HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1902-10-17, Page 3Are Matches Made in Ileaven1 Nothing Like
No; hut a, blasphemer dares e.ccue
nialtaten of having made ell the matri Paajne2s Ostery
..9P441 Matches, remarks an exchange
Ilesponsibility for the great ninabe
ief inisms.ted oonples nee belon
•to4 net above, eteaveo ja 110 Nue,
lilouncitleraans the old saw would mak -
eteiteer le ita fact,as ti;Vinhiathi superstition has it, tlia
Igoe ' lovers were made to mea
;Sure for each other, the plans havire
*Plated from all eternity, mad that eonie
, ;Where in this wide, wide world there i
* predestined affinity for %toll man am
Waimea. The nian who waits unti
eeaven and predestimition shall hem
trought hia affinity to him will be mon
than likely to find her married to t
neere enterprising fellow than he, an,
Owning half a dozen children. In tht
Parch for one's affinity it is necessan
to do some hustling, for competition
eloMetimes severe, affinities will becora,
Impatient, and if one meets his afilnit
too late, and still presses his claim
alothing but scandal can coma of, it. _
opmquity and manimeui Wee
daI more to do with meta:0Mo
44°bn:taking than Heaven or preilee
'Oration. Given the ease of a partieu
,larly attractive girl for whom HeaVel
ba e appointed an affinity in dist=
lands, but who is being "rushed" rathe
herd by an active, attentive fellow witl
sexaque intentions and money to bad
411eht up; whose chances would the bet
tingodds favor, those of the man °I
the "ground or those of the far-erwa3
afilnity? In the absence of rivals an
_Intelligent and decent man of the worn
'can make any woman of his own °las,
dove him, if he sets out to do it, an
has opportunity to talk to her alone
•If there is competition, of course, end
man takes the chances of the game
Mice. versa, no doubt, a woman can di
the same with any man.
r.aive is a sublime emotion only when
It isnot ridiculous. Writers on tie
subject and authors of novels in' Eng
iish are. inclined to take too romanti,
.and sentimental a view of love. Thi
majority of love affairs in 'English liter
aaature are thoroughly foolish, and if th,
!stories were continued beyond the wed
-ding day they would be sad narrative;
of disillusionment, infelicity, and an
tipathy. The Romeo -and -Juliet sort a
love and all first -sight or sudden pas
•fir01215 can end in nothing but coldnesi
and bitterness if they are given rein
Tha.ckeray was the English writer wht
came nearest to setting out .a same idol
of love. He was worldly wise and knee
human nature, and the happy love al'
lairs in his books are eminently directed
by common sense. Dickens, too, you
'Ullman and observant, but as. he we+
3ess cynical, he was less sound thee
'Thaekeray in his treatment of love
Modern French writers go to the ex
t reme of eynielann and therefore pain/
a sort of love which is mere dirt, and
as false in its naturalism as *Victor
SOLUT
SECURI
4 • Genuine.
hrCarte
Little Liver
Bear.8lgratue0 0?
se
See PeesSinilleVrapper Mow.
Teryoustall and as gagirr
tO take 411 Salfare '
• cARTias
ItE nwiiuousNErt.
'VER FOR:TWIPID,L1VE111.
pi vial' IFOR,PONSTIPATIOIL
A !INA muste.rt wrigg4stee.
Compound
For Ciennsingand Purifying
•
The Blood.
It Eradicates The Seeds of Di-
sease, Invigorates and
Rejuvenates.
Thousands of men end women who have
neglected the wore or physical reouperatien
in the summer months, ere now carrying a
burden of disease. In the majority of Ofteee
impure and poisoned Mood, and sluggish
circulation are the direot cameo of Buffering
and misery. 11.re you, reader, one of the
yrobime ? Use, do not hesitate a moment
regarding what you should do. The life
stream must be made pure, the health -
wrecking laxity M the blood veesele roust t 3
oorreated, the nerves and themes must be
nouriethed. Palmas Celery Compound is
the .mechoine that physicians reef:el:amend
for the biennia of pure bloed in the arteries,
and for arousing the purifying orgaus to
oast off the impuritiee that sive rise to the
disease. T, F. Mitchell, New Ramberg,
Ont., writes aa follows :
"My mother offered for five years with
a sore leg, and her mem was so far run
down that dootore could not help her. She
could hardly walk about the bowie. She
tried elniost everything to procure a mire,
but no good results came until Nine's Cel-
ery Compound was used, which gave her
instant relief. She is now using third bot-
tle and able to do ber own work."
