The Clinton New Era, 1901-06-14, Page 8es.
• s
r
June 14tb 190
TUE CLINTON NEW ERA.
LIILPIER�
GIILDEM MEDICAL
DISCOVERY
Ve been thittiting of writing to
you for Pottle titnet" Writes Mrs. W. D.
401000; of ItfaXteee, Robeson Co., N. Ce
"toletyeelletnew What a wonderful thing
Inereeht Golden Medical Discovery
One for ttly little boy. He was taken
With indigestion when he was a year
and a half old, and he was under the
t octOrei treattnent for five long years,
We Spent ell we Made for doctor's bills,
alef it did no good. He could not eat
anything only a little milk and cracker,
, ande•eotnetimes even this would make
bini.ick, and he got very weak; could
not it up all day, and r gave up all hope
Of his ever .getting any better. 1,001:Ing
over one of your books I noticed Di.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery me-
- 00•042ended for indigestion. We bought
• , see= and gave to our boy. Two bottles
of Dr. Fierceis Golden Medical Discos).-
ery eared ttim. He is well'as can be,
and can eat anything that he wants and
it clops not hurt him. He has not been
Ock a*" day since, and it has been three
years since he took your medicine. 1
pray that God will always bless you and
. your suedicine.n
IF YOU: COULD KNOW.
If you could know that half of all I yearn to be
to you, dear heart!
Caalr day that dawns I struggle to be strong and
do my part,
Yet when at last the night comes softly down I
humbly pray;
"Lord, grant me atill to prove my t,nder love
just one more dayl"
Just one more day to strive to rise above small
traublEs; petty care,
:That my cramped soul may break its earth forged
bonds, at last to dare
l`p face the future and to gladly live with courage
*new,
Lent -and cheerful facing toward the light for -
truth and you.
Axel yet / feel in spite of all the heights which
/ can never scale,
..bLeptte of all the many tests in which I daily
%. hat
That my deerflove, more deep and pure and strong
,than I can ever show,
You somehow, through my failures, doubts and
fears, will come to know.
The dreary clottde can't hide the sun for aye; it
' glimmers through.
e sweet, wet violet, struggling through dead
leaves, still shows its blue,
And o F trust, though oft I strike love's chord
•. with clumsy hand,
saisien feel the melody I tried to play and under-
' stand.
4,1
CASSOWARIES IN A FIGHT.
r"b
, 7 es Are the Only fllr,l�, Excepting
:-Ontriehen, That Can Kick.
thhtigli
the cassowary in captivity
has the reputation of being extremely
trectable and docile, he is terrible when
aroused.
'notable peculiarity of this bird is
filet if any particular object attracts his
Attention he will perform a sort of war
.;•
dance over it. This happened at the zoo
.•; wken one of the cassowaries, which are
cenfined in cages near the main entrance,
`slighted' upon a gaudy pie& of ribbon
blown inside the bars from the hat or
drage of some woman visitor.
Fe was one of the smallest of the cot -
lection, but he was of a martial disposi-
- thin. Alter having carefully examined
he ribbon he started his war dance and
kept it up with great vigor for some min-
otes. Just while he was at the keight
91Skis enjoyment a larger cassoway came
inaiteidinterfered with him.
Ile stood this for some time, but when
411*-leteseer
Jird attempted to oust him
frant• the spot in order that he in turn
ll3ight'prance about the ribbon he re-
Bented the intrusion in no uncertain. style.
Iielsing out vigorously on all sides,
e tanbag his neck, snapping his beak,
;almagatirig Ids body and bitting imaginary
blows with the horny mass which casso-
Wailes carry on the tops a their heads
and' which is called the helmet, he seem -
Ad( to bid defiance to all comers.
:The larger cassowery,- thinking ap-
atently that he could treat the demon -
atlas of the lightweight with con-
espts commenced hustling the latter.
1-40dtit 'twit" were ill matched as regards
sseight one ofssbem beiag about five -feet
• it gia and the _other a foot or more shorter,
tit this battle which ensued showtd that
eight and height will not always tell.
t' •Fativatel Was were the main feature
the fight. The cassowary, it is be-
peteeds is the only bird, except perhaps
Allentitrieli, which uses this method of at-
tack Mid -defense, and the way a anise -
'Via resat kick would warm the heart oe
French boxer. He can kick straight
Atit like a Marqs or he can do the high
klek like sa Maeda hall Star.
,...kt'llteCtlie Mows were delivered chief -
lit On. gsti' break dna didn't htirt much,
but eventually the small bird knocked the
other otiettit with a masterly stroke de-
livered by the long sharp claw of the hi-
ller tee Mt the wattles of its antagonist.
