HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1902-10-17, Page 6October 1.7th, 1902.
THE CLINTON IiEW LR
immense . pToof PC5itsicee
Opportunity,
For getting a Beautiful Watch
and Chain free.—No Money
Required.—Every 111an,We.;
!Nell, Boy-, or Girl Has the!
Sa,me Opportunity under
our System.
In order to 'ewe Dr Araelit's Engine
'Teeirt Pale placed in the hands uf all
Perrionseeutrering front bad been h Ave
' Mr. ke the telowing meet liberal alter to -
If you will eraid to us your came end
'whitest, awl agree to sell fin Lae twelve
• bei of Dr Arnold's Englieh Toxin
Ms at Mc per box, we will give yon
• aneolutery flee a beantiful watch and
chair in either ladiee' or gentleman'
ars, or yout choice ot twenty other
• premiums ench as tine sets of jewelry,
rielgteniulins.reandolinso ea. sets, eat en
klitirtS, cameras, etc. Remember. we
' don't want any money utad after you
all the pills and you don't have to sell
any roore than 12 boxes to aost the
premium. This Is a bona fide offer
from a reliable concern that hae given
e thousands of dollars worth of. prem.
/tuns to agents all over tine country,
'Remember also tbat Dr Arnold's Eng.
. tish Toxin Pills are a welt known rem-
edy for all diseases of the kidney aud
bladder. Bright's disease, diabetes,
rheumatism, • nervous troubles. and
female complaints, and are for sale by
allfirst clues druggiste and dealei's in
Medicines in all parts of the world.
You have only to show them to sell
them. You are not offering something
:that the people don't know. Our
. Watches are the regular etandaed oleo
for L tdies or Gentlemen in Nickel or
• 431euri Metal ()Agee- with handsome ff-
.'. luminated dials and reliable. time -keep Ale= watches such as no lady or gentle.
.man need be ashamed to carry,and
• they will be sent abeolutely Free to all.
Who sell twelve boxes of chose won-
' derfut Toxin Pills. Write at once and
.sbethe first in your locality to earn one
of (hose beautiful wittehi s raid chain.
As soon as we receive your teeter or
•*post card we will mud you. •post paid
e.twelve boxes, together with. our Illus..
•:tratect catalogue and beautifully colored
card with your nameafid address On as
,..our authnrized ageut. Bar ha mind
ce that you will not he asked to sell any
▪ more than tbe 12 boxes and we dent
•wantany money until after you have
-.Sold them. We bear all the expente
• and
n y making this liberal offsr
' 41. -*;4.
as od of advertising Dr A.eri•
ewe
. glish Toxin Pills. Don't delay.
write at (ince and earn a beautifelpre-
-.seet for yourself for Christmas.. •
. Address Arnold .Medicine 0e, De.ptiT.A.
60 Atiebeide St, Kest, Tornto, Ont.
' Sept .
Jewish and Christian Intoler-
ance.
I have known Jews, and, doubtless,
you have, who, despite education .
and so-called culture, were so nee
'row, se bigoted, that they practiced a
spirit of aloofness; who, though willing
• to. buy from or sell to the Christian,
- &ma to receive from or render proles-
sional service to the non -Jew, were un-
willing to eat or drink with him, to
worship with or -cultivate a feeling ol
'fellowship for a Christian neighbor.
I have known Christians, and so have
you, who, likewise, despite education and
so-called culture, were the creatures of
such narrowness of spirit, such littleness
of soul, that they would draw the line of
fellowship at the non-Christian.
Jews might be good enough to have
given them their Bible, their Saviour;
good enough to have given them their
. moral code, and their religious spirit;
, good enough to do their shAres in the
•world's great economic, industrial and
commercial work; but not .good enough
for fellowship, whatever nught be their
moral, mental or social excellences.
What, think you, would happen if the
Galilean rabbi, Jesus, were to come
back to life and appear before them as
the meek and humble Jew -that he was?
His Jewish name and face and • lineage
• would cause them to bar against him the
• doors of their homes, their hotels, and
, their club -houses, despite the fact that
hey would continue in their churches to
bow down, worship end adore him as
God's only anointed.