The Cold dreeley Coach.,
1111t Cla1141TON NEW ERA
' - sassaiesseessor
\ Wanted to Spit an The Floor.
',A relio of old times , stands, or die
stand, few days ago, ih front b
a carriage factory in Denver, Col.
a reminder of the period when day:
were consumed in going' clistancen ovei
rough and mountainous roads in lune
bering stage coaches that are now coy
media hours in luxurious and easy rwn.
ning drawing -room cars.
Peculiar interest attaches to this old
coach., because it is said on the author.
ity of old residents of Denver to be the
one in which Horace Greeley rode on his
overland trip in Hp. It has borise
many namee in the course of its career:
as Morning Star, Prairie ]?lower, Little
Pittsburg, and oia •ov...iiaata, its -latest
name; but old-timers in and .around
Denver always speak of it as the Greeley
coach. .
Old Overland ' was built hi Concert/
Mass. There is no doubt of this feet
as it is of the peculiar pattern that
made that little ritaimfaeturing Uwe'
well knciwn; brit just when it was eon
..structed is not known. The Material Of
which it was built was thoroughly sea•
soned and perfectly adapted for the
etrain of use in a rough country. The
cost was said to have been $1,100 de•
livered on the cars 'at ,Concord. In all
essentials the coach stands to -day pre;
eisely is it was in the days when it
made its long trips across the pleins„
having a somewhat weather-beaten and
battered appearance, it is true,, but still
as !Arcing and as serviceable' as when
. first built. Even the leather used to
cover the baggage is the same tough
bullhide used an the days. when theeoacb
irae in active service, and the immense
thoroughbraces on Which the body of
OM Overland swings, Made' of leather,
and which gave the coach a forward and
backward movement •that dulled the
strain of days and nights of continuoui
travel, have never needed repairing of
' any kind. The trip from. the hfissouri
River to Denver .occupied six days and
, nights, horses or mules being , changed
every ten or twelve miles, and to reach
California' by stage required thirty.
seven days ot continuous travel,' and
cost .$500. The fare from Leavenworth
to Denver was $100; and 25 eeittera inile
, was the way tariff, - • a
Another of the fast disappearing relied
of the pioneer days Of the great Weet
.will soon pass into history. What start-
ling and wonderful stories it might tell,
if it: could, of hairbreadth eseapes, for
the old coach bears, to -day many scars
• made .by ;bullets; Of the hopes. and am-
bitio f oun Men and of familia
rj) CURE SICK HEADACHL .
blOa was .aise in its aliment)
elem. The love of Marks and Cosetta
lu "Les Miserables" ia utterly eine, nnc
-eould end in nothing but sorrow for the
two young fools.,
• Sanity and common sense !should have
play in love as • in other Oahe. Wh3
not? Lasting love must be founded oe
-reason. A man and woman, beim(
"felling into each other's arms, ought tt
'know each other will, to have beer
, Much together, to have considered thi
'health, the physique, the temper, and
-the mental character of both. 'Their
during a long lifa-tiVether. wil
'have many shocks to stand, and it be
alitioves it to be robust and firmly rooted
' 'Before narringe a girl ought to lean
'from her mother and from wise mar
ried women just what she may ex
eet and may not expect, and a man
lrire the weadhig, ought to take
Mittel on the same point from married
en. Too remelt reading of romanth
ature, coupled with maiden ignor
of human nature, is likely to give
id expectations impossible to realiie
eieente ought to look after their
s and daughters, and guard them, as
haasapossible, from thatasort of love -
the Latin Latin poet celled -7a sort ol
. To .love rightly ;one should
0,v 'MI •Old head and a young heart
fhb ppily, mad yo'ung Iceie will have
itti way, in spite of law or parents. Ae
the Eastern proverb Sari: "When man
burl 'remelt are agreed, what Can the
eadi do?"
But it must be a bitter, bitter thing
ler a husband and wife to One day leak
lint0 eaoh other's faces and confess that
alhey have made h mistake, and that
-their love, which they had fancied deep
its the Rea, was only the foam that
Vtuteeth—ind has nteetest
. Stereotyped Phrase.