NesSitatil 10117 was done, but the
*beak fast Kine been terrific, for the big
Idd 'tittered 'a 'peculiar gry and retired in
oisfusiort to It collier, while the vietos
t, &WI one testinied its War clanee. It also
had been severely punished, and On
meld alined imagine it saying to itself,
like. /dr, rfeniey:
Ititteith the bludgeoninga of !ate •
MY held is.bloody, but nabs/ed.
-London Expresti.
iiiive.a,14 in, wit.
Wit hes often 'tweed an offender from
nielenlent in military as well as in civil
e-• etie
OP lenteettee it noncommissioned
•.entering• a barrack gate in Dublin
Waft mistaken by the "fresh one" on 'tea-
ty vtho,ltinMediately "came to the shoul-
der.'.
Th. *MOM., unaware that his colonel
Wer Atte 'behind, returned the .ottlute,
thing, net permissible • the drew*
State** Arrived at his quarters, he
giortur reeettea, on e to tuna before' I
the. 001,0114
OnPreseitting f was asked
*.he came le urn.the Sainte, know-
full
Wen that be Walla entitled to
* •
Not in the Tenet erdintefttotted, her I
mann), ottoverea
"Sir, at ultra)/ return .titebthtugr ant
entitled to,"'
"Moir *it pleased the eolonel, Whk$
blngly ,atted hitneQuteltdOn. Spirt
' „ I
• FAIRLY AT
rereltertera Ia. flexile° 'Who Kee*
174411" the Pruir An the Thee* THE ANOINT ORIGIN OF THE STEEL
1 EARLY RAILROADING SO-OALLSO
STRAWONENT COMPOUNDS
aTtiftcluoutityofqublue taken by for.
.11001111110
itiAbStit ele the Boutheast Cettet. Mettle° • • TRAM OF TODAY, i ANE
is something simply incredible,' said a• MORE ON WS THAN
reidilent of tine, city Who Is interested
COMO° 0400 in the sister republie.
"There la a Pagel itellot among the
konerleana and English all through that
region that the drug is necessary for the
preservation of life, and they keep full of
tt from one Year's end te another. he
first time I.vialted the Pest I stopped at
Prontera, the first pett OA of Vera
Cruz, and as ffeeit as our ship tied up. It
was boarded by a tail sa1lw man, who
tinned out ta be an Attlerican engineer,
in charge of a big sugar plant up the
country. He made 4 bee hue for the purs-
er. 'Hello, Billy,' he said; 'did you
bring that quinine?' 'Sure,' replied the
purser, and diving into hie cabin he Callle
out with an armful of tin boxes about the
size of tea canisters and jitintailed green.
Each of them held a pound oe quinine. '
never saw it put up that way before, and
naturally I was surprised.
"I soon scraped an acquaiutance with
the engineer and made bold to Inquire
what in the world he wanted with such' a
supply. 'Are you getting it on a specula-
tion?' I asked, with a vague ilea that it
might be intended for some Mexican
army,. contractor. He laughed heartily.
'Speculation nothing,' said he. 'Tins all
goes to our little colony of A.mericans
back in the interior, and it won't last
very long, either.' With that he drew a
penknife from his pocket, opened a blade
that hate been ground off round, like a
'spatuta, and thrust it into one ot dee
cans. He brought out a.. fiakY, White
mass -enough to heap a teaspoon -put it
on his tongue and swallowed it like so
much sugar. 'Have you any ilea how
many grains you are taking?' I asked in
amazement. 'Only approximately,' he re-
plied carelessly'. 'A man, quits weighing
quinine after he has been down here a
few months.'
"That was my first encounter with a
bona fide quinine eater," the coffee plant-
er went on, "but I met plenty of them
afterward. They generally keep the stuff
in rubber tobacco. pouches to protect it
from perspiration, and when they feel
like taking a dose they dig in with one
of those spatulated knives that they all
carry and swallow as much as they see
fit. As they go entirely by guess, it is gthes of Watt and Evans. •
hard to say how much will be taken in As earry as 1804 Evans' engine moved
the course of a day, but I have weighed a scow through the streets of Philadel-
phia, and the inventor predicted at that
time, although canals were then Popular,
that „the _pet geberatipp would want
tramways operateil •by horses and the
«Tom ellemoleh the hard American
Engine Built For Romani* on
Rath. -.An Runt/element by Peter
Cooper Which 'leurlited Out Well.
