HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1901-09-20, Page 6pteraber 20th) 1901
lierShot
For rigors
Igo use to hunt tigers with
bird -shot. It doesn't hurt the
er any and it's awfully risky
r you.
Consumption is a tiger
among diseases. It is stealthy
"—but once started it rapidly
eats up the flesh and destroys
The life. No use to go hunting
it with ordinary food and med-
icine. That's only bird -shot.
It still advances. Good heavy
charges of Scott's Emulsion
will stop the advance. Tho
disease feels that.
Scott's Emulsion makes the ,
body strong to resist. It
• -soothes and toughens the lungs
,and sustains the strength until
•the disease wears itself out.
t Send for free sample.
& BOWNE, Toronto, Canada
soc and $1.00; all druggists.
Ja+. Po'sinson, Woodetock, was killed -in
collision with a street oar in Detroit.
a. R. Booth, of Ottawa, has been fined
:$20 for yllowing sawdust from his mill to
lin into the river.
sA. true bill was returned at Montreal in
the Court of King's Bench against J. T.
Wilson, Joe:Lennon, and A. J. Stout, of
the Traokmen's Committee, who are charg-
ed with criminal libel.
The following is the population at the
London Asylum for the Insane :-Males,
458; females, 536 ; total, 995.
New Brunswick havesters raided the
'Pan-American circus at a station this aide
of V. innipeg. Wagons were shoved off the
--Int ears, and the employees chased in all
directions. The oi, cue men were out -num-
bered. Whiskey was the principal cause of
the disturbance.
A meeting will be held at Walkerton, in
the county council chamber, for the for-
mation of the Bruce County Historical So-
Vety, as contemp'ated by motion pulsed
Cy the county council.
Putting food into a diseased stomach is
like patting money into a poket with holes.
The money is lost. All its value goes' for
nothing. When the stomach is diseased,
with the allied organs of digestion and nut-
rition, the food which, is put into it is I irge•
ly lost. The nutriment is not extralted
from it. The body is week and the blood
impoverished. The pocket can be mended,
The stomach can be cured. That sterling
, anseslicire for the stomach and blood, Doe-
Pierce's Golden IViediesiDiscovery,aats
with peculiar promptness and power on the
organs of digestion and nutrition. Ir, ie a
positive cure for almost any disorder of
these organs, and cures also such diseases of
the heart, blood, liver and other organs, as
have their cause in a weak or diseased con-
dition of the stomach.
C.Kruger, a son of Com Paul, has sur-
rendered to the British.
Rev, Father Dandurand of St. Boniface
ocelebrated hia diamond jubilee in the priest-
h ood,
Wm. Wight, cattle buyer, of Tyrone,
was attacked by a highway robber, knock
ea senseless out of his cart, and robbed of
$2,000.
E. Beer, the young son of the proprietor
el the Bull's Head Flotel,has been arrested
charged with the Murder or Michael Ham
nett,
Rey. J. T. Kerrin, who is leaving Mit-
chell for Jamestown, N. Y., was presented
with an address and several valuable 'gifts
by hi congre,_ a "on.
Chiei O'Neill, of Chicago, announces
that Emma Goldman is under suivsillance
not far from Chicago. She was arrested
later on but released,
IF YOU SUFFER PAINS DON'T
WAIT
a moment, go to the nearest drug store and
get a bottle of Neryihne. Five times
...stronger than any other -it penetrates to
the remotest fibres -soothe the irritated
nerVes and carries with it almost instan-
taneous relief. Good for pain on the out-
side, and if possible eyen better for inter-
nal agonies. Nerviline is sold under guar-
antees. If you are not benefitted your
money cheerfully batik. Druggists and
medicine dealers sell it everywhere.
The contract for building a factory to
manufaoture beet sugar was awarded s t
Wiarton.
Maggie Plant, a profesional nurse, shot
herself at her room on St. Catharine street,
Montreal. The woman was 'taken to the
hospital in a critical condition.
B. Burleigh, the Telegraph' e special cor-
,zespondent in South Africa'reports that
the fighting Boers think England is on the
merge of oiyil war. They have been read
ing accounts of the Queen's Hall meetingin
London in farewell to Mr PrIerritnan,
For Eleven Years
COKE DANDRUPV CURE has
grown in popularity, until
it now has a phenomenal
sale in all parts of the civil-
ized world=an. indication
of its sterling worth.