Many of our stock expressiOne, like
'rather late 'do not mean anything if
Atte takes their meshing literally. A lite
;tie dialogue. from the Washington "Star"
a ease hi point: "Did any of the in-
habitants teeripe With hirt lifet" enquired
* the Man Who *ante harrowing details.
.41.. didn't Atop to ascertain," answered
the man Who is harrowingly exact. "Ie
•ttruek me that, if anybody esicaped with -
tut hie life there wasn't mulch use in his
• wooing, anyhow?.'
1 ' gli/hen, tt,wonitut conies into a street
.60 Where you ,are the lone occupant,"
the COO, "gather up your puke
agee and he on the Idea, for, you neve?
can Vire Olt al'hot a Wontati de.*
n y g
Seeking that fortune in the West that
• had. eluded their, grasp in the East; of
failures and sueees.ses! It will socni re-
appear on the streets of Denver, re-
upholstered and painted, and drawn by
six horses, carrying, parties of tourists
to points of interest in that town. It
• will be the same„eorich, yet not the same,
for it 'will be so disguised in its• new
arid more fashionable dress as to be un-
recogniza.ble as the old Greeley coach.
The Outlook.
• • ifer papa—Yo' aspiah ter marry inah
daughtah, Irml Virliad am yo'r
prosnetes? The suiten_ade. va jaaidowerf—Eb-
ery single one ob de pussons fee whom
taah late lamented wife done washin' fo'
hab promised ter paternize hex
miccessah.—"Judge."
Birthed Fisherman (to country hotel.
keeper) —There isn't a bit of fishing
%bout here! Every brook has a sign
warning peimle off. What dee you mean
by luring anglere here with the promise
id fine fiehing? Hotelkeepera-I didn't
say anything about fine fishing; If you
read my advertisement carefully you will
tee that what I eaid Was, "Fishing unap•
•• I Baby 'Changed.
;the Mother Ten" Row It Was
• liecomptlithed.
"A wonderful °hinge." is the ereMict 'of
a lady correspondent, who ,writes ad about
her little One. "I take pleastite," writes
Mrs R. B. Bickford, Glen Sutton Que.,ein
certifying to the merits 0tl3aby's Own nib -
lets, as I havefotind them a Stir° and tell-
able remedy. ley baby wee treated, with
• Indigestion, ind was teething and, moss
ansI reetlesrs, and the use of the Tab -
lea made * wonderful change. / think the
timely nee of Ileby's Own Mildete might
aim many a dear little life, and X would
mootnneend betthere to keep thaiii in the
bowie
The opinion of thief wise mother is echoed
by other correspondents. tteby'e Own Tab.
lets give such comfort and relief to a sick
baby,tbey to infallibly produce celnepettece
Int aleepithat you ,would almost think theta
A MOW. tut they tire not, They A only
boaltli.glror for ehildtert of any age.
They einnot possibly do herm-theyelweys
do good. May be had from attlffffista, or by
inaildniet paid, at 25 /tante tt bee be writing
direet to the Dr. Willients' Medicine Co.,
Brookville, Ont, or Solteneetady,
When Thom Straw, waiter in si
Fourteenth street restaurant in New
York, came into a fortune recently, he
expended part of it in buying the good
will of a little Germen restaurant in
lower Fifth avenue. The remainder of
his unexpected legacy went to re -fur-
nish the lace in elaborate style He
was proudof the mirrors which were
fastened to the walls, of the heavy
oaken chairs and tables, but proudest
el all of the new floor of polished herb
Two old Germans, who had been rep!
far customers of the place for years,
Eiontjnued their visits when the furnish -
was completed. They ineisted on
sapectoratina, on the new door, ignoring
the cuspidors.
Hans went to them and expostulated;
'Mine froind, vill you please spit in der
soospidor, not on der floor?"
01 emit vere I likes," was the curt
reP"IYYOu vill spit in mine coospidor • or
you yin keep away for here. That is
reit yet. If you va's go to Delmonico's
end spit on der floor, vot vood
raonico say, eh?"
"Ah," replied the Teutonic diner, °Del -
nook° yood say, 'Look here, if you vont
o speet on der floor you must go to
flans Straus's, not here.'"
_
• Not Much Difference.
Lady. (to furniture clerk)—I like the
Louis XIV. and the Louis XVI. designs '
tqually well. It wouldn't doa I suppose,
as have both chairs in the parlor?, Clerk
)byes, madam; they would harmonize
Well—only two years' difference, you see.