Railways made of massive stone bloelea
laid parallel and eissoothed on the surface
for the use of wheels arkalatost as old as
Wheeled velaclea themselves. From that
ancient Origin were evolved the teel
tracks of today. A careful earch would
probably reveal the remelus of stone
tramways in various lands, beginning
with the erude ones of ancient Egept and
centinuing in an improving line down to
those of modern enterprise. I have exam.
ined Ways of the early kind in Italian
vides,.and the native engineers said tlrat
they have been Used from time iramemo,
vial, In various parts of Germany they
were used in connection with Coal mines,
and from them the idea and the name
"tram", were call:led to England In the
seventeenth century. The wretched toads
of England, due to the rnolst climate,
made the tramways a great convenience
to the owners of the coal mines.
Soon the scientifie societies got to dis-
cussing' the details of tramway construe- infantum a,nd all Summer Com-
. .
America learned that the prevailing want P e• Safe, Reliable, Harm,.
of roads might le remedied by the con- less Effectual.
struetion of cheap transwaYs. Early in
the last century ahey were introduced in
the coal mines of Pennsylvania, and the
parties who built Bunker Hifl mouumeut
carried stons from Quiney quarries to IDIS
tide water by means of case of these reads.
That was In 1.827.
Two decades before various canals had
been constructed, but expertence had ful- EQUAL.
ly revealed the shortcoming's and linen-
venierice of canals. Even before the nine- •
teenth ceiltury began a number of men
had advo'cated the use of steam engines
to haul freight and paesengers, but these
nem were regarded as visionaries.
The .steam engine in its crudest form
was invented by Newcomen meet an
emergeney. Valuable mines were fulling
into ruioe because animal power could
no longer pump out the water.. This suc-
cess opened 'the way for the irapreved en-
RANK IMITATIONS.
THE 01E111111111E IS
FOWLE.,ifs
• EXT -OF
e WILD
aTRAWBERR?
(Put up in riles) wrong?)
CUBES
Diarrhtea,, Dysentery,
Cramps, Pains in the Stomach,
Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Cholera
tione and by that meatie the PeoPle of •
NO
the amount that can be lifted on the
ordinary knife blade ana found it to
range- between 26 and 5 -grains. - YAtt
set, quinine is as compressible as cotton,
and two wads of it that look about the sueeeeding- generlitiza would favor rail -
same size will vary a hundred per cent in 'WM *irked by eteira locomativea. •Hes
weight.
1133
N3
EQUAL.
_said sae aime waesunt fay slistantsszheis
"One would suppose, as a matter of passengers in steam carriages would
course, that such enormous quantities -01 leave Washington In the morning, brea-
the drug would produce an intolerable fast at Baltimore, dine at Philadelphia
ringing in the head; but, strange to say, and sup in .New York, 260 miles distant.
they do nothing of the kind. The aver- Evans did not live to see his prediction.
age white man down there who keeps un- fulfilled, but he prepared the way for the
def the influence all the time experiences
nothing except a slight feeling of ex -
steam locomotive. , •
William Hedley made the first practical
use of the. eteam engine for aransportn-
Fort Massey congregation, Halifax,
Nova Scotia, have tendered a unanim-
ous 'cell to Rev, J. W. McMillan, of
Li ncletty, offering a salary of $2,500, hut
it is net vet known whether he will ac-
cept. Mr McMillan was assistant pas-
tel' of the Seaforth Pi•esbyterirn church
a few years' ago.
GA.S ON THE STOMACH,
Results of imperfect digestion -pressing
up againest the heart it exoites Alarming
ezympterzes_ 4844 relief is afforded by
the use of Nervillife in a littleesweetened
water, half an hour after the meal. Nervil.
the -Aide digestion, expels the gas and im-
parte a senseolsioniforts Nervilthe is -goad
for a lot of other things beside. Keep it in
the house for rheumatism, orampe, smug.
algia, toothache. Druggists Bell it,
The Jane Magazine Number of •The
•
Outlook, Which is its Anntial Recreat-
lem.Nutieber. contains an article of ex-
treme value. by .Philip W. Ayres, on
"The Forester and His Work." Mr
lularation-at least so I was assured by Ayres tells of the •life of the forest, ite
tion purposes in England in 1813 by importance to mankind, and of thP •
dozens. of habitues. Whether the use of
Lauding coal from a inine to the shipping tracts of forest bind that already havo.
the stuff is of any real benefit is some -
point. George Stephepsoe saiv this en- been reserved; anti it is hoped. will be
thing I am skeptical about I never took
a grain of it myself. and I was the only gine and succeeded in making. linitations reseryed,by the Government. The ar' -
man on our plantation who didn't have 4 of etenish attracted Public tiftentien. tele illtenrated by photograpbe.tit
ant time fin;i•C: °Witted Vial* it *Too.11and hurl forests of ttin..,
eee• e , .„ ,,ele. ejt.,,....s, .... . succeesful tramways In P.I ngland. to 1825 West •and ' Sonth. ( 3 a year. Tee
touch ef fever." , .
a company Zuni ti eallrohd 25 miles long Ontlook Comp:lir, 287 Fourth A.ienite
HORSES NOT AS HARDY AS MEN. Irone Stockton to Derlington, in •the berth New York) • • • • .
pt flr:daird, for the purposti.of transport- ' • • s• , ..