Rivals, imitations, and
substitutes of all kinds have
sprung up, but their intro-
duction only tended to in-
crease the popularity of
COKE
Dandruff Cure
The reason is plain—it has
never failed to cure dand,
ruff—it goes to the seat of
the disease. It keeps the
scalp in a healthy condi,
; tion, prevents the hair from
out, and promotes
$ecrets Revealed by the Camera.
TI.OBABLY 110 human invention
has aided the course of Justice
to a greater extents says Lon-
don "Tit -Bits," than the snap-
shot camera, It has been instrumental
in condemning criminals, and has also
been the meting+ before now of saving
Innocent lives,
A case in point is that of Alfred
Grayson, an Englielunan who Was liv-
ing a few years ago at Rip de janeiro.
He was accused of the murder of a
Brazilian named Linares, a clerk in the
same office with himself. The two were
known to have quarreled some days
previous to. the Sunday 011 which Lin-
ares met his death. Apparently, how-
ever, they had made up their differ -
mace, for they went out sailing that day
on a email yacht which Grayson had
hired.
In the evening Grayson brought the
dead body of Linaree home. His story
Was that the latter had fallen from the
mast and fractured his skull. But med-
ical evidence was of opinion the, wound
On the head had been Made 'with a
stick or oar. An oar was missing from
the yacht's dingey. The mast -climbing
story, too, sounded improbable, for the
rigging • was all worked from deck.
Taking the recent quarrel into consid-
eration, and Grayson' s well-known vio-
lent temper, the Case was black, In- .
deed, against the Englishman. ,The
coroner's jury had already tamed him
guilty of murder, when a passenger on
a Marseilles steamer, which had ar-
rived in Rio on the Siinday afternoon,
came forward with a new niece of evi-
dence. .
This was a snap -shot phetograph
taken as the vessel entered the harbor.
Far away, under the cliffs, a tiny ves-
sel was sailing, and against the white
sail was a dark mark, -Which a power-
ful magnifier proVed to be a falling
man. BY an almost miraculous coinci-
dence the camera had been snapped
Net as Linares fell. The photegraph
turned the scale in Grayson's favor,
Almost equally curious is the way IA
which a photograph aided justice in the*
Cooper murder 'case. Cooper was as- '
sistant to a yqung blacksmith named
McKenna' in a Lanarkshire village.,
Both Men were known to be fond of
the same girl; .One day Cooper was
found dead on the floor 9f the smithy.
He had been poisoned with carbolic
acid. McKenna was suspected, but.
there was no' proof whatever- . of his •
having ever bought or owned any car-
bolic acid, while Cooper was known' to
have purchased, as •a toothache reme- •
dy, the phial found beside his dead '
body: "Death from misadventure" was
the vereliet.
Shortly afterwards McKenna was ar-
rested. It appeared that an English
tourist provided -with a kodak had
passed through the. village on the very
morning of the murder. Attracted by
the quaintness of the old forge, he had
taken several' snap -shots of it. • The
photographer event on to - stay in an
Out -of -the -Way, part of the Highlands,.
and did not hear of Cooper's death for
some days. Then he hastened to de-
velop his plates; Plain in one of the
pictures were three bottles on a shelf.'
Two were beer bottles', the third Was
unmistakably one of those fluted blue
glass betties .in which poisons are sold.
It had also' it label on at, and though .
the wording on this could not be read,
yet on the strength of this eVidence the
pollee made a thorough search. of Mc-.
Kenna's preniises, They found the re-
mains of the • bottle in question in ran
old well, and .proved that it had con-
tained carbolic acid. Then McKenna
confessed* his guilt.
The more recent developments' of.
scientific photography Mast make the
criminal feel less secure than he used
to: One of those thieves Who make . a
living by van-itibbing. got in unplease
Fint shock one day in March last. He
had safely got off •with a tub of butter
which he had stolen from the tail of a
wagon as it was crossing, a bridge in
Rochester, N.Y. The .dea.dty witness
against him 'was photegraph taken.
by. telephotography from the top of a,
neighboring high- : •
A biograph Picture, of the • Grand
Trunk Railway bridge over the siela-
gara Gorge was recently 'taken, and, •
when developed, thrown upon the can-'
vas at a music hall at Toronto. It was
then noticed for the first time by the
audience that a human body was toss-
ing and spinning in the whirling wa-
ters.' Search wan at once made, and
the body of a. missing and Much -adver-
tised 'suicide eves discovered, still
caught in the furious suction of the
whirlpool. .