• a„.„,
•
Sir Augustus Lackensh (to tailor)—My
*on tells me that you have allowed him
o run a bin for three. years. I have,
,herefore, come---. Tailor—Oh, pray,
lir „Augustus, there is really no hurry.
lir Augustus Iockeash—I know that,
aid therefore I have come to tell, you
diet in future I want to get my clothes
kom you, too.---"Tit-Rits."
- • • . •
Unities at Night. • s.
' •
Owing to tne state of perfection to whieh
firearms have. been brought, and the
universal use of smokeless gun powder,
the •German military experts are most-
ly • of opinion that the great wars of
the future will be fought. entirely at
night, as only under cover of the dark-
ness will it be possible to get to doe
quarters with the enemy. Consequent-
ly, in the German army the manoeuvres
now take place ahnost entirely at night.
The captive balloons, an illustration of
*hien appears ' this page, play
a, very imports.nt part on these
°melons, • for in the cage of
each balloon . a powerful
searchlight which sweeps the country;
for miles around, and makes the enemy
✓ isible at a distance of four miles, while
the occupants of the balloon are in tele:
graphic communication with their army,
and keep them adyised as to the move,.
merits of the enemy. •
. •
Although the inedichie bosiiteas,
should, abeve all,.be carried on with.the
utinoet conseimitioniness and sense of
responeibility, the unforttinate fact ise
that in n� other is there so much hirm- -
bug and deception. The anxieties of the
sick and thew relatives are traded upon
In the most shameful *enter; iroposeia.
ble mitee are • Proteised; Many prepara-
tion's are abso lutely worthless, and some
• are positively dangerous to health:.• "
As a consequence,' all ptoprie .ray
remedies are regarded with suspicion
by really arid the good suffer• '
for the bad . • ,
• the reasons We annOutee ;that
our propnetors are the principal Share.-
• holders in • • •
" . .
• .111RAII WALKER & SONS
Luvirrgp •,
which will, vie are sure, beaan.aiiple
parantee of the. truth- of every repre-
sentation merle concernieg • "
IRON—OX
TABLETS
Iffori-OX Remedy Co.; Ltd.
' . wsnakonkfko....
Pi* ping a Sea big.
••*111
The pumping dry of Harlem Lake,
In Holland, was pronounced • by
'many • engineers, to be impossible t
yet it was successfully performed. Zuid
er Zee is many times the area of Haar-
lem Lake, and presents from its depth
and character many more difficulties,
end yet the fiat of doom of the Zuider
Zee has gone forret. Iu a very few years
many—thousands-of, acres ofasmiling
Duteh pastures, of prosperous Dutch vil-
lages, of poplar -bordered roads will
characterize what is now merely the bot-
tom Of the sea. Science in the twenti-
'etli century will have hardly any tale to
tell more astonishing than this.
The Zoider Zee, celebrated in Dutch
legend and history,. occupies some four.
teen hundred square mires, the area of
a large European province. On its
shores are the ancient towns of IvIedem-
blik, Hoorn, Harderwijk,Norden and
Enichnizen, °ride large cities in the hal-
cyon days of Dutch commercial and na-
val supremacy. It enconipasses the • is-
-liar of 'MOM; Behokland-and-Urk:-.-
The present plan consists of building
°a dam or embankment Domed the north-
ern part of the sea front Wieringen, in
North Holland, to Piaam, in Friesland.
Then 'will follow the creation of two
"polders." or areas of dry land reclaimed
, ..roseaseeesveemosee..
•
Severe Pailk S.
• in Left Itk:dneY Mee "said to make out of nothing at
AU itt the Point of View.
!What an immense undertaking %MS
said * matron. go those who real,
Mr. Ellis Gallant, paquetyme, 010eceile ly bear the burdens and heat of theta t
duty to write you, as I base roceb,46. much gent woman would be amusing,' if it was
ter Co., N.B. writes; eta feel it i/ the strenuous efforts of the .self-Andu
benefit frOril the use of Dr. Chi 1.5" not so provoking to hear her complaints
Kidney -Liver, Pills, I was taken rA 'vs when they consider the why and the
years ego with a pain just below the elb °It wherefore, In a month or two from
of the left side, and right over the kidney, now, fortunes favorite will.have to open
At Snit it did not cause me much suffering..., her house in town, and she will undotibt-
but a year ago the pain, at times, was very edly be perfectly worn out with the el -
were.