During War These Antomilit Succumb ins-, coal, • The scheme i 1 n . • Every Hollis NeeaH. a remedy drat is
.was V o e tly on'^
to Hunger and Patigue. . posed. 'The Duke of ' Cleveland alleged. sdepted for use in ease oi bueden accident
There have been many instances in that the Tafiroad would disturb one of.hie irr•ess. l'-'36.(11 a ca6 48 "in -Killer'
e voia sitbsticetes, tbuee'e but, one Fein -
which fights have been lost or won ac- ' for courses, Tee, work was done under
I: 1 r. P.r,y Les,.1.!'. 25o. and_.500. ..
cording to the number and condition of the sepervieioe . pf- George 'Stephenina., •
the horses engaged. When the siege of -Who used loconiotives. • . . . • ..eli-e tlet.der. (..n, i 1 Montrea,l, '* ho'
Plevna commenced, the Russians were An impression prevails tbat railroads e q ,. en in t h L. At. ' 1 she parstaiiese
bringing all their stores and feed from and their operating machinery were eop- tit tee .eear lug per binthtr, Rev. J.
Sistova by the aid of 66,000 draft horses, led by pioneer American engineere from eiel.d; sse •, qr 5 ,11., add whn ie n...w.
and at the end of the siege it - was found British models. These engineere mei bar,* Pei fie inl,ie a ," i i. a I '14Y e r' tit"'
- V. 31 1 t f
- h q ilne wah • elecLed 1, • •
MILLIONS OF SMITHS.
Thla Wonderrni FarnilIr Pesketeletowl
lavery taradle of Itottletee
Three tholunned years ago the Minder
Were Under the dominion of the Philire
One*. Then arose Perhaps the strangest
hardship eveimposed upon * object na-
tIon be a conquering one. The Scrieturee
thennelveo tell the otorrin these graphic
wen's:
"Now there Was no Smith found
throughout all the land et Israel, for the
Philistiners said, Leer the Hebrews make
them swords or spears ; but all the Israel-
ite* went down to the Philletines to
sharpen every Man WS coulter, and his
ax, and ids mattox."
Thua the Hebrews were obliged to tray.
el from 100 to 200 relies to find a eueitn,
a hardship that i* quite inconceivable to.
day, when the country awarres with
them. If there had, never been any tirr
tisan ensithe.there could be no Ournanee
Smith today. And what would it mean
to us if there were 110 longer Smitha (by
name) in our land? It would mean Va-
cancies in the professors' chairs and upon
the indielal bench; It would thin the
ranks of the lawyers, ministers and doe -
tors, of the merchants, brokers and man-
ufaeturers'and of the railroad, coramer,
cial and financia) magnates; It would
diminish the number sif ,scholats, reform-
ers and philoaophers 'and deplete the
ranks of Inhere, soldiers, farmer, the-
chanics aud all the rest. of the great la-
boring world; the troupe, beggars 411d
Jailbirds Would be less often. met, with,
and cranks, politicians, drunkards ,esid •
criminals fewer in ellgaber. In fact, not
a rank or gradation ot our whole sodial
system but would be affected, Some
genius of eomputation has figured out
that if all the males of earth were en.
•rolled there would be tur'ermy of 7,000,-
000 Smiths among them. Allowing the
feminine Smiths to be as numerous, the
world has 14,000,000 living Smiths.
Whether the numbet be as prodigious as
this or not there is no question that it
-runs into the millions. A family so ne-
merous *and , so' universally Infiltered
through every caste and elassseomma.nds
at least the respect due recognized mag-
nitude and Aggregated power. •
Literally emith means e., one
who. smites or hammers. And in old
days Virhen every bit of metal, copper,
Iron, silver, gold or brass had to be
•pounded and • Imminered by mighty
.etrokes into armer, tools, plate, utensils
and implements; there was need of
many smithers. These smithere, ot
smiths, Were not men of brawn ideate;
they had to •peeeess the ready brain and.
skill to shatpen alike an implement, ret
pair an armor pr shoe a horse. ' ThenA
was auhonest and juerative trade, and
exert road, street and hamlet had its
s maths. Not only were- there * many
smiths, but different branches of smith-
ery abouneed,and thus numerous come
pounds and derivations of Smith...time
into existence. Amongthese are Smith:,
er, Smithkins, elinithson, Arrtismi•th,
Ar-
rowsmith, Goldsmith, Silversmiths Cop
persmith, Steelsmith, Locksmith; Ham-
mersreith, 'Hocksmith, frockersmith,
Drakesmitb, Forcesmith, Baketsmith,
r Wildsmith, Wizitersmith, Hoffsmith,
femitham, Bowersinith, Worksmith,.