'• God have pity on such Jews and tM
' inch Christians. God have mem on
Birch petty, narrow and misguided souls,
Such as these surely need your symea-
;thies and mine, despite the fact that
their conduct carries with it its own
punishment—the punishment of depriv-
, tog themselves ,of the benefit and blese-
engs which come from contact with good
men and women, whatever their race, ce
creed, or belief. How small would Buell
•souls seem to the broad and tolerant
.1sTazarenel How he would lay the lash
4.th the- back of Jews and Christians,
*hose arrogance would lead them to •
71110k upon themselves as better than
Itheirneighbors, no matter how gns-gt tho-
virtUes of such neighborst—From
;cases the Jew," by Harris Weinstock.
•`•
[..; Proper Dress For a Groom.
One ed the largest ready-made clothing
teems in the city received not long age
frein a remote plate a letter, the sub-
etetnee of which was, What re the pro- .
per dress for a ;room in the afternOori?"
The clerk who opened the mail, natural -
nig year's Summer Girl is, more
than ever alert. As witness the
TIM DAILANCE
followleg incident: First,' know
that the young man meant ...only
to revive that geed old custom of 'et
pair of glove" as a forfeit. When be
found tier curled up in the hammock, a
magazine slipped from her listless An•
gers, he—well, who wouldn't! Of a stud
den she opened her blue eyes on him, and
remarked accusingly, a tremble- in her
voice; "You kissed me!"
Ile lost nerve, and staninered a de
niat-
"I know it was you," she insisted, .
"I am not the only person • about," he
ventured. "There's '1Vi1cox going over
the links now. Ile had to pass here.
And doubtless Dandy Williams—"
"No," one interrupted, "It was you, I
know it."'
lier look froze him, but he gathered
desperate courage. "Row do you know t"
he deinaneed triumphantly. A final
spread to her pompadour. "Did I ever
kiss you before?" he asked, "Granting
I did Ida you just non—" he Was push-
.
inghis advantage harde and she
squirinecl—"I think I ought to be
cleared!" He was getting indignant
now. "There is only .one way," he went
on, "to pet tire matter to a fair test,
and I propose to have that way adopt-
ed." He paused, and she looked trotibled,
but did .not interrupt. "If I kiss you
now, you cam decide whether or no I was
guilty before."
It wa,s an awful risk, but he hoped a
second time might soften her. She went
quite pale, then replied armlet
"I.feel you have a right to vindication,
Mr. Se and to show that I am perfectly
fair-minded, I will submit to the test."
At this he almost shrank from. MI-.
tinuing. But a sewed kiss! Delicious!
And would.ehe not relent? Would not
all opposition be drowned, that i amal-
gamated in a mutual third? Great as the
riskwas, it was worth takieg. • •
"I wish to .be perfectly fair," he said,
briskly, "and I suggest that you close
your eyes that' you .may give undivided
attention to the character and quality."
"But I was asleep before," slie urged..
He almost said, 'Reale," but stopped
Ln time; and substituted: "Siinelatioe of
sleep mustdo now."
"Yoe will hurry; won't you?"•' she
asked, her voice • trembling.
But • he Was judisia. "It should be
done properly," wise ell hewould reply.
She closed her eyes and doubled her
fists, the color wave:leg fromcarnation
Lo white rose in her 'cheeks. ' He drew a
long breath, bent lingeringly, swepther
trembling mouth with the tips of his
nioustealie; toftlyetted his lips to tors,
gentiy.ptess.ed their yieldiegripeness till
almost the little white teeth were felt,
lifted the lingering pressure till the tips
of his moustache swept her trembling
lips, and—it Was over!
She. lay quite still thee,her eyelids'
fluttered, . Presently they lifted' over the
blueewhich was all dreamy And soft. She
'tiered, clasped her hands, spoke:: .
el don't think the other was you!" she
murmured with • deep 'conviction.
Then he fainted.. .
_
The •Only Way.
. .
Mistress — Bridget, the clock haul
. itopped- at twelve. Maid—Yis, mum. Ye
told we not to let it. run down, so. Oi
;Mopped it at twilve.
• .
