States when he conies to counting money.
Both of them know all about our cur-
rency, so
ur•rency,'so you can't cheatthem for half a
cent, but when 'they have to patthe
names' of value into words they go away
backfor more than a century and talk
.the lingo, of' their forefathers. I humor
their whims anti 'get a good part of their
trade,: because if I talked' shillings and
pence to the firmer or 'francs and sous
to the itimberman they'd 'quit me right.
away. Both of them ;seem to think they
hold
a monopoly.ou the outlandish Pingo
and resent any •interference: -
'tWiat makes'the'business seem strange
to me is thatcongress fixed upon dollars
and cents as the •standards of value more
than 100 years. ago, and not over 500 new
Frenchmen havee,s,ameaaay t;,. Caa:•q;y,
since 4uebee- as captured by Wolfe's
troops' in 1759, and yet both men cling to
their old methods of talk as if it was the
latest thing out. I rather think their..
children and grandchildren will Wee the
/tame habit. What's bred in the bone Is
sure to come out in the flesh:
"The most troublesome' case I. ever
had, and I've lots of them on my han&
now, was an old fellow named Hail. ' He
was Yankee born and. Yankee bred.. but
he not only talked English 'looney, but
'Weeny thought English money dud caro
his: interest in'. pounds, .shillings and
pence. He was generally easy euough t"
get along with until' he came to the shil
lings. Then unless you explained and
specified ,in every item be wept as inad
as a hatter and refused to trade with
you until you told bim what be wanted to
know: He was terribly down on what he
called the 'York shilling.'
"You know when tho states .fixed the
exchange value of an English shilling
New York counted 8 shillings Man dollar.
while all of the New. England stater•
made 6 shillings equal to a dollar. bight
away after this the trouble began and
continued red hot for-, many years. A11
over New England a shilling was worth
16 2-3 cents, while its value in New York
was only 121 cents, or a nluepence in
New England .money. Years`` ago when
this old man Hall was skipper of a lime
ber schooner be had taken a cargo to
New York and sold it for so many sbIl•
liege, causing a loss of 25 per cent on the
cargo, which ate up the profits and left
the captain badly in debt. iasi never got
over it Whenever anybod"y"3aid York
Welling to him, he flew in a rage and fair.
ly frothed at the month. He had a
shock during one ot these fits and died
the next day.
"Until the time of the civil war," said
the grocer, "more than half of the people
hereabout talked and thought is Money
of the English denominations. A dollar
was generally called by its rigbt name,
but $1.25 was always seven and six, and
$1.50 was 9 shillings.
"In many cases, suth as three and nine-.
pence and seven and ninepence,• a cent
was split in two, requiring the use of a
half cent coin. Iii order to check the half
cent habit the mint stopped coining half
cents. But this practice went on the
same as ever, the purchaser. paid over the
money retaining the ball Cent in every.
transaction. For example, if your owed
me a ninepence, which wns equivalent to
121,x eents, you gave toes 12 cents, which
squared the bill, but if You didn't • have
the exact change and linseed me out It
quarter of a dollar, i hnndeg 12 cents
hack to you and kept 13 cents for myself
It was always a wise plan for man to
carry a lot of small rliauge in his puo c't
When he went out among the men tele,
, talked shillings and pence."
"When are the people going to get over
these foreign ways?" asked a bystander.
"Never, wholly. I think,'" was the de-
liberate answer. "It takes 'auger to rrnd-
lents n habit than it does to acquire it.
The English speaking race ' have talked
in pounds and sbillings tor Meme than
600 years. Some of us Americans will
continue to talk it until tate year 3000 or
longer."• -Boston Globe.
Octopus is largely eaten in the Isle of
Teteev.
SA TORiA
•'or /eau) idles obfi lr &
Ate,
A Glen Miller Man's Terrible
Trial'.