Watchstnith, Rleinsmith and Steithdeal.
-
Strangest of ell these perhaps is Few -
smith. Sometiines, to distinguish several .
Smiths in one street or hamlet, a eerie-
r, tem name was incorporated withthe
usual nap*, Thus - came ihto usage
Smithpeer, Hillsmith, Helensmith and
Aarousznith.'
•
. Incidentalla it may be nientioned that •
• other languages have their' Smiths,- Ger-
Mad haee numberless Schmitz • and
• Schmidtz, the Fiench have Le •Festres,
the Spaniards . Gunsultes, the Rupiah
Sreithtowskies and tbe•Irish haye (Istvan,
and Gowan, 'each. meaning Smith, and
'151cGavan • and MeGewan, meaning the
L pion of a emith. •
that no less than 22;000 of them' had copied the plans of making tranewaye; eul hoe • " ' •
Queer 'Preen at ISIngnro•
Persons visiting Niagara falls in sum-
mer often have their attention attracted
to the queer shapes taken on by the
treeswhah grow immediately around the
great cataract. • A trio of sturdy old
trunks which must be evert bit of 50
died from hard work and exhaustion. but the' rolling stock used was the pre I-jr, "
The want of rest and food tells on a uct of native ingennitY and alwaye bore I I" 1' 44" i !h44. sl i astel cc ti
horse far more than on a Dian, for In the stamp of the °Heine] American de- • '••-r-451410 IkYinP WI- erio,r, ,,Irit v g'1'..1,1,1,"-,
the case of the latter there are stimulat- signer...Theron good rensoni fee. believing I Ie. •• . 1-' di i • t r t) e ' i '' "
victory and other feelings which are not heve resounded through our valleys quite ; ""-Itmd" 1Y to int ao elected it, Oai..id ..
Years. and is
Ing influences of patriotism, the glory of that the American express train would hPeecher f"r ' Ili'
existent in the nature of a horse. Quite ' h .1 on
• 1 Snould ti • . y ag wi ereeet ae ten i , ti
half the horses in England sent to the e.
'
Crimea never returned, most of them
having died from hard work and starva-
tion. Indeed, only about 500 were killed
in -action.
So reduced and starved have the poor
beast.; become on oceasions of this kind
that they have been known to eat one an-
other's tails and to gnaw the' vrheels of
ett
•
the gun carriages. Napoleon took
with
him across the Nieman 60,000 cavalry
horses, and on his return in six mouths
he could only muster 16,000. More than
half the horses which vrere engaged in
our Egyptian War of 1882 were disabled.
Six hundred of these were killed and
only three-fifths slain in action. In the
Afghan weir of 1838 it is said that 3,000
camels and half the horses engaged were
lost in three months.
It will thus be seen that actual fighting
does not claim so many horses as starve-.
tion or overwork. Defective shoeing,
more backs, want of food and rest and
other similar causes go far toward ren-
dering horses useless for praotical war-
fare. One more and impatient cause
needs careful attention, and it is the
danger of injury horses run wheis being
shipped across the sea. They are in eon.
stant motion. They continually fall,
many of them to be trampled ,to death,
and the rest become ,frighten'ed, klek end
batter one another about and are render-
ed useless. As an instance of this, It
was foiled that one regiment on tbe Amy
to the Peninsular wet Was deprived of
just half of its horses on the voyage, -
London Golden Penny. •
Miller's Worm Powders fcr sallow akin
old or young. Sold by F. B. Combe and
R. P. Reekie.
..0••••
s,
NINE BOIL
puted inventor of the steam engine, 11 ancl Coofeteue.. zehere will he seine r,
•• itlaisiifestt•d Its the twitter of her1.
gStephenson, suvent
et, ite such
her pie v dege has.it
Jog the Jeeemotive never lived er never
be,
built Y
an enginq, et been .1.110 weee &wool in in ony.Cai
1830 theteswere-about 2000,Miles •of. dein twee ,con Ze.
railroad projected. in Areerlea, and con- ; To be street', yoa. eerie fleets* good app..
erection had commenced in a greet ninny thee good. digestion, • wee, subd aresim-.1),
places. The most ambitioue p elect et ton. Muter'. °impound Iron Pille b;
the kind,' was the- Baltimore Oltie
railroad, -begun in 1828. to crone- iraile
between that city and the west and south.