Soft and crooked bones mean
•bad'.feeding.. .Ca.1,1 the 'disease,
rickets if you want to. The
growing child must. eat • the
right.food for growth.. Bones
must have bone .food, fe100d
•
111.1eSt heVe, biood ' food • and so.
on through the Jist.
.
Scott's Emulsion is the. righ t
treatthent, forsoft bones in
children. Li'ttle doseSe\Try clav
give the stiffness. and • shape
that healthy bones shouid,have.
.13-....tw -legs become straighter,
loose joints grow, stronger and
firrnness .comes to the. soft .
heads.
Wrong food' causedthe
troulA "Rightfood will curnit.
In diotis,:ncls of cases Scott's
Emulsion has /proven to be the
right food for soft bones in
childh °ad. .
Seed for free Sample. •
SCOTT C. SOWNE. Cherra&ts,
Or4IntOi . Ontario.
or.. and4.1.1,co•
The Snail as Food.
The popularity of the snail as an era
ofhele lood is not confinedo Paris,.but
extends throughout Southern Europe and
some pb.rte of Africa. Dr. Ediard, a
l'reiic]t writer, itt a pamphijt says that
ainety thousand pounds 7 snails re
tent daily to Paris from thadr at
Poitou, Burgundy, Champagne, Pro- -
mime, Those reared in gardens are fed
Areeseelisherbsetheimproveetheirelltae- -
tor. Their market price is from two ter
three francs a hundred,w e thosc front
the., hedges, woods and forests bring
ennewhat less. The. proprietor of one
mailery in the vicinity of Dijon nettt
aver seven thousand francs annually. .
the snail is reared and fattened with
great care in some cantons of Switzer -
and as an, article of luxury, and is ex-.
Sorted in a pickled state, it is also
eaten as a relish and nutritious article
if food in Austria. Spain, Italy, and In
tome sections of the United Statee, The
Ashantees and other African tribes
imoke them and eat them as daily food
ill the year amend.. in Algeria, in the
harkets, large hears of sailer are sold
try this bushel and the hundred as an
trticle of food. Vendors hawk them in
the streets of Cairo. Itt modern Rome
fresh gathered snails are hawked by wo-
nett from door to dein. , ,
Seized Fee Rents •
-tioughesteforredotheeenquiry--toethe---
very; department. The head of that
trench in turn dictated a 'brief reply,
eintething like this: "Bottle -green coat,
favvwdolored trousers with top boots,
silk shalt with cockade. We can make
erica as follovrs, et cetera." A Week
sloped, and the big store received a
plaintive little note: "1 alwaye knew it
wart expensive to get married; but aril
port euggeet something a little less elate
bride re.
Mali Breakfast Food-
4.USTAIN'S EARD MAN.
UAL LABOR.
;ta. COntains As AD Abfilitiant
O mitItitent An 'Minima of
rood Abseils In Meets. '
Malt Brakfast rod, ftirniehed the Ober-
netessarq to *erode digeution and the
lea !relations in a moss noifotra and MOte
We Manner than any Orlin brettefeet
hod on ths Market, and. is epecielly
died keratin hard manure tabor,
Mat Smokiest Feed Ceuta era as an *bud -
mite montane together wee the proper
toot, fie of Minersl eletnenre, gees %at
ebibt Peng firet rank NS •Fitt 1 r nI
Mid Mutate. 1..lvoe fe n man
died t. en to perform d tt
ve Vie t Bteekt
r bre •tPt It 101 thtt
Init, hing food*
•
Philadelphian who timid many yearn/
hithe gunny Smith, who, in fact, was
born and brought Up there, Celle an
tieusing story of daky wit; and one well
Werth repeating. It was BOMB years ago,
when he lived not niore than 100 miles
!rem New Orleans. One day he returned
from many hours of driving, arid was
egreeably surprised to see a fine pluMp
turkey tterv41 up for dinner. Wonder.
Mg where it cane from, he called ltastus
Ind reignited by what wane the beitetia
tut bird had reached his dining -table.
eith," re lied /tutus, "dab turkoy
Ione in Mat tig On our fenee dis trot
aighta, so die morning I seize hine for de
rent ob de fence
'tekee's,
Is often very much,
against the wife.