Ile Found a Cure at Last in
Doan's kidney Pi113. "
Mr, P. M. Burk, who is a ;well-known_
resident of Glen: Miller, Hastings Co.,
Ont., was afioted with kidney trouble for
ten years.
Soleased is he at having found in
Doan's Kidney Pills a euro for his ail-
inents, which he had begun to think' were
incurable, • that he wrote the following
statement of his ease so that others simi•
larly afilictedanayprofit byhis experience:
" I have been affiioted with kidney trouble
for about ten years and have tried several
remedies but • never received ' any real
benefit until I started taking Doan's
Sidney Pills. Myback used to constantly
ache and my urine was, high colored and.
milky looking at times'. Since I have
finished the third box bf Doan's Kidney
Pills I am happy to state that I am not
bothered with backache at all and my
urine is clear as erystal. I feel,confident
that these pills are the beat kidney specific
in-thh oountry."
vnirsese s:-nstomr.
A correspondent of the London Graphic
says that the friends ofthe dead in Chi-
nn beg permission to burn quaint paste-
board images of men and cattleshaped
in crinkled paper on'the spot where the
dead U. The ceremony is a mark of re-
spect and Is believed also to act as a sed-
ative on the departed spirits.. Another
curious custom in China is the deatrue-•`
tion at funerals of bogus bank notes bear-
ing a huge face value, which are a token
that the friends • of the dead are
over-
whelmed ver
wh med ith grief mad so forgetful of
worldly matters they lavish their sub-
stance
even to the verge of bankruptcy.
Thede bogus notes are specially manufac-
tured and Hold tor the financial effect
they • produce at a funeral. •
She Got It Free.
Enterprising Chemist-Sere'i a card,
madam. Every' time you buysomething
n
8
'hole
hi i 11 punch a
h value 11 I
tote a ng
in • It. When 10 shillings are punched,
you get a siphon of.soda watga"'free.
Madam -That's a fine idea. I'll take
10 shillings' worth of postage stamps
naw. -'-London Fun.
• irir McNeil, Conservative, has bean
declared elected, 'in North I3ruce, on a
recount, by 1 of a majority.
TIM GU ON NEW ItRA
EMULSION of Cod Liver
Oil i
There are others ; why
SCOTT'S ?
The good one is SCOTT'S.
It's nearly 3o years old; it is
used by intelligent people all
over the world; and approved
by physicians all over the
world.
When anyone says', "Emul-
sion , of Cod Liver Oil," he
means SCOTT'S. No other
is famous. • .
SCOTT'S'EMULSION
made in a' certain way; o�
certain thins ; it keeps; it is
always alike ; it does what it.
does. •
The others—nobody knows
what they are . or do. There
wouldn't be any others but for
the goodness of SCOTT'S --
there wouldn't'be' any counter-
feit money but for the true.
The genuine . has
thispictureon it, take
no other.. .
If you have not
• tried it, send for free .
sample, its agreeable
taste will surprise
you.
SCOTT &r BOWN1,
Chemists,
Toronto.
goc. and $r.00 ,• all druggists.
Waterworkson a scale adequate to
guarantee the whole of ladle from
drought not only exceed thepossibilities
of finance, but are beyond the reach-ot
-engineering skill.
The biggest workhouse in the world is
in Liverpool. It has accommodation for:
5,000 inmates.
FREE!
"For selling at 10 coats each only 2 doze
'beautiful Medallion ntetlt%o
llRora,sighiAetna ,,or
of
bis brillt.m t uniform and 'Medals In le dell.
IICyte tines on a gold ground: write n:cd wd
we nnttons, esti shwa, ratnm ,Honer. bud
, - we send poimotto d tbl, baadsome watch. it
.taw apous3.d nickel. seen accurate d meritan
numerate. and with eRO will last is Wire.
