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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1902-01-03, Page 8• Giving up Easiness_ 44r,gt.atizei;:bviebto:,,;;A: Looked over all th' other. . an that's th' only wan that 111.1ite. X have tit' judicyal .timperaralna 716 N 1Q.4% THE CLINTON NEW ERA A :Fasulowtoi tfpnalat Donley on Judges. BARGAIN SALE STILL ON • r hate wurruk. Ivrybody else ie pushed And will continue until th business is- diSpoSekkif: an' isurrid in tide tuntulehmle ago. Th' businees man has to get to th' bank Give as a oall and be convinced Try a pair of the TETRAJJLT HOCKEY BOOTS with oombivation ankle support, tor men and boy., Also a line of FINE LACE BOOTS, lined and unlined, in box calf and kid, for ladies, suitable for skating, EI MOCCASINS for men, boys and ohildren. LEATLR LEGGINGS for men, Laoe and spring sideel aturs in leather, with wool lining, as wen as ail wool, going cheap. Also other lines in Men's, Boys' and Youths' Beets at great redaetione. A tall assortment of Rubbers of all kinds, both Amerieen and Canadian makes, Mews Felt Lined Goode, high with loose socks, se well as buokled and laced. Women's in felt plain and leather foxed etyles; laced, buttoned and gaiter, all at redacted prices. A large stook of Mens' and Boys' heavy buckled Rubbers, the "King quality stubb proof," 1 and 2 buckle; the Yukon, 4 buckle, We have a large stook of heavy Socks ter men and boys. Men's Overshoes, both heavy and light, the Manitoba 4 -hackle, aeweitart Wcinfen's -Overshoes, Over -gaiters and Orardigans. Men's felt and hair:linea goods -the Klondike 4-bnokle with heayy felt lining, also !sterling Bros' Grain Bluchers felt lined. Bend -made boots in Frenoh and veal kips, first °lase. ' The 'guys:tee" Shoe made by Geo A. Slater in different styles and all size!' for men.Rage, Blankete, Galloway, Goat and Saseatohewan Robes, a1,1 at Bargain Pneee. Harness Oil 20o a quart. TrunkS We have a good assort- ment of all kinds of Trunks. Also Valises, Telescopes, etc. all of which must be sold. Dwelling House for sale' James Twitchell, Clinton Bargains in Furniture Jost arrived a large consignment of new goode, consisting of Bedroom Sets, Sideboards and Ex ension Tables. These goods were bought right and will be sold cheap. Our stook of Window Shadas was bought befbre the rise. The ad- vantage is yours, Now Picture Moulding, Mattress, Wire Spring, Mor- ris Chaire, Couches, and Iron Bede. Price of every article low as the quality will permit. Your mono back if yon wane it. .EL. OIIEII w • BL x ----eassaaa''.-SaaSS before it close an the banker has to get there befure th' business man ei capes, aa' th' •high-priced actor has to kill off rnotesgradyates Iv th' school iv wain' than Iver he did, an' th' night editions th' pa-aperi conies out ear. lier Ivry momnt'. All de rush an' wor- ry. Eip,gs and improve duck about thein' jooties - like bell -hops, tin pante Dered* eon ir luxury at Newport le thry- dng fr a mile a niinyitl In his autymo- bill an' OS ,on'y leisure class left dn th' werruld Is th' joodleyary. Somewhere a. la -ad hits somewan on th' head with an ax or slnds him a bunch iv proonie acid done up tolook like caady. May- 1he does, an' maybe he don't; but annyhow, that's what he's lagged tr. Th' polis. are In eshurry to get to th' pool room befure th', flag tails In th' first race, an' they carry tit' case to th' gran' jury; th' gran' jury Indicts him without a. thought or a suspielon iv a hazard teethe, th' judge takes his brealdast on th' bench to be there In time, an' tharges th' jury • to be ta.lr. but not to target th' man done it, an' th' jury rayturne a verdict Av guilty with three cheers an' a tiger. Th' pri- se:ter has hardly time to grab up his hat befure he's hauled off to his tuner - al Obsequies, an' th' onprejudiced pub- lic feels happy about it. I don't be- lieve In capital, punishment, alinniesy, but 'twill Inver beseeboliShed while th' people injys It so much. They're jus' squarin' thirnsilves Pr. th' rayvoltin' details whin wurrud comes that Judge Tamarack -tiv °polls has granted a stay iv prodeedia's. Says; Judge Tamarack: 'I know very little about .this case a. - chat what I've been tol' be th' lamed . counsel th' dayfinse, an I don't ae- lieve that; but I agree with Lord Coke In th' maxim that th' more haste th' - leas sleep. Therefore, to all sherlffs, greetin': Fen jarrin' th' prls'ner till ye bear fr'rn us. So th' pris'ner wag asan' dhreams he's lightnin'-r