Her strength is un-
dermined, she loses
flesk and her energy;
and courage slowly leak away from her.
Graduallythe comradeship of husband
i .
and wife s broken up. At first be takes
his solitary pleasures reluctantly, but
later be hardly seenis to remender the
old days over which his wife in her
weakness mourns daily.
Women who find -their bealth failing,
and womanly ailmetas fastening on them,
-should promptly begin the use of Dr.
Pierce's ,Favorite Preset:4nm. It cor-
rects irregularity, dries the drains Which
weaken women, heals inflaninuition and
ulceration, and cures female weakness. It.
makes weak women strong, sick women
well. Sick women are invited to consult
Dr. Pierce, by letter, Ave, All corres-
pondence held as strictly private and •
sacredly confidential. Address Dr. R. V.
Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
' had been a, great sufferer from female weak-
ness for about two years? writes Juts. EMI=
Richardson, of Gose, Wayne Co., Ky. ft Could
not do 'xity work part of the time. I took Ram
bottles of Dr, Pierce's Favorite Prescription and.
felt as well as I ever did. I have also used Dr.
Pierce's Golden lvtedical Discover!: for ulcera-
tion of the throat with good results and .half
of one bottle cared my -throat when I could
scarcely swallow.), •.
The People's Medical Adviser, xcio$
pages, on receipt of stamps for
custotheand mailing only. Send 31 one -
cent stamps for the paper -covered book,
or sci stamps for the cloth -bound vol. -
tune. to Dr, R. V. Pierce. Buffet°, N. Y.
• • A Present 'Duty.
It Is a mistake to postpone the plc -
aures and recreatioes of life until
one has done his hare work; w mio
.take ' which a great many frugal
• and •otherwise sensible .people mate.
There are hosts of men and women work-
ing with might and main for the pur-
pose of enjoying life when they have
laid a -solid foundation of fortune under
their feet. They are meting upon the be-
lief. that it is possible to get the hard
•work of life done, to press it into a fese
years, and then to begin to. live. This is
a. misleading belief,' aye "Outlook?' Itt
the first place, the work alter is never•
done, and ought -never to be done; and,
in the secolid, pleas he who postpones
indefinitely:the hour when he will begin
to enjoy lifeeecisepenes entirely the pos-
sibility of enjoying it. • No num can
work with might and main for tweety
years,. committing all his strength . to
his task and permitting 'himself to be
Setirelyetbsorbed by it, without suffering
• atrophy or deadening; of. the .faculties of
enjoyment. At the end of twenty years
he Will find nothing left of life for hire,
•
' so far as occupation is concerned, ex-
cept the things he has been doing.
He will have ' so • fashioned • himself:
that, hehas incense • only e hand
or a .tool- to : do 0; specific .thing;
he Will have lost the eapaeity of turning •
frem one eccupatipu to another. of tak-
ing eip oneinterest after another, of
giving himself Out freelyon many sides.
He who Would enjoy nature Cannot be.
in too' early. The•first acquaintance
with the outward world ought to be
made at the time one begins to talk, so.
that one fits his worth; to trees and flow-
ers and birds and elands just as sooe as
he sees them, and sees them jesteas stein
as he is able to fit words to there. The
bey who grows up with access to, the
'woods and fields and knows the habits
of birds, because he learns them in the
leisure hours of ehildhooe, will 'acquire
knowledge of nature whine the mature •
men erai nexer obtain. It is iinpoisible
to shut oneself up for twenty.: years
and then step out of the room and ,enjoy
the *sr and the landscape.It' is imposs
sible to work with Might and main for
twenty years with the • expectation' that,
at the end of that time, one will take
up music, painting, sculpture, architec-
ture, and fled delight in them. Delight
in these things comes with education,.