+ ,fort of having the rooms cleaned and
"After heath) repeatedly of the value m, ore or less reorganizing her household.
,be sure, she will not personally have
msrt herself in the very least; neith-
she havete= tfe°ePi alhothteasbk jilts° bWeehveerr--
culeaw, farad :Uhl asthareluksehotuoaklanfidnowathw:ton)rvnryidlittlhisie-
ten tee her if
I" la: erasji,i neg.a)priteille11:7 C14.,117 her great obligations,
said one of these hero*
"The amount of .worlc I have done and,
still have to, do fa appalling. dust ad
Soon as 1 have ft InSeathing spell I shall
haeto go to the Rot, Springs to recup-
erate."
"Now, what ao, you suppose she has
really done?" said one of the group to
whom the overworked 'woman had been
epeakieg, as the latter rustled languidly
Away, "Done!" echoed another; "why,
she has probably tad one womani, to
scrub the paint, and another to put up
the curtains." And they all laughed um
!sympathetically. • - -
of Dr. Chase's idney-Liver Pills, I de-
cided to make a trial, and AT using two
. boxes the pain had completely disappeared
and I earn well, thanks to this remedy. I
have also used Dr. Chase's Ointment, and
found it worth its weight in gold, 'You
may publish this letter if you like, as IV
may induce some other sufferer to profit
by my experience."
You cannot possibly make a mistake in .
using Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills for
derangements of the kidneys' liver and
bowels. It has proven itselfworthy of
the most hearty endorsement of thous-
ands of people. One pill a dose, 20 cents
a box, at all dealers, or Edmenson, Bates
& Co.. Toronto.
Dr. Chase's
Kidney -Liver Pills
A Japanese Vie* of Religion.
The spirit of religious unrest and
of dissatisfaction with existing re-
ligions that undofibtedly prevail to
la large extent among the more
intellectual ' classes in Japan finds
noteworthy utterance in an article by
Mehl Kaneko in the "Metaphysical
Magazine." "What is refigierr he asks;
and answers;
"According to the aircient -philoso.
pliers, religion is the worship Of God.
'The object of religion' says Seneca,
to know God and to imitate Hine Even
among modernthinkers, a man like
Sehleierroacher held that religion 15 to
worship God and obey His commands.
Immanuel Kant; the great German phil-
osopher, once said, 'Religionconsists in
our recognizing; all our duties as divine
commands.' Many other scholars con-
cur in this opinion. But it seems to me
that these are the definitions given to
the religions of the pest. Such is the
definition of the historic religions. It is
not the definition of ideal religion, not
of the religion of the new age, not of the
religion of the future. It le too norrew
and one-sided. Religion, is not merely
the worship of God. It is one's sineere
attitude toward the universe and life.
In this sense, We may call Socialism a
religion; Peeitivism a religion; and
Buddhism a religion. If religion is mere-
ly to worship a God, Buddhism may not
be called a religion, because it names no
gee to worship, But no historidal"
ar of religion would overlook it. • Bud-
dhism is, undoubtedly, a .religion. One
of the representative scholars on com-
parative religion says, summing up all
definitions of religion, that religion is
the worship of higher power in the sense
of need. This 'BeeMe to me much better
and a little broader. Edward Caird
wisely adds to this that a ',man's relig-
ion is the expression of his Summed -up
• meaning and the purport of his whole
conseiousnesea of things.' I think this is
as nearly perfect a definition of religion
as modern philosophers can give."• -
It Bemis a strange thing to Oriental
peoples, Continues the writer, that Chris-
tians should think that God is rightly
:acknowledged in Christendom Only. Is
it rational, he asks, to suppose' that God
'should eielude the great majority of the
inhabitants of this planet from His care
▪ and love9 Mr. ICaneko finds it sttange,
• too, that 'nor people "read the Bible so
ranch and Slaws loelf back to Jeans."
"Suppose the Bible were destroyed," he
says, "would Inen then lose all faith in
God ?" Ile writes further:
"Christianity )1.. a traditional religion,
an historic. religicio, Dna so is Buddhism;
so is Islam. Let skienee examine them
and if desirable destroy them,.and let us
build there the new, tin. true religion of
science. 'The Bible of f..;s3 new religion
should be science, but eit t that of the
imperfect religious historie of Israelites,
Hindus or Chinese. Astrons.ny, biology,
• chemistry and psychology a the • four
gospels of the new religion. PO° , not
say perfect gospels. They are ' im-
perfect. We must make them petfect.