Hindu criminals succeed lass long
.
practice in, forming a- little bag in their
throats.into which 'they can guide Jew- I
els when they steal them. Last Sep-
tember a native was arrested for steal- .
ing a diamond worth 10,000 rupees from
a jeweler's window in 'Calcutta. But as
the evidence was only circumstantial,
and possession unproved, he would have
been liberated had it not occurred to ,
the police . to have. an X-ray photo- '
graph taken of his throat, That
showed the gem safely hidden in the
little; sac. The thief was sentenced to .
tot° years' imprisonment, lant he still
refuses tolgive up the diamond. •
The Roentgen -ray hilotngraPhy has,
also been instrumental in adding sev-
eral thousand pounds to the customs
revenue f Buenos Ayres within the
last year. Valuable jewelry on which
no duty 'was being paid was known 15
be coming into the country in lettere.
It is,'however, illegal to open letters Or
stamped packages, so the law -break-
ers were unchecked. At last, in June,
1600, several registered lettets • and
packages were examined under X-rays
In the presence of the Argentine Post -
Master -General, Sixty-six Suspected
geltpkages contained 44,000 worth of
jewelry, and were, Of course, all cows
flscated.
What She Said.
It'wasn't a smoking compartment,
but they were using it for that Dur-
POnn all the same, and she was too mod-
est to object. By and by the two men
gott, into a discussion over the woman
flakier -1, and at last one of them, an
unregenerate bachelor, appealed to the
lady these
"Do you think there will be men le
heaven, miss?"
,She blushed.
"Xol" she said. "They will want to
go somewhere svhere they eau Igtoke,"
The discussion 'stopped; en did the
smoking.
To be acceptable to the aristocracy
One must be an ass or a millionaire.
It is believed that no evidenee will be
offered in snpport of the' eight election
petitions now standing for trial in this
P. These are against Blair, Tucker,
inerson and , t era 0", indssl,owler,
Ganong, Wilmot and rrste, Conservathts.
The trial of the petition against Mr Blair
tee Set far next week.
TO 0t/ftt A GOLD 11 01.111 DAT.
Tete Latattie6 Brans Quintile Tablet. All
druggiei 'refund the money if it falls tO Otte,
Ii5o. AL W. GroVe'ssitmetittes Ora eraeh boa,
?rice, $1.00 per bottle, at
aIl druggists, or by ittail.
Accept nO Substitutes.
A. H. BItlilldint CO., Limited
ItOlIONTO, WU/A
tee
11,
tRE GUNTON NEW ERA,
.4.
IOr..toket In England,
'August Ands the cricketing season at
Its height in England -the high norm
that precedes the waning -and, though
the.votaries of this splendid game on
this side of the water have perforce
to depend upon their own enthusiasm
rather than their great numbers, the
national game of the heart of the em-
pire demand e respect, if nething more.
The London Daily Mail not long ago
had an interesting article on this noble
sport, which, with the quaint illustra-
tion that accompanied it, is reproduc-
ed In substance as below. Speaking
of the scene that is being daily en-
acted now at •the' famous ground at
Lord's, it says
"The 'wisp' of the hurtling ball 'dead on'
the middle stump, the responsive ;rack of
the bat as It fiends the leather ca -rearing '
boeuclarywards, the exciting race of bats.
men snatching yet another run, the long,
sure aim of panting fielder, the rattle of
bails as the- leather beats the batsman by a
second, the cries of 'Well played, sir!' and
the cheers and the fluttering of dainty hand-
kerchiefs in the golden sunshiee--It is in-
deed an inspiriting scene even to the tenet
Impressionable. And yet not a new scene,
for it has been enacted times without num-
ber over eince in 1814 top -hatted and pig-
tailed batsmen first brandished their club -
like 'willows' on the now famous ground
In St. John's Wood road.
"Thomas Lord was alive in those days.
Who was Lord? Well, if Lord had never
lived there would net now be a Lord's. A
humble sort of person he was, too, to have
his mime ring •through the centuries and
endure as long as England plays cricket. Ile
was immortalized by a quarrel.