e,n' tie public wafts ivrybo y waits. Th' highcoort le busy:in its way. Ivry two or three years it Is discovered takin' a nap at a county seat in fie corn belt an' it hands down a deCisloa th' de- flndant in a case -fr dainages growin' . out iv th' Shay rebillion. Thin It dhrops off again. Th' higher up a coort is th' less they see ir each other. Their of- fice hours are fr'm' a quarther to wan leap years. Ye take a lively lawyer that's wurruked twinty hours .a day suin' sthreet railroad compnnes an' boost him on to a high 000rt an' he can't think out iv a b:arninock." - - • • r- J. J.C. Stevenson urniture & Undertaking [T T Albert St., opposite Town Hall, Clinton. RESIDENCE :—Huron St, in house lately occupied by Mrs Biddlecombe, opposite Commercial Hotel. Night calls at tbil4 place. A quiet wedding was solemnized at Melville manse, Bruseele, Wednesday Dec. 25th, when Albert H. McCall was married to Miss Hannah, eldest daugh- ter of Hogh Forsyth, now of Alameda, N. W T., but formerly of this town. ship. The ceremony was performed by Hey John Rose. 4-•-•-taiparaseseest-e-aaseaseseeseseasentelela ENTER TINY TIME after January 6th for: a thorough course under individual instruction in all Commercial Subjects Accounting Telegraphy shorthand Typewriting, Etc. In the Central Business College TORONTO IThis splendid wheel, a; a 12 teachers 80 typewriting mania el as I thorough courses of study is th' beat of tho kind i n Canada. Ciroulare Free. W. R. Shaw, Principal 4, ,Yonge &Gerrard Sts,Toront at • alsruanse-easestallealatalatiretnt The Novelty. Bakery *int Restaurant Christmas Cakes Note is the time to order yonr Christmas caltals for as yon all know livaitanakee like old wine become better *illitges we nee the beet ma- teriels proeurable, and pay greatest attention to baking. We always have in stook a nice variety of fancy bread, cakes and pastry and if anything special is de- sired, will be pleased to make on short notice; we do not nee Cottolene in any form. Oysters Ile ere now in a position to sup- attysean with fresh fat carders in odd &Oriente, we Berta them hot or delds cleeirStd • McCormick's stlit(ated M.are- WOW 0120°0100e a dainty hens - bons for ifele here. Almerie grain% 20d pit'e? Ad all kinds Creel' egasilenthie fe ook. Courteous And anent rVALUABLE INFORMATION ABOUT UATARRH. • . Is a sure method of curing it, Oint- ments and powders won't cure it, end you never heard of medicine in tablet or liquid form that cenld cure it either. What's the reason? Simply that germs cause Catarrh, and the germs take up snng quarters far back in the nasal passages, or deep down in the bronchial tubes where ordinary remerlics cin't go. What will 1 reach th.-m? Catarrhozons will, for it is inhaled In, the Mugs arid bronchial tubes goss-vvtPF; the air von b,reatbe gbes, kills ' the germs and cures the disease. It never yet 'tined. Try Caterrhozone, 25o and 1,1 00 Indian Smoke Signals. till traveler en the platne ilk The early da.Ys soon learned the sif- nificance et the spires of smoke that ho sometimes sang rising from a listnrIt ridge or hill, and that la turn he nSeht BOO answered from a different direction. 11 wait the signal talk of the Indians across miles of intervening ground, a signal used in rallying the warriors for an attack, or warning them for a retreat if that seemed ad- visable. The "Uttar Monthly4desarilies some of the signals and their meaning: 'The Indian had a Way of sending up the smoke in rings or puffs, knowing that such a smoke column would at once be noticed and understood as a rational, and not taken for the smoke of some carap-dre. He made the rings by covering the little Are with his blanket ,,112Prnent _and allovrtng-the-ramoke- te ascend, When he instantly coVered tic ere again. The column of ascend. - lag awoke rings said to every Indian wittdn thtrty miles, "Look out! There is enemy near!" Three smoke's Milli oldiftrielather meant danger. One smoke merely meant attention. Tiro smokes meant "Camp at this place." Travel the plating, and the usefulness. Of this long-distanee telephone It onoe aexiorne apparent. llonaseltates at night the settler Or Os traveler aro Met Name orosetng the Piro shoottng se 41.*4 Iallitlift Peewee taking a diceetten dledronal to 131O Meek .e Vielas. lie Might gapes .thitt OMs were few Niguel* of Ile Indiana but un- ties be were an ald-thewr be Might not be Otte to IttterPtet the signals. Tice old -linter and Um 14tumr, m Mew Mgt die-SrlOW, *A erre* prod by basting the head of the *heft with siernpoWder and fins bark, meant the same as the colt:was of sinoke purrs-, "An enemy te nes'in". Two arrows meant "Danger." 