The foundation stone was. laid by-, the
venerable Charles. Carroll of Carrollton,
the last teirviving signer of the Declara-
tion cif Independeece. 'thirteen miles of
the road were open for traffic May 20,
1830. At that time there was no senti-
ment in the United States -in. favor iof
anything stronger than horsepower for
operating railroads. Although there were
locomotive% 'operating various tramways
In Great 'Britain andthe Stockton and
Darlingten railway bad ' locomotives
hauling tong trains, the fame of that
kind -of motive power spread very slowly..
Although a locomotive pulling the 'first
train run on the Stockton and Darlington
rallwly had made a speed of 15 miles an
hciur, the general public in England, sev-
eral years later, regarded men as de-
mented when they talked of. hauling'
trains et a epeed of ten miles an hour.
One man in Baltimore was opposed to
the use oialliMilla for railroad Motive
power. ' This was Peter Cooper, the
philanthropist, who afterward ,gave New
Iraqi One Of the incest Valuable education.
al Institutions in the world -Cooper Un-
Ete had a small locomotive built at
hitt own expense, a tiny apparatus with
an upright boiler and a single cylinder
8Y4 by 14 inches in size, the whole thing
weighing less thane ton. • Various tests
- of the engine' were made, and- after a
ati Ouse. owe' by H. B Combe an .
t tste,
The oft teals of the Wu tkerville Mai ti'
Company contemplate establishing 1*
factory' e e 0.1 tawa.
teompourd Iron Pills, only t5
cents for go, Sold by EL. Bt Cease.
and R, P, Keeate.
After a, lingering ill nets of nem ly-
t wo yea) e, Rey, Oebn Si ',midiiform. t -
ly p58101 ut KuuX t:fittet•tt, plry,p40.-
ea away on Thili f eek, The
deceased *lee Lath( in , 1608?
Miller's Worm 'Powders make the child -
red healthy,sold by H. B. 17.30M130 and B.
P. Rohn.. .
'• few changes had been effected by • rae...
ebonies the machine worked satisfac-
torily. It pulled five times its own
weight at a speed of ten miles an hour.
'Thig was the (list lodoinetIve built in
America for running on yells.
Cooper's engine wanner from being an
apparatus of Imposing appearanee, for it
resembled a hand eat .with a entail Yee-
.
FOUR RUNNING SORES tidal boiler. It took experience to prove
• the fittest Our pioneer railroad Inas-
that fora locomotive the horizontal form
ter mechanics strove to make the engine
as simple' as they could and to arrange
' the weight Be that the least possible
stress should be put upon the light rails
atid weak bridges. The oame,principleo
et chnetrection dominate them today, and
the modern freight engine, 100 times the
Weight of the Tom 'rhumb s in propor-
tionately as easily carried' by the modern
• track and steel bridgeom•Success.
•
The sultan possesscarne crown, iron*
tien being unknownin Titrkelif
The T. Milbdrn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont.
Some time ago my blood got out of
order and eine taiga boils appesieed on
my neck, besides numerous small ones *ti
my shbulders and amts. Four running
sores appeared on my foot and leg mid I
was in a tetrible state. A. friend adalsed
Ilutticicktilooil Bitters, ap twocured three
boteles. After finishing the firpt bottle the
boils started to disappear and the street°
heal up. After taking the third bottle
theta Wee not a boll or sore to be seen.
Betides thie, the beaslachee from which I
suffered left me.and 1 improved to much
thin 1 atil 110* Arcing and robust again.
Your, truly, •
MOO ViAnnta WORTIONOtOta, remedy, ao not Ink fortttnern'o, it egto
5,000
Reward!
IF NOT TRUES
PUTNAM'S PADILESS CORN AND
WAPT VITHAOTOle
Cloutaine 110 aelfis or other injurioue
cbenticel compounds; is neither eittiotioelore
rosive or irritating, hnt:sootbes and eases
,from the first applieettlen and Mita qniekly,
It 3011 IVOR an irritaiin and flesh tutting
Feb, era Oafs Golipth Om, trait Vie Other
'
An advertisement may in-
duce a person to try an
article a FIRST time.
But an advertisement Won't
induce a person to use
that article a SEpOND
time unless it gives settle,
faction.
years old. and yet are graced with a tuft
of foliage which seems to belong to a sap.
