HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1902-10-31, Page 7„ •
The Mpg of
”' EMIL'S tiArrY Triouctrr "
TUdayhas gone past
vvhett a wise woman
Will pnt ttp with an inferior
cooking apparattts. She has
heard of
The
**Happy
Thought"
4'ir
Range,
....—'
1 s.-- -.-
:
i.
The CorregOted Oven
and her neighbors tell her what it Will do,
If by chance you do not know the merits of The Happy
Thought'' you owe it to yoiirself to investigate. See the Range,
look into the firebox and flues, weigh the covers, note the patented
&rapers, the ventilated, illuminated oven, the corrugated oven plates,
and all the different features that make this Range so different and
as superior,
You don't know true household comfort if you don't know
The " Halt& Thought" 'Range.
, Write tf.leManr1f&ChireTS for Illustrated Cotottogue.
Tfwe n DucSTOVt dO.,112114Trozii
1.4:4:ND ...13-RQS. • _
' 4
THE CLINTON NEW ERA
d
atron deternunation. Peet truants
,
not discouraged by rebuff, betook itself •
to prayer, to fervid, passionate implore,.
tiom at the very footstool of God, call,
hie upon Him "lo very truth° for help
and guidance for the one SQ wilfully
blind. After forty-eight hour!), wlien
the object oi so numb loving thought
vas again encountered the latter 4,beer.
fully vouchsafed the e.s.onisinirg in•
formation that the idea had come to
bint of consulting voluntarily another
friend, a wise and almost forgotten one,
and the advice then received had sway-
ed him to heed the remenstrancee and
warnings so long discarded. Must we
not think that that passionate prayer,
unknown to its subject, is entitled to
some share in the sudden retreat inane
by uncompromising obstinacy and the
Unit:eked, for recourse to the one earth.
ly influence that mrprisingly: could
. sway him ? Tide is only one mance,
quoted because recent in ;; the writer'e
. Mind. Every earnest observer can
count up numerous similar ones, and
were he able to read the heart expert-
ence of his neighbors instance would
add themselves to ins.ances oftesponse
to prayer, until the accumulated ma,
Toronto apple buyers say that the
erop throughout the Province is turning
out much better than it promised earlier
In the season. Not only is it larger. •
but the quality of the fruit has improv,
ed, the fungus noticeable in the early
autumn has pretty generally disappear,-
ed, and the Apples have tilled out well,
;without serious blemish.
were n despair, when one loving heart, WA to Farm loiters, We Have the litotes,
A Belgium, family, all motphia-trinni.
itihs, have applied to the Paris polio for
r ief. They were so ied by the
besott
' habit that
• _ • .they lost Ali nclination to
work and not having inoney to buy
HE FI ABIT , the narcotic, were in great dletress.
"You are looking well," said the street
log to the goat. "Plenty of fodder for
you now that the billboards are filled
With theatrical posters, eh 1"
"Yes," replied the goat, ,"but 1 have
not begun on them. I've been devoting
. ray attention to the new cereal foods."
"Those patent things? Why, I
"•
IugNolitt—l"he foods; the boxes'. . More nu-
triment in them 1" -Cincinnati Tribune.
Tess -He used to take me to the
The Boer visitors lunched with Lord
-; Minto at Rideau Hall, on Wednesday
MUSOULA.11 RHEUMATISM
Widsinsen, Stratford. On, says t "ft
affords ma much pleasure to say that I 68-
, Verienced great relief from Musoular Rhen
matient by using two boxes of Milburn's
Itheuniatio;Pille." Price 500. a box.
aitiyor Hendrie, Hamilton, has received
• .$5,000 from, an unknown philanthropist for
oity cbari$ieo.
_ There is nothing harsh' &bent LaitaLiver
They cure Corietipation,Dyspepsia,
, filok Headache and Bilious bgells without
griping, purging or sickening. Price 25o.
rhe Scotch machinists employed. at the
.
Kingston l000motive worksare bringing
their families out.