"Thomas Lord was an attendant at the
White Conduit Fields, where in 1779 a num-
ber of titled and moneyed gentlemen were
wont to play cricket. One day they had a
hearty disagreement, a practice the gentle-
men of those days were rattier prone to.
There was a split in the comp; one detach -
A Cricketer of 1703:
meta took the high reed, the other took the
. .
low. Lord, 'who seethe to have had a mer-
cantile mind, espoused the cause of those
who offered him • the best terms.' He was
instructed, to look 'out. for a" new ground;
This he found In Dorset equate. Lord be-
gan to prosper- exceedingly. .In thee he ac-
quired then
mi?rrit commodiousy.esbisground,
him. Eventually in 1814 we find him end,
the ele In St. John's Wood road, at thenew
Lord's, .
it IS jest 310 years ago this month since
the first recorded mateh was played at
Lord's -:not the Lord's this century knows,
but a humbler Lord's, where the gentlemen
patrons -they were all gentlemen-sqiiatted
In a promiscuous fashion on the ground.•
betted wildly, and addressed pointed re-
marks. to umpires And players, afterwards
. healing allwounded feelings over a pro-
tracted dinner and 'prodigious qinintiti& of
port.
"The first match on the present Lord's
•was Kent v: M. C. C., on June -22, 1814. Fif-
teen years later, on the conclusion of the
Barrow v. 'Winchester fixture, a disastrous
'are broke out In the pavilion. That, to use
an expressive colloquialism, 'settled' Mr.
Lord. It was net the mere damage that
discouraged him, but the fact that £2,600
was due to him for subscriptions, and, all
the books being burnt, be could not dis-
cover who had paid and who had not. The
situation was too distracting altogether
for. Mr.Lord, And he backed out of it -none
too graeefully, said some of the -members,
but probably they were those who owed him
their subscriptions.
"Money was readily forthcoming for the,
acquisition of the ground, and the clue has
now 3,500 members, and an income of 00,-
000. It could easily double both, for appli-
cations for membership are constantly ar-
riving from every part of the world.. There
is a rule, however, which admits of no
more than 150 members being elected year-
ly, and active cricketers are given the pre-
ference.
• "Lord's has a staff of forty professional
players, who earn as much as £10 a week.
"In these days of bowling reformers it
Is interesting. to recall the performances of
Mr, George Brown, who' operated at Lord's
In the early eighties, Mr. Brown was
probably the fastest bowler who has ever
sent a ball along the famous wicket. One
, day a longstop tried to arrest one of Mr.
Brown's -deliveries with Ws coat, The ball
went clean through the coat And killed a
dog on the other Wel Messre. W. Maroon
and II. W. Fellows were two other.terrille
bewitre, WM occasionally delighted a Lord'e
assembly about 1840. The first 'named is
credited with having broken a batsman's
leg, while one of Mr. Fellows' deliveries
uprooted a stump with such force that it
flew Into a fielder's hends elevenyards
away
"Lord's was- the birthplace of 1 -Mind -arm
bowling. Its introduction clime about in a
curious way. In 1822 a well-known bowler
of the day,,Mr. John Wines, suffered a sere
WS Illness. When convalescent he !Ought
to regain his strength by getting his sister
to bowl while he batted'. He found her
bowling more troublesome than that of the
most expert professional at Lord's, and on
reflection discovered that in delivering the
ball she turned her hand over it. On his
return to the field to play .Mr. Wines tried
the new bowling on one of the batsmen in
an important county match. He was
promptly "no balled,' whereupon he left the
ground in high dudgeon. A short time are
ferwarda, however, round -arm bowling was
ottleially adopted.
"The highest aggregate score made at
Lord's was 735 knocked up by M. C. C. and
Ground egainst Wiltshire on August 18,
1888. The lowest was 10, for *bleb total
the M. C. C. were dimmissedby the Austral-
ians on May 27, 1878:
"Mr. W. "Mud in 1820 made the highest
Individual setae at Lord'e-278 for Maryle-
bone against Norfolk,
"On June 5, 1871, at Lord's, four Graces
played for •Gioueeetershire, W. O. Ocoee, 11,
M. Grace, G. F. Grace and II, Grace, The
first time 'W. G.' played at Lord's was in
Ally. 1864, at the age of 16. Ile then repre-
sented South Waled against the M. C. C.