Iling of a few summers, stand near the
, American falls. •
A visit ' to the falls In winter wilt ex-
plein the rellS013 forthe. grotesque ap-
pearance of the -trees. The mist thrown
up by the falling Wtiter settles on e
. _
trees in such quantities that they often
assume the appearance of icebergs strode
ed high and dry on the banks As the.
weight of the ice increases the weaker
boughs break away under the burden,
and after a very cold season the tree.
emerges from its plating of ice shorn' en«
eitoely of its branches. The trunk alone.
stands, and when. touched by spring's
, warm breath it shoots out into a very
close and compact bunch et leaves, which
looks ridiculous on the top (V such a
heavy piece of tiniber.
m-Wfaheetentel-INFAufeenefatetteeeettleAtnefaigie
Keep You Head Five
Frwn Dandruff
with Quinine Heir Tonic. It cleans the tioalp and keep It glean one
aurae dandruff. Bet exoellent tonic, ineretweee the growth, pre-
vente the hair from omitting out, makes the hair soft and brilliant,
nicely perfumed and not atiokyt
Lane 0 bott1075c.
J. E. IIOVEY, Dispensing Chemist, Clinton.
oroc**********************4
Fancy furniture
AT LOW. PRICES
New Styles In parlor suites, Oreat variety of easy chairs klattressea and
Wire Springs yery cheap. Great values in Window Shades. Headquarters fOr
Baby Carriages and Waggons. Fictiates framed while you wait.
Of CIE-13011-0LIEW,
A tooth brush \NU every 25c bottle of tOoli
powder, tooth soap or tooth. wash we sell.
Use COmIm's Baking Polder and you will be
using, the best obtainable. 25c per pound.
H. B OOMEIE, Chemist tt Druggist
FOR ma, SPRAINS, WOUNDS, BRUI-
SES 013 ANY sou OF PAIN.
USIA • Internally, and Externally.
' enunoN Ayoid the weak watery Witch
Hazel preparations:represented to be 'the
samensm-Pontrs-ExtraerFwIlich•ensiirseur-
and often contain "wood alcohol" an Irritant
externally and, taken internally,'a poison.
. zooming Papa.
"Here Is a story o'f a little girl', the
datiehter of a local physician of credit
and renown," says the Cleveland Flaiti
Dealer. "She is a bright child of 6 and
has been much petted by her admiring
friends. Perhaps this has spoiled her a'
little, but she is so sweet and entertain-,
▪ Ing that visitors can't keep their hands
off her.
"One of these visitors, a new neighbor,
' made a call on the little maid's mother,
and it wasn't but a, few moments before
the little maid was on her lap. .
"In the dilater which followed the
woman made some allusion to the little
one's grandmother.
" 'Why, didn't you know?" cried the
• child.
--
"'Know what, dear?' said the visitor.
"Why,' answered the child, 'grandma
Is dead, and grandpa Is dead, and Aunt
Jane is dead, tind most all of papa's pa-
tients are dead tool', "
Surtlight
Soap
,
hen a (tetheferger the;
• combined sales of any
other thee* Soaps.
An advertisement may In-
duce people to try SUN.
titling' SOAP once.
.Bat it is quality and qualm
Ity glom* that make,
people use' SUNLIGHT,
SOAP contittuouslY and
always.
LEVER OlitITtlielee Itteeirritte,
Stem Manufacturers,
TORONTO,
• McTaggart
DANNER. .
ALBERT.. ST.,.. CLINTON
Goneiaj. Banking BUSIness
Vansacted.
NoTni3 DISCOU eITED ,
Drafts issuee. Interest. alliewei ' on
deposits,
'l'� Etil OLsONS itANK
reeerporated by Act of Par1iiimente1$85:
t.:A.PirAL - $500,000 •
REST FUND: - 32;0, 000
HEAD OFFWE, MONTREAL.
Wee Mueson Meceiteincet, Peeeident
Jess ELOATT, Gen. alanag
notes diseourtted, collection Made, 1 -efts
ineil pterlin t and American eeelsesige
troushi anti ecild. letereste Know on
t saes ins Seen% Boa e-Intereets elbowed
on stunt; of $1 and up; Monsy adeaticed to
farmers on their own note, with one or
there endorsers, No mortgage required.
H. C. BRB WEB,Menager, Clinton.
•
Zlistalksati104
u4Vi.
4owetri Sttor.
ianos.
Wholesale and retail piano
and organ distributing centre.
High grade new:pianos Five
used pianos at decided bar-
e.- gains, ' •
Buy the wonderild .
for a pleasing entertainer. We
• are headquarters for it '
Bergains to tee chefs and stu-
dents in Sheet Music, 250 to ,
75o pieces for 10c” -wholesale.
Instruments id alt kinds sold.