'nut* arrow A said imperatively, '"thiol danger is great." Several arrows oda: " ho enetri7 are too rattan for Mt" t'hM flan tiutrt1 1.4 rflavnite emtlet tq1oOtiOti4 telrla Weil at 'night an well as itt That tired faare • 1. .111••••71,•,••••• wj Cannot t'rho de e MIGHT time after lime. Sybil Sanderson's flrot debut In Ne York, When the papers wer ringing with praises of he jewelher Inutile anti her vette, eh partY, at which her hostess remetrIcen ..Those limos To4 're Mee 'Sanderson. are the mopeautiful that I have ever want. Was the guest o honor at a dinner It's tho ol 1,1 val Of th 'Good .heavens!" cried Miss Bander son, "you didn't think that they wet real, did you? Those are only stag lewele. If they had been real, I Woul deserve all that the American paper abuthave satd me." , The New York "Sun" declares tha fashionable women are .att prepen wearing quantities of false jeyvels cleverly made, and perfectly set in gold in simulation of the real article. One of the pastures of the Duchess of Manchester which was printedeln the newaPapers showed •,her wearing a pearl necklace swatch was said to be "the famous Manchester Pearls." 'Inns alsAm was knooked lathe head only the other day when a New York firm of manufacturers of imitation jewels he- ifer; a suit against the duke for scene - thing like ribs hundred-4011am tor this very necklace for 'which his grace had failed to pay. "It has only 'been within; the last few seasons," adds the "Sun," that tins vogue of artificial jewelry b has become fixed. . . The possession of genuine resale, for instances is pos- Able only to the very tew, for 'neck- *cern of well-matohea pearls are worth email and even large fortunas.- Many of the .most •perfectly matched ropes have taken years in their accumu- lation, while others' are heiripoms that have pciatied from one generation' to another in the royal families of situ - Tope. When the pearl necklace be- came so fashionable In. Americe there was a demand for them that cc/aid not be supplied,. and now nine-tenthe ot the •beautiful ropes that are worn are false. The new imitation peerla are Indistinguishable from .the real except under a glass and to the eye of an • expert.. They are perfect In shape, finish, color, and the wonderful satiny surface that giVes the pearl its beauty.. • . . The diamond ftnitations are only effective et nbrht, for- this stone is one which most successfully defies .the art of imitation. Ascounterfeit pearl' takes an expert. for Its deteCtion, while any. . one at all accustomed to handling 'diaa monde' cafireadlly discover the 'Unita - thin stone. •The.Pstals 'makers are send- ing . to .this. country now some very clever products in this line, the :settings being artistio, and the stones tiny and. closely set. These. are extremely effec- tive at night, and are ivorri for stage • purposes by many'actresses who . are famous for their so -Called diamond coi- lectioari. These imitations Are not cheap. On the. contrary, . they era con- stantly, advancing in meets For hair - ornaments the knitatlion stones are in Much derhand: There are some who say that they really °Wellston the genuine diamond' under the electric. • light.. • But they are •Irepostiale . for wear. in the .daylight, and by ao Means. approach the degree 'of perfection to which the peari.Counterfelt. has been OUSty Its e Cheap to buy, d naleusasanacticy.o coated • eating, sick b p t Sold by J. E. -The Depot t received an or for 1000 more t be shipped to S make 2,914 ton Cape. , The Menke • 07T NATURAL! Ourang-Ou J:1 ' was taking banyan tree Naturalist viewed silence and then a he might had little ent. "Base brute, thou thought",beyond th thy instincts! Arid us that man, the nob has evolved from such sate animal! Thou .h glorious privilege of ea Eof VIL"Tree of Knowle • "Pardon me!" said 'ti . tang, awakening sudde bea "I've had a few ,n1 years ago,' a Scientist vis and he and I became q He was alwayts °urging and contended that it easy job. All I had M do to strike .:fire with flint stone implements and and haul off my neighbo establishing the sacred the Family; but I hav caution in my blood, ,an I have rather a tidy be demurred at the idea of self so treAndously fo good at obtaining some ' Progress.' "Well, the more , I h more the Scientlet urged - we finally decided that