The true gospel of the new religion la-
the uriiverse itself. Look up to heaven—
how beautifully the stars shine! Hear
the birds—what sweet tones they eine
See the flowees—how lovingly they smile
along the peaceful stream! What har-
mony! Whet mastery. Are not these
the real gos els of our mother nature?
froxii the sea. The water will be pumped
out by means of steam -pumps.
The entire work is to be completed in
eighteen yeard. The enclosing alio from
- Wieringen to Plaain will be finished in
the ninth year. In the eighth year will
be commeeeed the work for diking the
Wieringen Polder, which in the four-
teenth year will be dry and ready for
sale. In tho eleventh year the similar
works on the Hoorn Polder will be be-
gun, and will be completed in the eigh-
. teen* year, making up to that dote a
total area of upwards of sia hundred
square miles of reclaimed end fertile soil.
It is as if Lake Ontario or Lake Erie
were to be pumped dry, and the lake
door of eaelt added to the area, of On,
tarlo. •
"Thee* teachers," growls the first
man, "have no mercy on the young
nitride earested to their care "What
have they done nowt" asks the second
nem. "Why, my boy tame home yester-
• day In ft date of collapse becaute hie
teacher insiste upon Ider telling het hoer
Many finite the Philippine War was end.*
ed in 1001."--)3eltiteor8 "4merleatti."
Handy -if:notaxedge.
•. The irvana of the Buddhist id
*too abstract for the majority of the peo-
ple and the hea,ven of Christians is too
mithelogical for a scientific Mind.. Man-
kind noes not want, Christianity, Islam,
nor Buddhism, Mankind' wanta the
truth,- and the truth- is brought out by
candid and impartial investigation. Man-
kind is destined to have one religion;
and one universal truth. Science will
spread, elowly but surely, and the scion.
title world-eoriception is leading the way
to the religion of truth—the ono truth,.
the one religion the one, moral end, and
the one eternal 'God who exists forever."
"And so you beve • a little baby at
your house. Is it a boy or a girl?"
tasked a neighbor. • "Mamma thinks It's
a boy, but I believe it'll turn out a
girl. It's always crying about noth-
ing," answered the Little boy.—"Tit-
Oita"
00 heenninitike
Mg 1 good deaf
lately and feel
an °cessions!
twinge of pain
roundyourheart?
Are you short of
breath, nerrOil
unhinged, sense.
tion Of pins andneedle*
goisg through your
arms and fingers?
natter take a bet or two
of Milburei's Heart and
Nem Pills and get tend
before things' hotpot* too
serious.
A a 'pea* tor as
•
„„ heart and sedve,
trouldestheyeatt.
ot be excelled. A
true heart tonic. blood
Enricher aad *terve re,
aintot, they are ntriftaualtegal kleeplerae
kis', eersesebresiration, intoker's heart,
palpitation of ‘h4111 haul, aftior off4Gto af Is
epee,
palm soo,, pee hod or .3 fiche* kr *toe
at edi druggist". Cr Will Mat oxt tatOliqt
e t piles by
T. ire gat", AliaribM.
TOM sae •
• Mies Elephant (as she spies a, mouse
Goodness mei How fortunate it
t I learned this trick!
9
October 17th, 19*
R.' COCE
0, lo lastest Method, Treatment to be a permanent anti positive oure for
Varicooelso and Stricture, without emitting, stretching or loss of time. In Verieocele it
owe, the bagging, or ITerhai eontlitien, equalizes circulation, stops pains In the groins,
also ill dreinerthereby seems the organs their proper nutrition, vitalizes the parts sea re-
- Attires Iwo powers; in Stricture it absorbs the Stricture tissue, Stops smarting isenration,
nervousness, weithness, backache, eta, white In ail prostatio troubles It li ths treat-
- ment par sgOolleripe. SO Reships am I that my treatment will euro you, You can
• PAY WHEN CURED
You eeedpay sloshing until YOU are convinced thee, i thoroughandeonipleteourahau
been established. This should convince you that 3 have contldence'in my Latest Method
Treatment, otherwise 1 could IPS Make you this proposition. 11 makes no difference who
has failed 19 cure you, call or write me.