Muslc EmpOrleim
O. HOARE. .7e,..1•Arril
Teeb recseived a lot of pew Bats,.
Buckle% Pulley Bells, Bangle Bracelets,
etc. The latest goode in the markets.
- We make a specialty of fitting Specte.elea Mtn Eye Glass. .
Eyes examined free.
W. N. W. alker
Upholsterer •
En all kin& of Parlor Furniture and Man
ufaeturer of
DIAtt resses• Loma ties
COtteltes t ony Corners
Ete. • •
Carpets taken. up„ cleaned and relaid and
ison,•eelea Meg attended to. •liattresees
Undo over. Prices reaeonable.
(WI s"' 1r'. 4 91Ip vs ef work 61.a ow -r•
Inge, n Io .fidrti• 400 o.
Fim1',`41410 75 set is1 flee Brussels
•
Carer', . lame 1411 goo4
Lincoln's Nettle Ointment. .
The Only guarantee cure
' for. Piles. •
It not only gives instant re:
lief,bilt it cures to stay cured,
by removing the cause, Con-- .
stipation.• • • •
Vint as direetecLatieyou
will be surpris.ed at the result.
Special direction- in every
packa,ge,will show youhow..tO,
tute, Itching, Protruding
'bleeding Piles, Constipation of
the bowels or any disease of
the Skin. Price .25c..
kiptued only by LineOln *
Medicine Company,50.QUeen.
street, .Ottawa.
Recommended and for. sale
.by J, 11 Hovey, Chemist..
St, s ti 11 pit.erti Ofitailo
tit t
• .• ' Philanthropy..
"How you must ettjoY 'being a Willa*
thropistr mild the sprightly young Wera-
-
an. e, ,
"I don't quite understand you.''' replied
the4utte of earnest Manners. ° ...
Vit must be etich a pleasure to feel
,.. that you have plenty of money and can
always be doing good."
. "Yes; but the only diflicalty is that 0110
ean't,,always be sure whether he ie tieing
„pod I or being done .good.'e • °
,41111* .
• ' ii4,4;007.
fifirth
- 1
Standing Va. IMO (even Light.
"III never giVe.Yott up. Miss Perkins,-
never." . -
"That's it, Mr. lloplilust I'd be afraid:
to triarry filch a determined, obsthsate
Cma as you are
•00,10masairam.rnSaradass.......M11.
The reported 18 current in Winnipeg.
'that Lieut. -How root. McMillim, has batt-
en the ground that no fortbet, &amis.
eels of (invert went empioVeete are to,
be made wafts for goad and subst.anr
Oat causes.
OM -droll Cry tbr •
CASTOR IA.
'"Btuak 015 MO AMPS"
If yeti use Pao Nam you will Ma k, bat
MU not he ion& Ski the gentlemie In the pia -
tuft. Th. Page Penne is wenn in me torn
Amoy, frost dolled wk. mule by etirsetves, sad
twice Bs strtiat IS tam Wed IA ether tegns. Ost
tide yaw's prism, ewe *slew than 18.5 7..?.
The PAGE WIRE PENCE CO. (Ltd.)
ewetteeereeeillIALItitetttlfiLlt.
•
)4:••••••••-•44.4,«•4444-e-tikt,
Central
Meat Market 4 -
Having punt -Reed the buttherirg
businees of F. H. Powell I km pre-
pared to furnish the people of Olin,
ton with all kinds of Fresh and
Cured Meats. . Saueage, bologna
lard, butter and eggs alwayekept on
hand.
E,. Fitzsimohs. & Son.
Tlephone 76.
Orders deliveresi promptly to all
pasta of the town.
N.B.-Persons having hogs for
h lenient will coder a favor by
eying word at the shop.
000gioaakiamizatorgeori.41tioisaraptaketa
A Stepladder
Given Away
. To eve pnrohaso of one c4n
doer Pure Cream Baking;
Vowder we will give, withottk
any extra cluitge, a, strong
. datable liYeatoot itteplaader,
thrall 15e bars of Soap for 25o.
25e aroma go at 20e.
0. OLSON.
• Nett (loot to Dr. Clutin'a privakhoapitai.
ekstel Butter and Eggs wanted.-
-
SIP Choices Linton has asked that
ihe A.merica. Cup races be postponed
till the firet week in October,. 011 0.c..
count of the injoriea to tbe Shatttrock.
Oh -Wren. Vey for
CASTORIA..
• J. P: TISDALL,
CLINTON, ONT.
Vrirate !untie' to loan on mortgagee et
weal entrant rates,
A. General Packing Business tranotoled
Interest allotted OS d'eVolto,
ale notes bought
.10
......eitette!et