• SPRAINED ARM
,
',„,Mary Ovington.Jasperphi,writes "MY
mother -had a badly aprained arm. Lq.othing
we need did he any good. ''.ehen.fither got
Ilagyard's Yellow Oil and it oured mother's
arra in a few days. Price 25%. .
.Graduates of Normal schools -mord
now take a course in domestic science
All.may not be required to teach it.
but the Minister probably intends to
Make sure that the future, husbands of
sthool teachers will be able to count On
their wives tieing ahleto assume house
Wifely duties with a confidence born of
thorough grounding in the work. Take
'•'11E13 GOT IT RIGHT IN THE HEAD,
• • ••• That's Where Catarrh alwaye.stiaks,, Lin-
; til it strikes down into the lungs, then its
-• consumption. Stimraer is comipg, that's
flare to cure catarrh. The weather,
• me, dry air are all favorable. Cat-
aerh will not cure itself. The favorable
conditions above mentioned enahle Catarrh -
• to do iti work in one quarter of
time. It always oureii, but cures. more
'quiekly now than at any other..season. of
- the year. 'Yetir druggist or again will tell
.; • -- ,you.ethat a_golid thing (latarrhozeue is. 25e
and$1.
I
. • Geo. Wiee,a leader Of the anti -Ritual '
• PartY,i LbeettiOol. was hound over -to
• keen-V.1h peace for six months.
To Oure, a Cold in eni Day.,
.Taketaxative ,Bronio Quinine 'Tablets
OF PRAYER.
• Int•F DE'SOLA MENDES,
• Rabbi at the "Gates of Prayer
• (West End Synagogue), New
•t•• York.
%Al
The Lord Is near to those who call upou
aim to those w_htcall upon Ulm in' very
truth.-Psaints, caiv.
thed„,,tre eyery other so, This is -a word tothe young, based -up.'
evening or
one evening when we were sittingbin
on the discerning experience of all who . the. parlor I foolishly allowed him to
have attained middle' age at least; great- kiss ma.
less -I -What . :
ea' years but increase the range of ;Mr hasthat to do with the
theatre? •
servation and confirin the resulte atreadti now he Wants to tit in the
furnished. • . nailer all the ,time.-Phillidelphia Press..
As years add themselves. .to years * -
various •generalized fade stand Out • ..
.
prominently. ,,before him or her
who •reviewes the : past; ' 'we '! call 1 BUriiiiig,:itehing •
the statement . of them. experiene4 • . ' 'ma. • ' _..... - •,.• • .
Theis, from the various 'tete of kindness.' ' ,' ' *tinging ries:
received from relatives or friends we sen.. :::::, ‘
. ,
, . .
eralize Omit the blessed effecti', of If people- could onlysealize the 'virtue of
friendehip "in...purifying our, ambitions; Dr. Chase's Ointment they would not suffer
strengthening our best endeavors and - long with piles, ..
, . Mr. W. H. Whitebait. 'a : well-known
making life not So. harsh a struggle as _ and • respected •'citizen, . of •Cobourg, • Ont..
men's -selfishness would make it. Gen, ' states :-."Having. used Dr. Chase's Oint- -
I .
vereely, from repeated exhibitions by; the, i ment • for piles. I can teatify: to its great
value, . The sliftering • which I endured .
"reptiles of the Mimeo race" of •the de, ' from the. burning, itching, stinting aen.
n
ptavity and • raven e.se- to which • ,they on of piles Was something stwhil, and
th t th is hotbin hi this world
sometimes surrender . themselves, we , to eq Dr.' Chase's Ointment at a Aura -
r • der -eau egi a ere g
forni our ' general • opinion of the dant for this dreadful disease... I tried a great.