Grace has never been dismissed twice in a
first-class Match without scoring. During
the thirty-seven year's he has figured at
Larder the Veteran batsman has alter smok-
ed. 'Intemperate smoking,' he eve, 'lute
more to do with nervousness and Small
aoresui Gum mederate drinkinie.
When children tirsi pale, peevish and rest.
less at night they require a dose or two of
Miller's Worm POWdere. Sold by II. B.
Combo and IL P. Beale, Clinton,
dhildren Cry for
CA t-INO R I Ael
mistakes or Reporters.
' The mistake Of ahOrthand report*
ens, laughable and serious, on ,various
important occasions would fill volumes,
but a decidedly curious error of the
kind is pointed out in a letter which Sir
Henry Carnpbell-Bannerman was ,at
the trouble to write to The London
Time, Under date of July 81 :-
"I do not often correct errors in re -
porta of speeohes," says Sir Henry,"but
there is a passage ins your report of
My Speech last night on the third read-
ing of the education bill which / find
It necessary to explain, and this can
only be done by a correction.
"I followed Lord Hugh Cecil in the
debate, and what your report repre-
sents me as -saying is this:-Vhere is
often a power behind the throne, We
have known in history of a great
Cardinal who wielded the Power of a
mighty Monarch, but it was known
that after all it was not he in his
gorgeous raiment who truly wielded the
power, , but soberly -clad ecclesiastic
in his retinue. In this case we have
not to look for some Ventre St. Grist
who sits below the gangway, We
cannot help thinking that .on the pre-
sent occasion , the eibwor behind the
throne Is the noble Lord, the member
for Greenwich.' 'The words I used were
these: -Th this case we have not far
to look for "son Eminence Guise." "Son
Eminence Grise"eits below the gangway
and is member for the borough of
Greenwich.'
"I .may be allowed to point out to
you that Ventre St. Gris is not the
name of a person; it is a nneaninglees
collecation of words invented by King
Henri IV„ who, finding himself de-
barred from the use of an oath by the
rules .of. both theereligions-Which he
in turn professed, employed this inno-
cent but sonorous expletive for the
purpose of relieving his feelings. Sim-
ilarly, for the same object, Thackeray
suggested 'Bagneres de Bigorre'; others
have thought of 'Santa Pe de Bogota.'
"But Ventre St. Girls was never, so
far as know, the appellation of a
person. It appears as a pseudo -oath
in 'Quentin• Durward,' the scene of
which is in* the reign of Louis XI., but
this is one of Sir Walter's occasional
e
anaahronisms.
John Dresv's Dress
John Drew, it is well known, is most
particular regarding his dress, both on
and off the stage. He was playing in
"The Liars" two seasons ago on the
road, and his itinerary included nearly
--fie-6-Weeks of • sue-ceisl v -e-- One -night -
Stands. His man attendant oalwaYO
looked after the clothing he wore at the
theatre, bringing it to the actor's dress-
ing -room shortly before Mr. Drew ap-
peared to dress. In one of the smaller
cities the valet had sent Mr. Drew's
linen to -a laundry, and the actor found
when about to don it that the bosom
of his dress shirt 'Contained a polish
which disgusted him. • He said things.
But there was nothing to do but to
wear it, polish and all. Mr. Drew had
a long speech in a scene with Arthur
Byron. The latter at once observed the
unusual polish on Mr, Drew's dress
shirt, and while he was delivering the
lengthy dialogue Mr. Byron, though it,,
was not noticed by the audience, be-
gan to adjust his hair, straighten .his
tie, and otherwise complete his toilet
by the aid of the polish on Mr. Drew's
shirt. A roar went Up from. behind the
scenes, and 'Mr.. Byron's joke nearly
spoiled the scene. -New York Times. .
•
. In Memory of testae. Pitman.
The mighty army of those who owe
an undying debt to the' late Sir Isaac
Pitman, the inventor of Phonography,
will be interested in the latest develop-
ment of a scheme which the corpora-
tion of Bath have for some time had in
hand for perpetuating the memories of
distinguished personages who haVe
lived in, that city: The latest tangible
renult "of this PearsaiverrthY policy is the
tablet of which an illustration is given
in a neighboring" column -a small
event, yet one bn which the whole world
looks with a kindly and grateful feel -
lug. Lady Pitman still lives in the
house whose walls the stone adorns..
Mand Mollerei Setting men.