,:,tdkSiixF3,Y i 3lr,"Yrn s
17
"Toro�ate r
'D. K.. Erb, Liberal member for;fiouth
Perth, is declared elected,' on arecount,
bye a maj
10.ority of .9; his majority had
been
•
Itching !Hiles.-Dr.Agnew's Ointment
is proof against the torments of Itching
Piles. Thousands of testimonials of cures
effected bjr its use. No case too Cggr eat•
ing ortoo long standing for itto soothe,
comfort and euro. 11 cures in from 3 to d
nights. 33 cents. -95
Sold by Sydney Jackson, druggist, Clinton,
Easy to Adjust. '
"Mr. Scrooge," said the bookkeeper.
"this past week 1 did the junior clerk's .
Work as well as my own" Title being pay
day', I tbopght it only right to remind
'"Very good," *aid old Scrooge. "Let
me see, your salary is $12 and
thecleel
•„
,1
e` `Ties, air,' replied the ,bookkeeper
beaming ex:peetanti.
y
I "Then, working half the week for your
f self is$6, and the other halt for the clerk
4s $8, Xonr snlnry this week will is
$0.,,
R•I•PAN•S TAB=
Doctors End
A Good
rescraption
For mankind
WAIrT1:D r-.4 case of bad health • that R•t•p•A•N•u wilt
sot benefit. They banish pain and prolong life, One gives
teller, Note tl,e word R•i•P'A•N S CU the package And
Wept no substitute, it't'PA'N S le for unto, Inay
lair had at any tire"( store. Ten samples and one thousand
kstlrnoltixls w;l 1rr nutiktd tosnyeddreisfor five cent*
forwarded to the Ripens Cbemihal Co., No. to Spruce
Orme Ilea York.
1r,l.aar�tt.-r • r
Wbs Uer'lerms Were 11tob.
One of the women delegates at the
journalists' conference told an amusing
story Illustrating the ambition which
many persons :have to see their names in
print. She was engaging a servant; an
Irish girl, but found that her terms were
unusually high.
"How is it." she asked, "that you wan:
such high wages?" •
"Shure, ma'am," was the auswer, giv
en with a delightful brogue, "my. nave's
been in the papers,"
"In the papers! What do you mean?"
"Shure, I gave evident at an inquiet."...
Loudon Chronicle.
W1,Inanweil.
The Chicago divorcee was talking.abon'
her former busbands. -
"What was the matter with the first?'
asked bar friend.
"He didn't understand me.,'a
"And the st'coud?" ; ea.;
"Xte did."-
rA?jw3333 ?3ad>33ar?s-33
-415
m PYD ,B0Sam
OvlcK CtAig Folt
COUGHS AND,COLDS
Very valuable Remedy in all
affections of the
m THROAT or LUNGS
Large Bottles, 25e. ,
DAVIS & LAwIiENAE CO., Limited, •,
Prop's of Perry Davis' Pain -Filler.
MAKINo HASTE. •
"&on," . says the Snowdrop and smiles at the
motherly earth,'
"Soon -for the spring with her languors comes
stealthily on, •
,Snow was my cradle, and chilly windssang at
my- birth•
Winter is over; and I must ,hake haste to be
gone!,
"Scop," says the, Swallow and dips to the wind
ruffled stream,
"Grain is all garnered, the summer is over and
done;
Bleak to the eastward the icy battalions gleam;
Summer is over, and I must make' haste to be
gone!"
"Soon, ah,• too soon," says the Soul, with a des•
• perate gaze,
" Sootf-tor I rose like a star and for aye would •
have shown; •
See the pale shuddering dawn that must wither
m •
Leapsyfrom� the mountain -and .I must make
basso to be gonel'".
' -Arthur 0. Benson in Spectator.
•Kidney Search Lfgh'is.•-Have
.you backache? Do you feel drowsy? Do.
your limbs feel heavy? Have you pains in
the loins ? Have you dizziness •? Have you a
tired dragging feeling in the regions of the
kidneys ? Any and all of these indicate kid-
ney troubles. South American kidney Cure
is. a liquid kidney specific and works won-
derful cures in most complicated cases. -94
Soldby Sydney J'aokeon, druggist, Ciit on.