•• •ti Many remediet and never •goi More than •
•:_g.f...3 t'Ll?!_!9 q're.4friurt suc...._231...2,r4.2..e,..‘r'.•..: ..sligl2t. relief irom .anyaittheni.?.-.But while.;
•
verts as semTtiines7iiiii elbows with :tte T. Chase's Oletment brought quick relief. -
.All &Is rebind the money Jr/ it fail
t . W. Grave's signature is on
The School Dentists' Society of.Grest
- -•••••••• Britain is endeavouring to arouse the
t•,, •
interest ef teachers in the teeth of the
childteralo. • '
Mrs Fred Leine, St.Geotge,Ont, writes:
little gin would cough so at night that
' neither she nor 't could get any rest. I gave
. her Dr Wood's Norway Pine Syrup and am
thankful to say it mired her cough quickly.'"
• Timbridae Town Council decid-
ed notto apply to Andrew Carnegie
far help In establishing a 'free library.
Milug.perlingHeaaaoho Powdersgive
- ,
t relief from' Monthly pains
act efter effects•Whetever, Be
Milburn% ,Ptipe,109 and ?so,
••-..T.port Lieutenant -General
eta i•etter distributed war medals
to the cre it the Loyal North Lanca-
shire Re„ Qt1t..
fIRN LIGHTNING
' That's Pu • ;21's Corn Extraotor. Gives
come timan'eeling in about twenty-four
inane. . consequently get out ite they
,oitunot keep np, to the pain any longer -
mikes them weary -it's Pritnatne Painless
Corn Extractor that does this. Now don't
forget, All druggists. .
'King Oscar's award in regard to the
settlement of the Samoan claims has
not yet been received by the . British
Government. •
' WHY WAIT, ,
. • ;if suffering from pain but go at once to any
drug attire and toy it bottle of Nerviline,the
' great pain cure. Never fade to give ininted.
Nerviline is composed of the
Most ItOwerica pain aubduing substances
ktowit. is endoreed by medical
, then everywhere,„ Dont wait a gin& hour
without trying Natviime. The best medi-
cine in the world to keep in the house in an
--inziergencyr-tilituggiets-eyerywhere.;-----
,
The entouted drought in South earn Lan-
Asiebire is causing no little apprehension
Liget many mill and foundry owners.
re Fred Leine, St. George,Ont„writes
"Iffy little girl would cough so at nightthat
neither elle nor X .00tila get any rest, I gave
her Dr. 'Wood's Norway Pine Syrup and
ani thankful to say it anted her cough
' quickly."
The partition of Portugal's East African
, poseeinnons between Gertnany and England
a said to he the atiMect of * treaty.
Miller's Worm Powders mike the child
ten healthy. Sold by all druggiate.
The Duke of Devonshire presided at
meeting of aubsoribers to the Derbyahlre
TrensvitelVar,
Be young It le only :mammary to take
Milier's Compound Iron PilIa.to -retain-
youthful appearance and vigor. Sold by all
druggiste.
In the Danish tandething the moms on
the voting for the Sale of the LIAtinsh Wet
Indies were most emiting,
- Some 'tinning meylbe good, bid' Without
doubt Miller's Compound Iron Pills are the
•heat. Sold by ell deuggiata.
,
Incretteed vigor and viVeicitY follow the
• nee °littler's Compound Iron Pills,. Sokl
by 0 druggisin.
• I• Lord Itoberts will be enterteitied • Ai• a
banquet by the Meter Asteoletion in Lon.
• "on 00$, 2801.
on the ntareli of, life or occupy a seat it went further and made:a thorough Cure.
adjoining burs on the scene of our daily . I cannot saY too mtich in reconimeridatio&'
1 of this great remedy."
;Work. Such experiences anent Our fel. i :. This is .the only preparation which ..is
lowqiten are at hand. for all of use and . : positively guaranteed to cure anaprth of .
their generalized lessons,. more or less piles. Ask your neighbors' alien t 6fic, •
'
,,, a common , a box, at all' dealers, or EdMansodi Bates
. :
. & co Toronto.
..
plain to as, are •• desien ted "
experience." . • - ' , ' •
. -: • :
:
s But , there is another range of :ex- ' Dr Chases .
periences-strange to say, equa,10 prain ' • ,. • . , , : ...
• and patent to Li117'which are not so . ' Ointment.
-readily understood- or not so frequent. .