- "Maud Muller" still goes on being
parodied. Here le the latest from art
American source, though the usual
"might have been" stanza appears to
be missing :-
Maud Muller, on a summer's day,
Set a hen in a brand-new way
(Maud, you see, well a city girl,
Trying the rural life a whirl.)
She covered a boX With tinsel gay,
Lined it snugly with new -mown hay,
Filled it nicely With eggs, and then
Started to look for a likely hen- .1
Out of the flock selected tone •
And then She thought that her work
Was done; .
Then tied its legs to the box, "You
bet,"
Said she, "I know how to Make you
net."
It would have peen; but this etubborn
-' hen
Stood up and cackled "Ka-doot" and
then
Maud pMruisleler Came, and in hurt sure
Lboked coldly into the creatureeleyes.
But still it stood, and worse and
worse,
Shrieked forth its wrongs. to the tint -
verse,
Kicked over the box with its tinsel
say,
And ignominiously flapped away
Then a bad boy, over the barnyard
fente,
Tee -heed, "Say, Maud, there's a dif-
ference
'Tween hens, you • know, an' It Is that
One says 'Ita-dootl' an' one 'Ka -de -t1"°
Then Maud recalled that the Ugly,
brute
She tried to set had said "Ka-dootl"
kied iyerhasininne tahnat his dayembatorrracesedway•
' To think of the hobble she made once,
when
.phe,tried to set a gentleman hen.
Now Open.
The Autumn Session of the Central But.
mess College, Toronto, has opened out this
Month under most favorable conditions
with largest enrollment of now members
in Its history. The reputation of this ex.
cellent school seems to be of the right
kind and hat been honestly Won by its
ample equipment. and its first ohms work.
air *
The W011ifen, EMMA, (.1-olditiati, Whose
reckless harrangues are said to have
inspired Oz )Igosz to mongol:late Pre
sident 1VIcKinley, is dubbed the high -
priestess of Anarchisni in America.
She is after y and impassioned speaker
and said, to be absolutely unrestrained
in her ideas, She would abolish both
marriage and divorce, and leave par-
ries to the doctine of natural selection.
flex teachings are destruotive of pri-
vate rights in property, and she be -
heves that individuals should be above
the nectssity of all° resttaining law.
ii bee barrangues she has ben known
LI, tenth doctrines destructive of all
social law and order -declaring " that
laws Were made fur the rich and not
for the poor. She is now in custody
and it is said the chain of evidence
connecting her with Vzolgosz is being
woven around her.
HOW'd THIS.
We offer One Hundred Dollars Remo d
for any case et Catarrh that cannot be cur-
ed by Hall's Catarrh Cnre,
F. 3, Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0.
We, the undersighed, have known h'.
Cheney for the last 15 years,and believe hirn
perfectly honorable in all busines transac-
tions and finanoielly able to carry Out any
obligations made by their firm.
West & Trutt x,W holesale Druggists,Toled 3,
0.
aiding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledb, 0
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
meting, direct ly-upon the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent
free, Price 75o, per bottle. Sold by all
druggiets,
Hall's Family Pills are the best,
The d bate in the Anglican Synod at
Mtooteal regarding the proposal for
the adoption of the Gothsn burg system
for the r'estr'ict ion Cf the liquor traffic,
ended by voting down the Gothenburg
idea and adopting a resolution urging
the clergy and laity, both by example
and influence, to do all in their power
to influence, public opinion in the mat-
ter, and the establishment in every
parish of branches cf the Church of
England Temperance Scciety, and the
bringing of pressure to bear upon the
proper authorities to bring about a re-
duction in the number of licensee.
-DON'T BECOME
, AN OBJECT
Of -Aversion- -and-Pity.-- Cure
- Your Catarrh. •Purify Your
Breath and Stop the Offen.
dive Discharge.
Rev. Dr. Boclaror, of Buffalo, says: "My
wife and I were both troubled with distress.
ing Catarrh, but we -have enjoyed freedom
from this aggravating malady since the day
we first used Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Pow-
der. Its action was instantaneous giving
the most grateful relief within ten minutes
after first applMation. eta cents. 9
Sold by J. F. Hovey and R. P. Reekie.
The United States steamer -Hertford
d image I a bridge in the Welland Canal
and then sailed away in defiance of the
G wermtnent rather than ray $500 dam-
ag
THE ASTHMATIC'S A.GON Y.