with early and intimate contact; and
When one conies: out of A 'saline* which
• he has maae a prison for twenty years,
he caii no more see what art has to re-
veal to him than on a blind men. • •
The tower of enjoyment must be edu-
cated by use just as .truly as any other
power; it withers and dies by disuee. 11
ones is to enjoy life he mat enjoy it
from day to day; If he postpones enjoy-
ment, he loses the power of .securingeit
at, the end. There -come brief moments
in life, swift crises when everytherg itt
put by for the doing of a piece of work,
the performing of 4 specific task, the
facing of a great peril; but these are
°ay moments. The lives ere. few in
which there are not sopporterithes_ of en-
joyment as one goes along which will
rimester to one's working power and not
subtract. from it. He makes the best
living who keeps himself fresh by keep-
ing his interests vaned; and he only can
, make a life who lives in every part of
his nature. elijoyment is as much a•
necessity as work; to find pleasure in
life ite he much a duty as to find profit;
and the only 'man who lives it whole-
some, normal, successful life is he who
combines pleasure and work„ toil and re-
escreatiorreeromalayeeo elayedromethedsa-
• ginning to the end. • Pleasure is a dufe
which cannot be postponed.
IBURDOC
. I • )
BLOOD
• —
4kA
riBiTTE S
Is a purely vegetable System
Renovator, Blood Purifier and
Tonle.
Eating, Drinking aria Table
Conversation.
Wben Boswell compleined to Dr.
nonusers of having dined At A splendid
table without hearing one sentence
worthy of . being remembered,
Iolinson said: "Sir, there is eeldora
any such conversation." "'Why then
meet at table?" 13oswell, asked. "Why,
Lo eat and drink together, and to pro-
mote kindness; and, sir, this is better
done where there is no solid. converse!
nen; for when there is, people differ in
epinion, and get into bad humor, or
tome of the company, who are not op -
able of ouch conversation, are left out,
and feel themselves uneasy. It was for
;his reason, Sir Robert Walpole said, he
always talked bawdy at his table be-
muse in that all could join," The stout -
warted old doctor, by the way, was net
if Sir Robert's opinion, for Boswell else-
where relates that Dr. Johnson received
tbe greateet compihnent ever paie to a
.aymari when A certain person apologized
co eini for having used profane words in
e story which he had just told. -
The man or woman who ban be relied
in to talk well at table or in a parlor
rrill never lack invitations. Good eon-
rersation is the finest product of braille,
ereeding, society and civilization, but it
4 very rare, and one who ea a master of
It is welcome in every. company and a
friend in need to every host. How awe,
musty, in making up a dinner party* do'
people run over all. their friends to find
rine or two. who will help keep the•table
alk from flagging! No one, who has
not sat at the head of a table heroically
warding off the silence which threatens
LO fall at any moment, can appreciate
lay the gratitude A host feels for the
man or woman guest who catches end .
Losses back to him the ball of conversa-
tion and keeps it in the air, who helps
Kim drew out the more, taciturn mem-
bers of the party by gentle banter and
artful questions, and who lightens the
talk, when it becomes heavy and serious,
iy throwing in some jest or 'frivolity.
,Buch a jest, if hosts were judges, would
do more to gain the sweets of heaven
for the jester than.a rosary of prayers.
Much is said and written of the &aloe
of hosts, but have guests no reciprocal
duties? Are they not bound, be some
hospitable rule of honor, to prepare
themselves to entertain the company and
bandy conversation? Hes a guest a right
to sit silent; receiving Much of the gold- •
en coin Of table talk and giving nothing
in exchange wept, perhaps, a copper
penny or two, a "yes" or a "no" en an-
swer to a point blank query? .
Except to a .bleseed few, the gift of
conversing does not come by endure.
Many fine minds there are who, like a
inuch-quoted college lad, are chock-fuli
of an elegant vocabulary, but can't get.