• . • •
ly applied (to our lossaand detriment!) .
as those touching our felloW-mert. .4.:hey
, aro the repeated facts of life, in Con- .
neetion with the Great Spirit, the great •
,
and all -wise God, who has eent ut
hither for a brief stay in accordance
with seine vise plan. pervading the uni-,
Verse. Thus, repeated examples occur
'around us of the pernicious effete of
sin .and vice; 'on a national , scale as '
••tvell as on an individual 'one; and yet
men rarely drati upon their "experi-
ence" for Moderatim or preventive
measures when contemplating just such
error themselves. -That sum of human
experience, that Almighty God loves.
purity and juetica and_has set His all-
powerful ban upon all disregard of this
His laW, is strangely neglected or for.
gotten of men when present opportuni-
ty invites. te ; •
Conversely, teen are foolishly and
ungratefully •oblivious of. the generali-
zations .of experience with God on the
side of His mercy and,. love. Row
counties the instances when Divinity
ihaped our •ends srpooth• that .secined
se rough, rent the clouds- that threat-
ened, dispelled the storms that terri-
fied tte I
But of all the experiences on this
side, those most strangely and detri-
mentally , neglected .tentte around that
factor of human experience to which
the Psehnist alludes, the power of
,prayer. late_Hebrews alwaysivere 5.
prayerful people. In later centuries
they ma good reason to be, but een.
tunes .before Homer had sung of siege
end strife, or. Boman Romulus had
founded. his law -Making city, the. Jew-
ish bard t in the' inimitable Pealter
had sung of Goes nearness to man by.
way of the avenue of prayer, and sung
in terms that 'make their book to -day
the prized prayer .book of civilization's
myriads
This "neatness of God" Is a subject
men and women would do well to ex-
amine, ponder and apply in their own
lives. We hay!, societies for psychic re.
search, collecting Matinees of the in.
fluence of • spirit over matter and of
spirit ansvvering spirit on the human
plane. Is it 'beneath our dignity to
tollect illustrations of spirit hthrianap!
'pealing to divine on 7so much
higher a plane and meeting response
swift and certain t If we eta° out -
Wye to 'think abotit it we can do it
little work of psyehical research in tnis
field ourselves. Many of us know, all
of as have heard, of instances where
true player, "calling 'epee Clod in very
, truth, have met with blessed response
and. not for outselveg alone, ..but for
°there. Let nle • quote ,,an instance
tomIng under my knowledge. A young
friend teemed Inexorably bent upon S
seem fraught with certain and hitta
Inertifiesttion, if not with danger. 12*
niernitrance, warning, requests, loving
fo4reat7 alike $4ttered on hefid.
•
. , •
natvellous results men and women Who
• will .serve Him. •,
floir delightful to exert our choicest
itrength for such a. Master How hon. ,
arable is the ening which Makes; us
tollaborators with' Such a friend! Yes;
we touch • the hand of Him, who moves
• the Worlds. We feel the throbbings of
the heart of the Infinite in fullest synt.
/lathy with all our efforts ' to elevate
,alankind and to save this- world.
Dourage, brother, do' not stumble, , •
Though thy path, be dark as night;
Thews a Star to , guide the humble,-;
Trnat in God and do the right..• -
. •
.
•
Deeirnetion
•There are two classes of weeds --those •
that come from seeds and those which
are propagated principally by =cane cil
their roots. Weeds which spring up
from seeds ean be destroyed by success.
ively bringing the seeds in the sell to
the surface, vihere their germinate. .Tht
See& of some weeds have great vitality
and remain in the soil for *ere: Sonia
are enclosed in clods and are retained
for another season, but when the clods
are broken and the weed seeds exposed
to warmth near the surface, they ara
-put-ont-of-existence-by-;-the-harrow-as-
aeon as they germinate, for tvhich rea.
eon it is ,impossible to clear it piece oi
land from weeds in a season unless every
clod is pulverized. The oft -repeated in.
quiryi 'Front whence come the weeds?"
.may answered; "From the clods."