Helot With ' His Own Petard..
A London clerk on a holiday excursion
was spending an evening in a country
inn •full of company and, feeling secure
in • the possession of most money, made
the following offer:
"I will drop money into a hat with any
egg tlte-ac tib, the man who holds: out.
longest to have she ittltaia,and treat the
company."
"I'll farmer;
._ ..
do it,"" said one of the farmers
present. •
The swell dropPc'd In a halt sovereign.
The countryman followed with .a. six•
pence.
"Go on," snid the swell.
"I won't" said the farmer. •"Take the
whole aud treat the company."
.`What atife" Menne:
Somebody has expininall ,'tyre :sigpi i
educe "«e." It way
uet . 11
of_the editorial
have 'it variety of nitirnlu;k. For O'i'l 111
ills. When you read 'hat "die expect •eitt
wife home today" "We" refers to thN
editor; "We are n little .tater with out
work," It includes the whole ()Mee force,
even the devil 'and ihi' towel; in "we are
baring a boat:" the town is meant: "rt•"•
received over 100.1100 •omlerauts let..t
v.•tlr' embraces the nation, but "we have
• ,
hog cholera in our asides" tic sus that
the man who takes one paper and duce
not nay for it is Ili.
111. Faulty Figure of Speer'.
"Jimmy, " exclaimed . the first boy,
teacher jumped on you pretty quick.
Yanked you up and walloped you titre
lightttiu, didn't he?"
"bio," replied the other boy ruefully,
"riot ills lightnin. the,
bit too oftenin
the same place." Ei1etei' FIoi,ii
There is no policy like politeness, anti
a good manner is the best thing in the
world either to get a good nae or to: NOr
supply the want of it.-Bulwer, • AT EXTRA G4S P
People who hug delusions seldom oto. All kin 13 qf_ Small Field Seeds; ` as Timothy, Red and
b1Aca, Q>;po>tnnittes.-;Chicago a?emocrat. Alsikee Cilo l'erl.Ieadguarters for Turnip, l:ongolld, Oarro
Seeds, Fresh Groceries and Canned Goods.
Our specialty is Teaa. Try, aur 16o Tea. , Other:varieties equally:se cheap.
Ritbest'market price paid to cash for eggs.
November 30, 1900
What is.
IA
Castoria is for Infants and Children. OastoirIix is a
harmless substitute for Castor Oil, I'aregortC, . Drops
and. Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium,'
Morphine nor other Narcotic substance, It is Pleasant.
Tte guarantee is thirty 'years' . use by Millions of
Mothers. Castoria desboys Worms and allays k'everisb-
Hess. Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castor's:.'
relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and
Flatulency. ()Astoria • assimilates the food, regulates
the Stomach and Bowels of Infants and Children, giving
healthy and natural sleep. Castoria is the Children's
Panacea—The Mother's Friend. „
Castoria.
Castoria.
oCastorra is an excellent medicine for "Castor's Is so well adapted to children
children. Mothers have repeatedly te11d me that I recommend it as superior to any pre-
of its good effect upontheir children." scription known to use."
Da. G. C. Oscooa, Lowell, Mass.. H. A. Axessa ,111, D. Brooklyn, N.
a
THE h'AC-SiMILE •SIGNATURE OF
APPEARS �.ON EVERY WRAPPER.
iHt :6LNTAUR COMPANY 77 MURRAY aTKOCY. NCW YORK OITY.
.1 I, .rit yil i., sLd Ld tia^i�w : :,u L ,h!'
SEPARATING AND
SETTINU' M114K;'
The•value•ol the Cream Separator, is.
now So ;well understood that any argu-
ment for its nse would Appear 'super
finone. The following will, hosvever,•be
of interest, .