It out. Oliver) Goldsmith; who wrote so
well, was dull in coinpeny, and evert the
great Dr. Johnson, who talked •so woe-
derfullysvhen he thawed, was ordinarily
silent. How many hosts leved the crafty :
• Boswell. for ;drawing out the lion, as
only he could do it? Boswell confesses
that in order to start the doetor's tongue
he used to utter scene heresy in religion
Dr polities which,- he was aware, woad
• rouse the great nian to a fAry of ilispie
Melon in which poor Boswell .Would be
rushed by the first sentence. But the
Boswellian Fuse ,never failed tonet the
doctor going; and we owe many, delight-
ful :pages of the "tele" to the 'money
•Scotchumnre trick. . Weuld there were
more Boswells a our dinner-tables—and
more Johnsons! . • • •
' Conversation ought to be learned and
eultiyated, just as music pr any ether
entertaining art is learned •and cultivae;
• -ed. Young Women*Will employ expensive
masters to give them lessons on thepe:
anti or the violin or to train their :voices,
• thee they may have "accomplish-
ments" and appear well in company, but
they totally neglect .the greatest and
finest of ale accomplishments, the art of
Conversation. Thertrought to be masters
of conversation to teach men and women
how to talk well at 'a dinner table. The
girl who can interest a table for five
minutesat a tiine three or four times
Miring a einner has a More graceful and
ingratiating accomplishment than. she
who cannot talk, but who ean Play all of
Chopin beautifully, and by heart. The
Lougee is a greater, instrument than the .
pianoforte, Let a girl. take .conversation
for her accomplishment; let her give to
reading and thinking the time which *the
piaidst gives :to practice; let her go in
• seriously for conversation, though net
entirely forserious conversation, and
the will beeothe the paragon of her eitele
endmen will •fight duels for her hand.
And men, tee, might to study converse:.
Oen as they study, anything else and
practice, practice, practice. In liranee
sorreerstitioe is esteemeda fine art, and
It is the cenversation of France' which
proves it the most .pelished nation. •
Feting and drinking seem to be news-
tary concomitants of convetsation. If a
man invited friends to bis house just for
tonyersation, and ga"e them nothing to
eat or Oak, he would soon Ise town.
talk. Doubtless son! people Mad trace
it. subtle connection between dining,
arinking and talking, dragging their' au,
lichee through a psychological maze, but
the vulgar truth seems to be that when
mano-or,.atrauge to say, a gentle wo-
man, either—bas a full stomach and feels
-the-pleasant afterglow of wine, there itt
L tendency, to nit at Moe andeuribendeee
%the mind of whatever lies epee It.
Nowever that may be, it is a fact that
bribery people will not °careers() and
that nothing sci expands the • mind and •
loosens the. tongue age& good dinses
. .
Stops the Omagh
Webtica eft. taaluutt...___
tiiiTailielfrorao-tenizind Teblete cure a
act I in one day, No Chne, No Pray, Price
25 cernts,
THAT'S THE SPOT!
Right In the small ot the' back.
Do you ever get eosin dwelt
it so. do you know what it means?
It is a Backache. • •
A metlititutAirkt fiats titie4lyits,----\._
tbe SAMS time en the. Stomach,. pc'
Liver, Bowels and Blood.
It cures 'Dyspepsia, tillioutnesi,
Coastipation, Pimples, Boils, Head'
ache, Salt Rheum, Running Sore*,
indigestion, Erysipelas, Cancer,.
Shingles,Aingworm or any disease
arising from an impoverished Or .
impure condition of the bloody •
ifer Selo by oil Oregaist•
A sere sign tit IticineY Trouble.
tiejglettlt. Stop it In time. •
If you dais. Serieue Kidney Treetablee
, ego bine tO foliate.
DOAN'S tIDNd PILLS
eurotactLgZeTack1211tpldneytld 11s
oub.
IPtlab$00i a hoe or S ter$1.25. al &Mae.
160Alt ISIDNIMt 11414, COilk
'reiterate. On
The Mau Behind the Mask.
ieesse,
,A sympathetic Vetere of the 'Chi-
nese laundryman Oi painted by A
writer in the New Orleans, 'Mmes."
"John" lives among us, patient, Indus-
trious, and often despised by those who
know too little of ham even to regard
him as a fellow -being. Yet Mew° knew
the human history that lies behind that
yellow mask we 'should not doubt that
eere also dwells a soul of like dignity
with our own. Says the writer;
Next door to • my lodging is oneof
those squat little houses which now and
then you find next to a big mansion. On
the lower floor of the small'house was
• Chinese laundry. In It was A Chinaman
about twenty-five years of age.. His face
was as imperturbable as the sky. He
went about his business with the unde-
viating regularity of the solar system.