Wakeful nights, suffocatig sensations,
difficult breathing. Who can disoribe it 7
This disease partly neryOus partly 'con-
, 1
eestive, partly the result of naierobiti
rritation, is ho longer treated by nailer -
:118 stomach destroying drugs, but by
Coarrhoznne, that destroying the microbe,
relieves congestion and relax •ti the nervous
irritability that renders breathing so diffi-
cult. The medication is carried by tile
ai you breathe, to. the very eeat o' the
disease, and removes at oncehe melee.
The' ereat discovery i- known as Caterr-
hozone. Its influence n; On Asthma is
.i.uply marvellous Catarrh, z tie prevents
as well as sures and is the only remedy
guaranteed to cure. Your money back if
t fails. Two sizes at all dealers, 25c and
$10.0
Mr Cooke secured an order for a n:-
miseeion to examine the officers of nal Mu-
fti Reserve Fund Life Association of
N rw York in the Suit of Mrs Ann Grentes,
ho seeks to recover $2,000 on a policy
held by her father, who died in -Winnipeg
in Angust, 1900. The sornpany claims
;het the policy is void because in Deceit.
tier, 1899, the deceased missed a
urea on tit: pelisy. Trot ratyinuns was
made in January, and the deceatted kept
the premiums paid up Until the time of his
death, but neglected to present a health
certificate covering the time his policy had
lapsed owing to nen-payment, hence the
company'e refusal to settle.
A call has been issued for a Liberal
convention for the Province of Manitoba
lo be h Id in Winnipeg iii November, with
VIM to preparing for the next Local
elections,
GOOD OPINIONS
FROM EVERYWHERE
South American Nervine cures
that hackneyed speech. "A
trial will convince you." Car.
ries with It no deception
when applied to this igreat.
est of Nerve treatment.
An Influential gentlemen retently wrote t --"l
join with the thousands who haite been benefited
by South American Nervine in their good opinion:
of it. It was recommended to me by one whe
had been cured by It. I tried it and aril cured,
and I heartily pass the good word along -it's a
wonder -worker to shattered nerves, mad an excel.
lent tonic. so
Sold by J. E, Hovey and H. Reale,
A. despa ;eh 'torn Lord Kitchener, dated
from Pretoria, announces that 0 Kruger,
a son of .the torn' en President Of the Trane -
yea), and Captain Ferrerra have surrend-
ered,
BRITISH
, TROOP OIL
LINIMENT
vOn
•
Strata, Cu* Vain* 014:4:1,
Bruises, Stiff Ohl* Bites
Of Int* CougotdiCoatracted
Cords, rthetnustlana Neura1Ia, 81'006101i
croup, Sore Throat/ Qtsimey, Whooping
Cough and ill ?sinful Swellings,
A LARGE MAIMas..
•+•+40.1.0+404.•+•+•4+1.44•44441:14 -444+++++.44.14+44.44+.44.10:
1.1..!.!L., Itir_.4.4o 1ans. "1„.b....ict:a..Lilinp 7 Thouht'
_4411' took Money,
WI. Bands and Brains
to perfect The Happy
ttbought Range' an4 it's
the -Range thatardent
Copiers have taken their
cue from, ; ; ; ; ; ;
Happy Thought Ranges
/ are made in 6 different sizes and 72 different styles, They have all
the latest practical Improve-
ments such as the Corrugated
t Oven, Transparent Oven Deere,
T. Unobstructable Oven Damper
Iand a Thorough System of Oven
yentilation.' : : :
4* 150,000 Canadian Cooke
IRecommend Them. seineelfe
I Write for illustrated pamphlet,
A.; I
1 The Wm. Buck Stove Co., Limited, Brantford I
Itite+.11.14.144.e+++.+*14,44 SOI‘D BY' 04+144..•+•+1144.14+•+•441
= 4.
HARLAND BROS.',
Happy Thought
Their Cue ve
- Manufactured by
211111161.111111114.116■11i
CLINTON
CURES
Diarrhoea,' Dysentery, Cholera,
Cramps, Cello, Cholera Infantum,
Cholera Morbus, Summer Com-
plaint and all Fluxes of the
BOW015.
HAS BERN IN USE FOR
HALF A SENTIENT.
fIarmless, Reliable, Effectual, and
should be In every home.
family for the last nine years and
would not be without it." -
SURE REMEDY.