The weeds that spring from roots are
cut op, checked and prevented from
growing by frequent cultivation, because
they cainiot exist for a great length of
time unless permitted to grow. If no
leave are allovted on such plants they
perith from suffocation, because they
breathe through the agency of the leav.
Ca The advantages derived by the soil'
In the work of weed destruction reduce
the est of warfare on the weeds, /or
every tine the harrow or etiitivator-if
Used the manure is More intiroately min.
ea With the soil, more &ids are broken,
a greater proportion of plant food is
filtered to the rote, the lose of incite
ttire is lessened, • and the capetity of the
Wets Of the crop to secure more toed
is increased, The cost of the destruetion
of 'weeds should not be charged to the
Itiounts of Single year oily, as thin.
Pugh work during a fieasoti rimy °Witty
.lite the weeds entirely, or so reduee thy
number aa to make the cost of their der
ruttion during sueeeeding year e but
trifle,7-Philadelphia Record,
"
pr.. 9..
Tbere alwaye raore inter* in an
pm NE% CELERY election, than there is in a vote taken
upon an abetract (maim, or even on I
• COMPOUND a proposal for an actual change in leg -
!elation: In the year 11398 there were I
The Rome Friend of the Far.1426.446 men ready to go to the polls to 1
mer and Ilia Family in vote for members of the Legislature. 1
',there were only 269,782 who went to
the Autumn Season.
the polls to vote in the prohibition.
PleTilhi es° t e polled in Ontario in the pro.
hibition plebiscite of 1894 was much
larger than the vote paled in the pro,
Whitton .plebiscite in 1898 In the.
f ulna case the voting t enk plece at
mole tircia as the miteiciPal elec-
tion, a large nuinber ot persons were at
the polls tor the Purpose of voting for
municipal councillors, and being there
marked their ballots for or against
Prohibition.
After the labore and toile of the stimmer
time, and harvesting of crops in the early
autumn. rnany of our femme, their Wives,
daughters and sone, find thereelvers in a
oOndition of health demanding (Maul at-
tention Minxes is to be avoided. Many ex.
perience kidney trouble of 'gime form; with
each the liver is torpid; there in bilimuniesSi
nausea and yomitiag, with loss of appetite
and depression of epirite. Thousands who
beve been mond to cold, doom winds and
rains, now feel the twinges of terrible
rheumatiemi nthere rundown by worry,
•overwork and irregular dieting, am tor- . Although the total vote on the pro.
reenter! with the parge of dyepepsia. ibition luestion in ISM WAR smaller .
To hethouliande of rundown, delay and than that of 1894-, the vote of :the liquor
half dead men and women in farm home party was increased. No one imagines
We recommend with all bonesty and mond- that there was any falling off of tent -
atm the worker's friend, Painee ()dory perance sentiment, What, then, SS the
Compound, the only medicine that oan explanation?
quiekly and fully restore etrengtii to the In 1898 the liquor party did more
weak body and vigor to the remotes. . work than in 1894, made a stronger ef-
Paine's Celery Corommod, tones the atom- fort, and polled its full vote. Conditions
aoh; it removes poisonous acids from the of discouragereetits led to it falling ot1
blood -which cause rheumatism; it feeds the : in the vote of the prohibitionists.
weak and diseased nerves, and banishes This means that the liquor party can
neuralgia tortpres; puriliee, the blood and be relied upon to poll its full vote un -
gives true •vitality and life, The use of der any circumstances. If the total
pamets celery Compound in autuinn means vote available is 425,445,and the largest
the establishing of a perfect phyeical vigor vote theliquorparty can bring out is
to withstand the rigors of a severe winter. 115,000,0ten there must be at least 800„-
• 000 Vciters, who will vote fc.r prohibition
if thetevote at all.