At Met he was an ordinaay Chinese
laundryman to me, but my attention
beeaene riveted upon him and my marked-
ty was awakened.
'h° man seemed to live merely for
Itis work. When I came in at two o'clock
in the morning I found him with the
lights turned high, patientlyworking At
i
his calling. If I rose early n the morn-
ing, that prodigy of industry was up be-
fore me. I gradually became filled with
wonder at the untiring persistency cif the
man. Because of his neatness and po-
liteness and exquisite care to please, the
neighborhood never thought of sending
its lengthy anywhere else. '
I began to carry my thing's hi person.
_ to the Chinaman, urged on by de deeire
of finding out something about him. I
reasoned that no Man, white or yellow,
could work as . he did without being
dominated by an all -absorbing purpose.
I found him intelligent. He could speak
dE;Tngehleieswell...yetungFi
Chinaman was in love. A
nally- I won his cora,
girl in China was welting for him, and
he was patiently and bravely undergoing
the hardest kind of toil in order to go
back to hie native country and marry
her. •
When he told me the story I forget
that he was a Chinaman; I remembered
only: that he was a man, woeking like a
roan' to earn a wife, and withal, despite
these .• Meagre, unpoetical Surroundings,
Cherishing all the dreams of a %young
reran whose swee thee! t itt far awaits •
• The Bowery Omar.
L paper .wid 'de lateetrePorthe noos,
san'wieli an' a', shell use beer, an' youse
wid me down ter Coney Isle -
11 dat Ain't .heeven. den .de angels lose.
. "Well, old man; bow areyou feelin'te
'Oh, sort, of Bandit Traeyish." "Now's
that?" "Somewhat run down, but .still
Ole • to be up and aroUnd."—Chicago
'Record -Herald."
DEAFNESS CANNOT 134 013114D
•
, By Iocai applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of theear. There
is only one way to'oure deafness, and that
is by constitutional remedies Barnette is'
mined by an inflamed. cenilition of - tbe
mucous tieing of the Hustanhian tube.
When this tube gets ieflannect you have's
rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and
when it' is 'aurae, dosed deefeese is the.
route and unless the inflammation cannot
be taken out and the tube mattered to its
'normal condition,hearinz will 'be destroyed.
- forever; nine oases out of ten are caused by
critarrIewhich is nothing bat itifiamed con-
dition af the mucous surfaces, . .
' We will give One Hundred Dollen for
any case of deafness (caused from catarrh)
that can ziasbe cured by Mallet Catania
Cure, Send for oireular free. '
F. J. Onesxze & Co., Toledo, O. '
Sold by Druggists, 75o.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
. We can give Positions to person i of 44
grades of abllicy. Agents, book-keepers,
clerks, farmer's sons; lawyers, mechanics, phy-
sicians, pr. adhere, stadents, married and
. single women and •widows. Positions are
werth from 5400 to $2,00 per annum. We
have paid acefisral canvassers MO, weekly for
years. Write fully and we. Will: give yoti a
Position to suit.
11)1R BRADLEY-GARRtTSONClo. Ltd.
Aug. 22ad. Brantford,
Nora Cotton Root Compou
Xs successfully used month' by o.
0:000Ladies. t3afe, effectual. Ladino*
your druggost for Coles Cotton Root Cent
woo. Take no other, as all Mixtures, p1111111111111
twortatas aro cuingerons. Price, No.
OM/ No. 2,10 degrees stronger,a8 pet box.
4 GeLnial led on receipt of price and two
The COOK Company Windsor,
1 stlielel and recommended!,
M in QUM&
•VO, 1, and No. 2, arts sold n Clinton
stall responsible Drug Stores,
olesale btoek- of
at vel7 beat possible vices.
Organs tbe very enteruututble
gramoplone, sheet music,
books, land a variety of music
at
e., HOARE'S
Music gmuorium.
3SIC.r3r011trINT
Ideving bought -ctitit the Hammel
"thtlesi"s Mitre
Ing sell T , et
Ittieterind everythingin tsonneotion
with the Ueda-, Good and (beep,
Light garnet!!! a Speeleity
oat and 6,1 and 1 wili net yon
Burma St..0 asere'weat ot New.