Mr. F. Churchill, Cornell, Out.,
Writes t "We have 0$ed Dr.
Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw.
berry in the hOme and always find
It a sure remedy for, dysentery."
USED 9 YEARS.
Mrs. Jones, Northwood, Ont.,
writes e," My baby, eight months
old, was very bad with dysentery.
We gave her Dr. Fowler's Extract
Of Wild Strawberry and It'laved
-her life. We have used It In four
11111W161111111111111MIW
ACTION WONDERFUL.
Mrs. W. Varner, New Germany,
N,S., writes; "'I have great con-
fidence In Dr. Fowler's Extract of
Wild Strawberry for various dis-••
eases In old and young.e My little,
boy had a severe attack of summer
complaint and I Could get nothing
to help him until! gave him Straw-
berry. The action of this remedy
Was Wonderful soon had him
perfectly well."
AFTER SHAVING,
COOLS, COMFORTS AND
HEALS rss•SKIN, ENA-
BLING THE, MOST TEN-
DER FACE TO ENJOY A
CLOSE SOAVE WITHOUT
iitieLEASA h f 1,Lbt178.
Avoid dangerous, trritat
ling Witch Hazel preenraPons
represented to be "the same
as" Pond's Extract, which
easily sour and generauy
contain "wood alcohol," a
deadly poison.
MT.
J. P. TISDAIL.
l3ANKElt,
CLINTON, ONT.
,
P amte fundto loan on mor'g ages :al
West 2urrent rates.
6•64.94me
A Ce otrel Banking Burnam transsoted
Interat allowed on deposits.
Sale notes bought
G. D. G D McTaggart
BANKER
ALBEE, T ST, CLINTON
N General Banking Business
transacted,
NOTES DISCOUNTED
Drafts: issued. In!ercat: alllowed;san
deposite,
srantiova.3.9to
Waitch *344
4invottist Silmo
If you want rip -to -date jewelry you can
always be sure of getting the Very and most
cornet thing here. Whatever you buy you
can feel sure that its all right. Or if you
have anything that needs to be altered, re-
paired or roast, bring it to us
Eyes' examined free.
THEMOLSONSBANK
Incorporated by Act of Perliament11845
CAPITAL $2,500,000
REST FUND $2;020,000
HEAD OFFICE, MONTREAL.
Mor:ton Macranusox, President
limits Baum, Gen. Manag
Notes discounted, collection made, :Irati
mated, sterling sea American exchang
bought and sold, Interlude allowed oei
deposits, Siviso BANE -Xutereste allowed
on Mame Of $1 and np. Money advanoed to
farmers on their own note, with one. or
more endorsers, No mortgage reoirea•
O. BREWER, Manager, Clinton.
.M111111111MIIIIIIIMINIIIIMI11111111110116
EP 103)DER.
GIVEN 'AWAIT
To:e cry purchaser of meow.
of our Pure Cream' Baking
Power we Will give, without
any 'extra charge, a strong
durable fiye foot Stepladder.
thre 3 1 a: bars of Soap for 23,3,
25 c I rooms go at 20c.
0. OLSON.
Nest door to Dr. Gurn's private hospital
Gan. Butter and Emzi wanted,
4-4 ,)-044-4414-444-0.414444-64-4***9
/N,13.-Psrectut having hogs for
ehiement will confer a favor. by
caving word at the shop. . I
Central
Meat Market
Bavihg purci.ased the butchering
business of F. H. Powell I am pre-
pared. to furnish thepeOple 9f Clint -
toil with all kinds of Fresh and
Cared Meats. Sausage, bologna
lard, butter and eggs always kept on
hind,.,
R. Fitzsimons it Son.
Telp hone '76.
Orders delivered promptly 'to ail
rarte of the town,
4-64-4-41-4-•44-4-4.4-04-0•44-e4-0-64-0-40.4.4•
New Blacksmith Shop.
ere, -
Subscribes haering rented the shop adjoin
ing Leslie's Carriage Shop, Orange St. is pre-
pared to do all work in his Hee. Ire het had,
a good many years* experience in the busi-
ness, and will ghee personal attention to all
Work entrtutted to hitt.
'Special -attention given
to Ilorseshoeing and the
care *I Horses' feet,
Itemalt in rt. oral kinds; °barges reasonable
F.R14.0 G. LOST T, ClIntOn
Nee
1