Rah This. AnYthing To Re With There is no •doubt that the over-
whelming sentiment of the electors of
' The Bulidip7;2.i Our New
of the Bauer traffic. We can only be
Ontario in in favor of the prohibition •
defeated. by falling to bring out out
There is nothing that WS ktt9w. vote. -The Pioneer. ',,
that will exchethe cariosity so quickly
At the Christian' Endea,YOr Cionven-:
and hold the attention of people SO long,
tion in Ottawa, R. W, Dillon, of the St'
•
as an excavation, They get around and
Marys Argus, spoke on "%he. Church
seethe first load of dirt out in the
and.:.the Netyppaper," as follows :-
morning and the last onneut at night.
Some of them get down itt. the hole and tthiLz.,tit..,....4wIiiginbina.:1,11,:ppceorrRiizhe;
stand in the way of thashovellers and ars should
'llarroWIV escape .being run over by the rpibeuastinteeesesxppreoeptotehtetiorneo. pTieootmo arnuynchtuhrecihr
teams. s Boeses driye them. out add s of eociahr free of Cost. • Church
teamsters swear at them. They bltck- people should have - more resp_ect for
themettives and not ask soinething for
.acle the. sidewalk and. are driven away notbing. '' They could take a leseon• cif,
by the police, but like the cat ,in the the advance agent of a circus in this re -
adage. or the song, they:comeback and Pneoette.xpIettetthicepnaepv!is taosppercitn,tYoloungehroeuilid.
• .
rubber.' . •
. • • • ; : glom articles to the exclusion of netts
They seem to believe that a gold Mine and market -reports any more than a
Christian man to spend his whole time
will be diecoyered or that an lodian:
•
graveyard will be iiimayered Or that 111af:oraePer:pe ret.1:43. :ti ft them .gewy e rvieoi:113
busted treasures will be found, They :be nothing but milk' Lind water . sheets
and abisolutely '• • • •
can't be driven away coaxed away arid , „ . • . • . ,
an invitation to the nearest bibuluizi • , • ; •-;
the only inducement.that . Will budge , .
j• 11).-11NOAL.
. - • •
them. They want to know how deep
you aragoing,and how high • you ate. • • BANKEti'' • . •
• • .
dirt ieheing •ittov- • • •
going and
e•ed Where the .!
I • . CLINTON, ONT..
" The oldeet resident telle who • ilret• :povitie fund ro j-0„; euraior%tgagea 4
built on the lot and When the. •building
."burrit down" end about the •old elm • begi altrent ri#4°‘'
tree that stood. in the lot "back Of • :01.11"bcieip. ,-tr'.11;ispott
the house° and how he came neer buy,. .A•General Banking
ing the lot once himself for $'27 When •nterest allowed .on, deposit.
the old Deacon Somebody •pattured his • salS fflietes bought .•
do* there 'way along about ,18ff when • • .
.1b-Hirtgite-alfhteksnuthshopotionoside
•of it and a tavern on the other and not. to • •e • _ _
;13t atuitons.ly •given' atoitit
ALBERT ST CLINTON
a printing ofike neater than Toronto. • , • ; .
Then a lot of information is cheerful- , • ,. • ' .u.e.at.rumpts
log bY People who could not put up an
• umbrella. They Want to see the plans
and learn the cost. They condemn the A. 13lenerall Banking BiassInestis
' architect and 'cuss the con t ractOrs and , • . trannaoted •
mechanics. • '•• ' ; ' •
•
attraction to a vreat many peeple. •
.1-14'0TES LISCOUNTED' •
A hale in the gadund is an irresistible ;
. Note:Joined. Interest allowed on
' deposite. •
•
Impieirts. front Canada. • ,1.."