(mato*
A WONDERFUL MEDICINE
,:IFOR ALI,
BILIOUS AND NERVOUS DISORDERS,
. Sick Headache, Constipation,.
Wind and Pains hi Stomach, Impaired Digestion4
DisOrdered Liver and Female Ailments.
The Salo now oxooOdsiIX MILLION Boxes port Annum*
Promo ow, *7 to Prarleter. TrOeIVIAS �CflAM, �ts Was, onowid.
Said Everywhere in Canada and U. 8. America.
in boxes, 25 cents.
1 I
ho Bolriner
Gramophone
The Best Talking Machine
The most wonderful instrument will sing every kindof song, Comic, Sacred or Senti-
• mental.' Reproduces every instrument or a fall Brass Band or Orobeetra. It will play
Oahe Walk, a Waltz or a reamers lo.u1 enough to dean by. Pelee $15.00 to $40.01). .
old on easy payments if desired. .
$1.00 easa and $2.00 per month•
'Every Gramoseplione is me in Canada and is gold with* WRITTEN GUARAN-
TEE FOR 5 YEARS, 'grate or call for circulars it catalognea. Sold by .
C. 110A,R,E. Agent for Clinton
Manufaetured by E. 13erliner. lefontreas. ' •••
33-14-ggiesilivaggoilit
•
Do you want a -high grade Buggy or Wagon ?
. We have the Street stock to select from. All the latest styles in thernew-
est colors. Our prices are as low as can be found for first-class materiel
and workmansbin. Before you buy call and see no, '
We also handle the Canadian Steel Field Fence, alrestly woven, any farMererto
erect from 60 to 80 rode per day1 ites a cheap strong fence. •
Geo. Lavis,.. Isaac, Street Clinton.
• .. NEXT DOOR -TO yew BOA OFFIOni•
Elipry, Farmer Should, Use
FORMALDEHYDE
. .
• The best known remedy for Smut on. Oats, .Barley,
Wheat or Corn. • • •
We CEI.;ff give you testimonials from 411:the leading
farmers of this section who used our Formaldehyde
last year, Fallinstructions given' with each bottle.
Use Combe's "Standard Formaldehyde"
COiVi8E, Chemist at Druggist
•
Reduction in Prices
Here is a great chamie to seaumeit firtiCenasepiiggy at*, big :reduction,
these ;nicest-, •
$80 Beggnes$f6or50.geniegglietIi5or le6gogiei.!er $15
Remember these small onr own mekeewhiels places' us in a position to guarante
them, as *redo not. buy any material but what itt Best class.
• •
• dRepairing promptly ateendedeo. by experienced men.
KIMBALL At 11c1111TH. - Huron Street. dint,
Clinton .ffasii,Toor, and
Blind Factory..
S S. COOPER PROPRIETOR,
General Builder and Contractor..
This. :factory itt the largest in he eounty, and bag the verylateet improved MS-.
&beery, capable of doing work on the shortest notice. We carry an extensive
and reliable stook tine prepared pleas and give estimatee for and build all date -
se of buildinge en short notice and on the closest prime Ail work is snpervl*.
e4zn e meobanioal-way and satisfation guatenteed. We aell all kinds of in-
terior and exteriorrneterial•
Lumber Lath Shingles Lime Sash Doors Blinds,. Etc
• Agent for the -Celebrated e G-RAY3I14f FiCE(00I4 OESK, manufilotured
ft* Waterloo. Ciall and get erica and °attendee before plaoing vour orders'
I I I
1.
FOr—the rairtrideirliatralinagt
• and comprises all the new materials
Waist materials in
• French Flannels
Finnetlaines, Etc..
A special line, of Fancy Striped' 131aok
" Silks for waists at tiOe'yard.
Co.AFre
,
eoiskT
°WAY
Wik0 )108 MOV4`41 hit% stock of TWEEDS
to tho Searle Block*
, le on givi ng 26% diseettnt off all his Tweeds.
Now is the titue to gi:st a good cheap tailor-made
suit, a • ti
1
50percent. Discount