if an the expenses, I woul around the wprld with • various phases of civilize' if I thought the game wog I would evolve for h iawaited.ersure you, I never In my life. He hauled and sea and showed me palaces, 'steam. yachts an libraries and pictures, and song—in a word, the ea;t'Whtit en I had seen the 'Get "thee behind me, splendid- civilizatton is a but a masterpiece foals. eivitized toil that the .oth play various silly games th Society, Power and Fame.' "What did he reply' to the Naturalist. • ' -"Ile had no time to make re.. slivered the Ourang-Outang. "K. him as well as I„did, I was quit that he would convert the entire der -log people to his views and h all the monkeys in the country dol various stunts in their frantic effort to evolve; so I simply cracked his head open With. a cocoanut and disposed of the question without further argu- ment."—hars. Wilson Woodrow hi ,1 • • • tought." .• , •„„ . . .• • . • • Dinner at a Hundred Dollars a . . • Plate. • ..• • . . ... ..____ . NE of the most remarkable -.private dinners • in the history. of Del- .* monico's was gi-ven In New York lately by Mr. George Heave. For the pleasure of entertaining nine guests from fifteenaninates past severs o'clock until half -past ten ea...lock, Mr.- Hoye • transfotmed the Red Room of -Delmorti- co's nitre a miniature -bower .in a „pine ,forest, and spread, before them a .re- . past ;which oost him aboutonehaadred &Alert' for each of the ten covers laid. _ Hundreds .of pine -boughs had ' been r brought from the woode, . and • these -I' were so adjusted Upon. the wills oell-. ing and floor. of the• apartenant as in completely conoerd their original •char- ...adter. .Ifivielble wires were stretched' . through thein and:cenruacted with hun- dred s of .tarrikll ine,andesoent °electric light globes, which peeped out from the • 'green houghs' on walls and ceiling. - Bach globe war gimped •Iike an Orchid, i and shone with pale -green light that • lent reality ,, to, the semblance of. the rare, woodland flower. Over the crash = .• fl. Bottom Mod. Siipt.of tho Prot. Hoopitg • . • demi Liver 011 - (Trade Mark.) GIVE YOU AN APPETITE! •AlMAKE YOU STRONG! 4 'TONE YOUR NERVES! MAKE YOU W,ELL1 thet covered the nhor had been strewn :sterdilirer' nalfszy, / feel dizzy. --Suppose I pine-hou h ' should fall." " Horrors! I should oast myself down on top of you." "Well, after all; 'twas but a =men- nary feeling. I guess I won't tall, Mary." • Among the Old Masters. GOOD looking young woman, who had evidently been fed on large quantities • of • "culturene," was piloting about the Art Museum 'In New York the other day a fat mid comfort- able mirldleraged soul, whose agreeable but totally uninspired features showed that hers was the proud privilege of being mother. to .hhr companion. The girl dragged her. mother from canvas to canvas, explaining things in a high.. pitched voice, and a portion of their conversation Is rec'oided, by the ":11lioaase. bune." • - • 14 "Remarartett was a .putehmars," she observed; "'You see flow full of shad- ows his pictures are." "Shadows, indeed," returned the mother. "I mast. say, though, At was welt for that lady he did put her in the Shadow. He' must 'have been well paid. for painting her, I should say," 'She added With scorn. The two passed on to nubens. "Ain't they fat, thise ladles-e.at_yost„. Octii-calf-'.em ladies!" exclaimed the portly matron, for once interested. "He used hat .w.tect, as •Sli =SCA moth- er," volunteered the cultured on, "Well, now," said Mother; wrathful- ly, "to think man would make ettelt I, OM of hie own wife! No, I may not be 'to well educated as YOu, but LknoW better than that, / bone." The colrveraation, carried on in clear tones, had attracted the attention of kalf the room. The girl blushed deeply, and drew her mother away in the dl - *Illation of the modern Tema The kopeleis remark floated back: • "No, Antoinette, it ain't no flee. Tbein std Malta% all loOk alike to me." g e* ang ee of -that& -wood- - a wiiitZgybk;ivtstuZITIRIAltabbet°1•;rAla- land moss, and buehela of . attain= &ass and et.00 potties. leaves in all -their rich tintei of scarkft. 