THE MoLSoNs BANK
• We note with interest thakaecording
to a bulletin :named by the WaShinaton _Incorporated by Actipathament 1855. -
gOvetiiment, the United States 'during. •*;• • ---- • •
1901,,iinportedlargelY of Canadian live fitAIBITTFALtry• • ••1). • - 845105041
stock. Uncle • Sant imparted from READ 9' rtimE. tatro' NT' BB' AL .
countries 1.46,022,head of cattle, and of
War, lifoLsos theornaasou, Prisitten•
these 50,000 head, or over 83 per cent,. amne Etimagen; manager.
valued at Iff342,462,came from this. etTn- Ittc"ri crisOonnted, collections made, e'afts
tty. : • ' • issued, aterling and American exchange
and. hold. Interest allowed on
as an exporter of cattle to the bought
• depoeits Sainitti Bers:-.Intereet allowed
United States Mexico outclassed Can- eti some of $1 and up. Money advanced to
ada, the Dominion headed the list as a ficaters on their own note, with one or
ore ,
furnisher of horses for the States., an- endorsers, No mortgage required.
ada sent the Republie C3 per cent.of its .11:1•°11 -13relivere,ManoM
imported horsee., The animals number- Metes..
ed 2438 and brought 8830,452. •
Canada last year supplied the States —
with practically all of the 31.188 sheep
areprintsdifroMAhroad. cagy 2000 com-
ing front Other countries. In value
thee sheep ran ap to $1,2C0,000 -
,While upon the subject of United
States imports it may also be mention-
ed that during the first eight months
of 1902 the Republic imported $19,915,.
862 worth of gold,and that no less than
$11,597,2of this came from Canada.
Of course, the 1 ukon was. the chief
contributor, British Columbia also for-
warding ite quota. . .•
• The MOdern Mother
Has Ways si eating tor sehy
---""tifitt-Orn-Grturdintothers—
•
,• Netter Knew
Many . almost' eared' traditione of the
nursory have bcon oast asideby the np to.
date mother. Wen the once eseentiel
oradle is now Seldom found in the house 011.1111.111.11111111.111111111111111111.111t
bleeeed by baby'e presence. The Modern
baby is not fed every . tune he. ono, but
when the clock announce the proper
time.' The doetor approves of thin and
baby hi better for it, but despite regular
honrs for feeding, neatly all the disordere
glen= itife Cr 1 tritel,
St1 WO S. grea es
a by n e ent o
problem is &treatment for thole ills that
Wilt be gentle but effective, And above ell
aide. Mr e 3'. W. -Bailey, of Head Lake,
Ont., writes from ihe Mime of exper.
once when she says: "X have boa .
--Own-TeblettfOr iny--abc-monthe-_old-,baby _
who Wad trtitibled with indigestion, The
• CANVASSER
WANTED,
' to sell PRINTER'S Mi-
ff. journal for advertisers,
published •weekly at five
dollars a year. It teaches
the science -and practice of -
Advertising, and is highly
; esteemed. by the most suc-
cessful 'advertisers In this
country and Great Britain.
Liberal commissi&n'al."-
lowedeArldress PRINTERS
INE, 10 Spruce St, New
York.
reaulte Were beyond my expeotations.
Words (moot convey to those who have
not fined them the worth Of„theee Tablets.
will, never again nee any other pteptira.
Lion for the baby, an I am eonyinced thee
is nothing so good BO iieby'e Own Tablets."
. Them Tablets are a getitO laxative And
comforting mediate for 'infante and
children. They are pleaaant to take and
are gnerented 10 oontain no opiate. If
your druggiat does not keep Baby's Own
Tablets -send .25e to the Dr Willitonti
Medicine 00„ Brookville, Ont., or
rilehisnerdedY, N. Y., and it full 'deed bent
Will he mallod, poet paid, to your Wares*
"
Central
Meat Market
;Halting purobaued the btitohering
business of It, E. Powell 1 am 'pre.
pared to furnialt the people of Olin
...ton with all kinds' -of -,Frealt-anat.
Cared Ideate, Semi -age, bolognal
lard, better ma eggs alwAye kept on
herd,
R . Fitzsimons tt Son.
TeIphone 76.
Order S delivered preetptly
parte of the town.
ii,130.10ersons having hogs for
Whipnienti will confer it 'WOO by
leaving word M the ehep.