Ata trial made at the .Munster Dairy
Sehool.some time ago, the averages of
i.'3 experiments with a given quality of
milk were 100 lbs. of butter froth the
Separator,compared with 69 lbs of
batter from milk set in open pans for 24
' hours, 66 lbs .of butter when it was set
for 86 hours, 73 lbs of butter when
was set for 42hours, '.and 76 los when set•
for 54 hoots. It may be taken for grant-
ed th t the use of the Separator gives
25 per eat' more 3ream than any System
of skimn:iug.: 'If von are, a 'dairyman,
think over these facts.' Can you afford
i hioh there
bu 'rases w
odir s r
t0 on 8 n
is a waste of one quarter. Buy a •
Sharples Create deparator• and thus-
secpre all the profit that is that is to be
had in the dairy business.
CV.H.fY. maohine capacity 300 Ib*, $76r
No.1 machine on stand,oepacity825, 590.
Easy terms of payment. Write to -day.
L. OUim$tte
Londesboro.
r�� and Chinaware�
:
1 �•
fru fs Teas 5�
FOR',.Y•'„..
•CHRISTMAS ASD HOLIDAY TIM..
Rai. ins Seteo'ed Valencia, Sultana Deheea, Claviers and Imperial Csbene"e: ,Cera
anda.
stook', 'finest best
Hera t
l fulls resorted '>< ate, f ne Fiifetrr s and Plates cleaned. ' A .
e+ndlei Lem r,Ot anco and Citron Peels, Almond. Walnut and Filbert Nuts, Layer end
Cooking Ergs, Dates, Prunes, Oranges, Lemons, and barrels of Candies, all at. very low
est prictp. •
6Ibs of Figsc
for 25e 2 lbs. Cleaned Currants z
,
Best Raisins 10e, special price in box lots
Cranberries IOc a ,quart.
Headquarters for !lunars sad Teas; we have
the bask 260 Tea in town extra
good Japan 20o spound. Agents for Itam Lain, Appleton, Monsoon end Bioe' Ribbon
Tena. We are allowing largest and nicest line of Dinner, Tea and Toilet Sets, Pandy
Chime, Glassware and Lamps in town. Examine goods and prices before you buy.
J. W. IR TIN.' • Clutton
if
Flow Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple
Yablots Give instant Relief.
They're haedy to carry -take one after eat-
ing -or whenever you feel stomach distress
coming on.'--sullerers Have proved it the only
remedy. known that will give instant relief
and permanent cure= -nn long tedious treat-
ments with questionable results -best for
all sorts of rto� `ach troubles, gg cents -g6
Said by 8vdnbv Jackson, drnggiet,Olinton.
WELCOME VISITOlRS.
They Conte to me in dreams, betimes,
The dear otter gone before;
They sit beside mo at the hearth.
Go out and in my door,
They rarely epeek, but Sit about
In each accustomed place,
The While it gives ink fog to vie*
Each well remetnbeted face.
1 Waken with a sob of pain
That it is but a dre ,
And yet they're near all the oaf.
Bo reel does it seem.
They tendert me through all the hears
ret; of t
an
Of labor t red;
1 fel that I have touched the heal'
Of garment* of the bleat.
Deur drreltet* on the distant shote,
Come near me when you may;
Set memories or my happy dreams
]gals sweet the waking day.
With joys and griefs and laving tett
The years drove on apace
*hen droner shall be realities
. f • Mad edeetlegd face to lace.
rl., •••Mary A. Simpson in Michigan !armee'.
Children 'dry for
SAS IA•
•
Buggies
.We are selling Buggies for three df the; best Carriage
Conmpanies in Canada.
GRFT AND SONS, CHATHAM.
• BRANTFORD CARIUA GE CO.l
CANADA CARRIAGE CO., BRO KVILLE.
and the well known
BAIN WAGGON.
We are selling twine made by the very beet "makers at
reasonable prices.
Also agent for the Alexander and Mallotte Cream
S'eperator, and Caatiey Harris Bicycles. Samples can be seen
at the slop, Isaac Street,
Geo La s,
General Im»hement"°beaIer, Clinton
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