1 DAVIS & LAWID/Non CO.atimited. yellow and gray. A round table, eight feet • In diameter, made of uniinishe oak, rose from the litter of moss and leaves, and its stout logs • were own pletely coveted with green' and gray moss. Ranged around the table were the ten chairs, each of espeolaJa lyebuilt for tine occasion, was • made of black birch-bangha fashioned in Yat-' led rustle dasigne and with the baric left on the .surface,' The center of tha table was a mound of maiden -hate; liern, mese .and oak -leaven In their an. tumnal tints. Twenty oathirty eleetrio globes, 'like those • peeping from the' walla were arranged among the ferns and Monsett In the center of the „tab* anal In front of each oover was a due - ter of thirty • of the . retreat of natural teen orchids that the hothouses ot • Miller's, Drink dare i� la per boa. 'For - sale by all druggists. ' . . . 1,1:he Qbtawa Journal (Independent) says :—"A matter of. common obser. va ton in Ottawa during the reception of ( he Duke and•Duchess of 'Cornwall and Yoe k was how frequent the use of the Union Jack or the Canadian flag was in all parts.of the city, including the parts where the French-Canadian peple are in a great majority. A • feNY ye • se flan theU taint Jack used; to be far less conspicuone, and the tricolor • was much more so. • The mime wastrue of Hull. But gentlefnen like Alr Rob-• ins, when let loose give new boosts to tri -color display:Curiously enough, the tri color was introduced in Canada by a British ship, which came up the _ St. Lawrence decked with it, at the time of the Orimeanwar. It ,won Its first popularity in Canada as a sign of t • friendship ,and•alliance between Bri- tain and Franoe. The Journal would like to see all Prench•Oanadians using •' the Canadian flag as their emblem, and no other, and believes that they will,e se long, be doing so; mean -while we think 61, —7•Ive•eawlive.conafora-withoutr.worry,6,.c,T . Stranger -And don't your corlftreSe• eon oonelder it a sin to tell ti. ke?. Kentncley Parsoft-It depends on the lie, stranger. We don't consider it et* great harm for a man to make out be has been bitten by a snake In prohibition diatrict.-Philadelphim "Hie iterd." •w York could supply. There Wilt no other illumination of the room than that furnished by the' green globes ot the .small eleotrio lights, and tho effect wail like that of twilight neastsaff,fie ,aforeet. ',The natio-cards for each guee were painted on oak-leavea and tits menus on equares white birch -bark anout- ten by invert Inches In Ilse. •Tlia ',Ines were all orthe rarest and most expensive vintages. • ' ASTH Asthma* SENT AB t„eltIAIINEICI - IIIT Y,EARS Trapped. mg oyer the tricolor. " I IM•moommolo Theodore -ale all right, darling. )IaVe met your father, and we took to ine *Mother at once. Ile evert wont so tar as to borrow ten *allure of me. IturelY, iie .ant refuse me your hand after that. . Ittlith-Dry, Prn afraid you've made a seers of it. Pa told me about Ai tea dollars, and staid I'd better it' ymt slides that You woes 440 smag!„--Boistost Ifreasoript, At the ALAIMO' Front Doo. bleseebirer-be'Is im lide. *mad illton-hortmeon's. or • lit Mutat homitonorieon's, or Ur. ilkmapson- Teton's. -c)a. Mr. Mimed Theton•Bkontg* Pone? Ifeld-WeAt a swarm* cant �e. Ile didn't may what it would )6 Me -day, Ill fro and tusk blin.-Cleetelend Ibteder." ----).--- -i• , Builder re Irtti Losing Weight ?* iii The I) & Is I, inlsion will always help to .,„ build you up., Restores proper ditlestion 4;6 end bringe Iteall i back, hfiinufaottired by 41 - the lievis &Lu Ltd, .., wa,•1•••—•1., Many School Children ars Pale, Weak and Nervousi ItedIttated RSA mbossuutted ta Wog and Maar-gm Charnels Nerve reag In SurImbilnetly Benelletal rev WU obvert% and ever -Immuring Arsia if oompetitive examinatiorut MOMISM at a Woe when every boy and Ski Is undergoing trying physiological ehanzel does Much toward* Making inental and physical Wrecks of selso4 Ihildren. Mtn dawn in healt. Wit* tke blood thin and watery and MS mew volts eyetem exhaustd, shildren kaVal ne chant* to sufeepe the rainy Ms that beret a feeble body'. There is no treats', mint known to eeiertee that So natural ly end thoroughly restorer strength and vitality tO the nervous system as Dr. Chime'. Nerve Pood. It makes rar, este kaPpY by bringing back the color and the !strength and • PELIIICK int Tag linos, Memorex Co. Gentlemen: I write this teetimonii fnl effeet of your Asthmalene, for the 0 spesmodie asthma for the past 1 year many Mime, I ehencedte gee yonr nig I &fence Obtained* bottle of Asthma) firtof November. 1 very Koh Iloilo b)ltle her Astifne tits dissodscrt I feel that 1 can ooneistently repel* distm sing dimwit. Yours me Da. TAIT Beoe: Matronly 00. Gentlemen war troubled with cog remedies, but they have all fits • stetted with a triel