0
0
c•
•
'
'GOOD BO
a
0
October 814,1902
.cr
•
•
4!'CoCEHPA
,e4 !,4
•„,.
rgolopiat
MEL__
WOW C*11/6fti11J6•
Alga* Pitatf
. -
woo
0 r
locos
ogle*
maliauni"e'''an'sp510" -.)41/S
aitaTiti;
"THE PERFECT.F000"
THE
SIGN
OF
THE
PERFECT
FOOD '
TASTES GOOD
• BECAUSE
IT IS
• GOOD
• ;MAIN and MUSCLE
iude front Canadian grown wheat. by Canadian woricrnen.
•„ • in the eit.r etTorontch Canada. • •
LTA• - Vtiet;rit is goqd.1,,oarcl.for,al. 1 rnankin.d...w.,. ,Relis, ed..4011tby old and
sickyoung,
or
MALTA-trrA...is the original and only pada*, reeked, therotigidY
malted, flaked, andtoasted whole wheat toad; •-
MALTA -VITA is the nerfect food ; perfect in taste, perfectly cooked
and malted; perfect because MALTA -VITA contains all of the elementa
necessary to sustain life and invigorate mind and body. Perfect bealth,
sound, restful sleep, clear complexion . bright eyes, clean, white teeth,
• sweet breath:are the blessinga that follow a regular diet of MALTA-
• A week's trial of ML.TA. •Aasa diet for breakfast ',and” slipper
will convince the most ggeptical of the Superior merits of MALTA -VITA.
Beware OE imitations 'haat on getting MALTA -VITA, - "The Per.
feet Food."Requires no Cooking, always ready to eat. -•
. .
For sae by grocers. • •
IVIALTtrvyliTA PORE FOOD Co.
ant.s:s. mt:11
., Calaa
„ .
onous
argain Even
A royal time for those who need or Who will need
-clothing. - Men's Suits, • Boys' Suits, Men's
Boys' Overcoats,. Men's/Pants, Boys' Pants. .
Our Whole Clothing Stock will be offered
at a special, discount of 20 per tent
The object of this sale is ..to sell out this season's
clothing before our new goods arrive. We never.
carry one teason's goods into the. next Season. All
goods charged during this Ode will, be charged at
regular prices. Positively no goods charged, at sale
prices Our croods ftre ma,r1Ted in plain figures --
deduct 20 per cent and that will be the selling price
for cash only during the sale. ,
. ,
Men's Suits.
. Men's 5.00. suiti now •,.. : .....0; i. . 4.00 :
Men.'s 6 00 ' a " oo...........
. ' ' . .. 480 '
. :
Men's 8 00 • ". "" . • - 6 10
•
Men'S 10'00 "•
" '
•••••••• i. .• • • 1.1 .•a, 60 -
„.•
, .
Men's12 00. " . ".••tei•••••• ' . .6 ' ' 960
. ..A
Boys Suits
. . ..
Boys 1 50 SIIIES now • . • •11•••••••••••! 1'20
Boys' 200 " " •••••••••• 00000 .. 1 60
Boys' 250 " ‘o . .,.., .........,.... 200 .
Boys' '3 00- :" " . ....„. • . ;......• • .... 240
Boys' 400 ". i
. I' : ei.4.:•••;i, o • oo ....o.. 8.20- .
Boys' 5 00 " 4g • . . . • ..... . a . . . ; • ., 400 "
. Boys' odd panti i;;Ceoroleau; oo o ii 000 ••'el 40
Men's Overcoats
Men's 500 Overcoats now 4 00
•Men's 6 00 " •
4 80
Men'sr8 00 • "• " • • 6 •
•
40
Zemin:se 1102 0000, . . • o o 9 •
60
BOYS' OVEIZOOATS end Pea Jackets reduced
in same proportion. •
All fur goods at absolute cost—Fur Caps, Coats,
Cellars) Gloves, Mitts and Heavy Underclothing.'
Thos. Jackson, Sr.,
victorit. Block, •eLimarem
WARMARAM PAM MWMMM
.11OLLOVITAT--
Who lia4 itiotrptiligegrkititi;rittranos
Is still givinig 5% discount off all kr Tweeds.
Now is thq\ time to get a good cheap tailor-made
suit. • •
.Discount •