Each Time You Call You See Me Personally,
Or each time yea write le receives ray personal attention, The number of years 1 am
established in Detroit, end the cures I accomplished after given up by other doctors, has
placed me as the foremost specialist of see country. OONSULTATION FRES. Oaii or
write tor blank for blank for home treatment. Perfect system of home treatment for
those who cannot stall. BOOK ISM All medicines for oanadten patientahipped
Iran Windsor, CalL All Ceti and OsPrelta charges prge)pixaT1:01111.7mialecsae:t 0. 0, D.
DR .GOLDEsERG 208 WOODWARD
AYR.. COR. WILCOX SY.
Quality the Best. a Prices the Lowest_
74t J, W, IRWIN'S
.Redpath and Bt. Lawrencee best granulated and coffee sugar", at, less
than wholesale prices. $$.85 per cwt by the barrel.
Canned goods cheap—Debit and Kent Can Corn tic a mai.. Canned
• chicken 10e, Roast Beef 1 Ib tine 15c each.
Teas—nlidl,ack Japan and 'Young Hyson from 10e up; our leader is 25o per
Raisins, Currants, Prunes, Dried Peaches, Apricots • and Cooking irige
cheap. • . . •
Crockery—I have just psned out 3 crates of Dinper,Teit aria, Toilet sets
• a,nd fancy china, new patterns direct from the .factories in England,
selling beim 10 to DI% less than regulac peke. Call and examine -
•
quality and prices.
• Wanted good butter and eggs. •Plone45.
• J. W. IRWIN,, Clinton
Another Drop in Prices
• The undersigned is ofiefing his $80 Buggies for $65. They
are his own make, and are made from choice material and by
first class mechanics. • All the latest improvements used an(
are up -to date in every respect. They cannot be surpasuet
and we guarantee them.
• .JOHN Huron..§treet. Clinton..
• •• Opinions of Leadhig Physicians.
• Price $1.00. For sale by druggists, • of
ty ntail on receipt of price.
• W. T. STRONG, Manufacturing Chem -
it, London, Ontario.
-.S•. oft.
Harness
Yes ain 8nahe4cair bra •
mess as soft as glove
and luLtoasti airwire by
tieing INURtililiA Bar.
nee. ott. Yo tt can
lengthen he life -make it
bust twice es long es it
ordlnually would.
EUREKA
Harness 011.
inakesa poor lock Inc Mit%
nese like new Made of
pure. heavy bodied 'oil, es.
nodally prepored with.
Nand the wouther.
• Sold everywhere `
cono.,,t11 slaw.
MAKILLANDORANITE
NUMENT5.
NEW AND
UP. TO 'DATE*
A very fine line of DRESS GOODS is Our GRAIN BAGS at 02.50 Lied $3 Ste
. what our ciaetoniers say. • sellere •
Such beautiful WRA,PPEBETTES, at 20,
. and 1.94 cents, '
•
Grinder Wan SHAWLS & SQUARES
PRINTS that please • . .
See our beindsome initkOY Bras.
• ,E.fORSE BLANKETS. and ROBES
Our MILLINERY and FANCY GOODS •
• i • llrye take the eyes 'of visitors to the
poriam. •
Thfoet: snleenour $3 WATERPROO'F; COLTS i arra ef awl epw: ti pi! pyr er v tenothe Basetilv ya :be et inoo aft: og pow; herepeolafnodr
,
•
•
d.
Great .1/slue hi READY MADE SUITS,. •oash or produce, suchbutt
as er, eggs
also Cottonaae PANTS and SMOCES a large, tallow, &a 1
tondesborO Emporium, •
ADAMSSept. 23rd, 1902. . • '
Bargains, .on rurniture
.• A *large assortment of NJ goods,just iurived con-
sisting of Bedroom Sets, Sideboards, Extension
Tables, .rancy Rockers said Couches, prices all
marked down to the lowest point. If dissatisfied
we return your money. Bring in your pictures
and 'get them neatly framed. -
J. EL. CETIDIA..r..i w4 3131.J.x. WI=
•
•
r•-•
., •
and a half for what.
.gall stones.. had
elief
thonght I would'
ht of ¢ Voxes__
•
• Specialty.
• TOMS +strictly midi.
WC*, Clinton.
ainsationsesteessoussurasionapCO
since.
ISTS
enough for aa
amily bottle, silt ty
for a year.
fv0...1.;C•ffV.,r••
•.1: • • ,•