HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1902-11-28, Page 7• ,
DYSPEPSIA OF WOMEN* Largesr $urgical Fee Ever rani.
;
Mrs. 13. ,E, B. Bradshaw, of
.00thrie, Okla., cored of a severe
case by Lydia B, Pinkham's
•Vegetable Compound.
A great marijr women suffer with a
Sorra of indigestien. or dyspepsia which
!does not seem to yield to ordinary
medical treatment. 'While the syrap-
, '•° toms seem to be elmilar to those of
ordinerY indigestion, yet the medie
. clues universally prescribed do not
#300M to restore the patient's. normal
condition.
•• - Mrs, Phikliam. claims that there
' a kind of dyspepsia that Is caused
• by derangement. of the female organ-
% and which, while it causes dis-
turbance similar to ordinary indiges-
tion, cannot be relieved without a
medicine which not only acts as a
stomach tonic, but has peculiar uterine-
• ionic effects as well.
"` Thousands of testimonial let-
tera ptfirre beyond question that
nothing will relieve this distress-
ing condition so Surely as Lydia
11 rinkbam's Vegetable Com-
pound, It always works in har-
mony
s • with n fa!: mill•Ilev ties: ejsZt
women free, Address Lynn, Mass.
a Livable." .
add Mrs. Ferran, decidedly,
nfilly Morris is a nide girl dear
through, and if anybody ought to get
along easy with a tryin' mother-indeavs
she sught. A •merre livable person
• Sieves' Itnewir .
"Livable?" repeated her listener. "Live
Ole? That must he a local word. I'
don't think I ever heard it before."
• "It may be "coat" rejoined Mrs. Far:,
ren, a trifle loftily, "and it may be bad,
. and it may be good; but anyway it's• ,
just. what I mean. 3/filly's livable. She's
been brought up in a big family, and inlet*
had to be, if sho meant to be eoinfort;
able herself and let other folks be cone
forte:We, too. There wore more nimble.
.. folks when I wan a girl than there are
' now, and I think th„e big nad a
- good deal te do with it, though of .eduree
not everything.
"There were plenty of people then who
never got their corners worn' down, no
tnatter how toasty . brothers arid sisters,
they had; but even 'when they rasped,
those days, they got along together after
fashion. Nowadays, land! Sometimes
It etunips me fair and scniare why the
Idee people I know in 'nice families. can't
; seem to stand each other's little ways. .
"Oh, I don't afty it isn't. so; when the'
; -.doctors my they can't—and it generally
: ends' in doctors-awhy, I suppose they
-truly can't. It's. nerves, and nobody mo
neretands nerves. 'unless the doctore, and
nix a long_ wan from being sure that,
they do. But just you count un acme
thim the families' where . there's always
sine member mysteriously off eisiting, and
then the number of folks you know. that
separate *lien they'd naturally stay to-
gether, if only they could hit At off—
Ione sisters and only -surviving 'bachelor
tiro -there,- and tnothers and only daugh-
ters, and all sorts of family remnants.
that °tight to be ea& other's 'best com-
• fort. But as soon to they try living to-
getber, one of 'era .get,s nervous prostra-
•don; in• leas hysteric spells', or is ordered
off.quiek to travel somewhere Where the
climate doesn't agree with the other .one.
. They're fond enough of each Other, gen-
- -•• • aridly, and they aren't generally • ugly-
, •'• tempered; they just aren't.
• "It can't be endured always and it
' want be cured, sometimes; bet I'm flan
. In believing 'it eetild be prevented most
•tiPM:a. If, When folks first began to
"herden in their awn little ciankums, and
fret over the cranks of the ,,folks they
•- 'carer -most for, -they'd Istop-Jands- think
' "where they were getting to, Why, nind
• thnes out of ten -they'd pull up in time,
and get their nerves and feelings arid
• foolish. frettings tight in hand before
• they run away with. 'emi
• "Yes, that's -what surely do believe.
And outside the great, big, deep founds:,
tion virtues; if 1 bad a daughter, the .
little vintve—if if is a little .virtue -s -I'd
rather have her baize than any other
• would be just that-4cing It's
• . an all-round, lifelong blessing to whoniso-
' ever it concerns."' '
• "It may be good or it may be bad or
..„,„;.• it may be local," assented tlfe listener,
• --thenihtrufly, •thiir-vtlintevir ;W -tis -A-7
Worst livable is tr good thing 'to be. PH
own
ABSOLUTE.
•
• J. Ogden Armour a Chicago re-
• cently persuaded Dr. Adolf Lorena
olio of the world's most famous
surgeons, to come to Ameriets, to
perform an operation on tni mil-
licuedrea little daughter, Lolita. Some
children are so neinelcy los to be
born with their hip -joint out of its sock-
et. Of course unless the joint can be
put hi place such -children are cruelly
crippled for life. Tins miefortune had
happened to the little daughter of MT.
Armour. By orthopaedic surgery, with-
out the elte4ding of blood, and by the
use of hands and instruments that will
move the dislocated bones and einem
into their proper place, Dr. Lorenz halt
effeeted many curesof such aloes. After
operating successfully, on the little Ar-
nim girl, a service •for which he is said
to have received 'a feeof one hundred
tlioucancl do11ars,.Vhs largest f000n
cord for o single operation, Dr. Ioreris
gave es, demonstration at the College of
Physicians and Surgeons, Ohicago, where,
with eight hundred doctors and students
looking at him, he 41d for nine afflicted
children the same service he had done
Lor Mr. Armour's child, The nowspa•per
account of how he did it deecribee the
unconscious child ;brought to hhu, the
"large projection at the hip -joint caused
by the head of the dislocated feinue"
and the corresponding depression in the
Vein, "deep and discolored, with the
surrounding flesh shrunken and -unripe
tural in appeerance,"- showing where the
head of the bone belonged. Then the
despatch says.
"The surgeon took the leg in his hands,
drew it up at right angles to the nody,
and, hot nig it, paused' to my; 'The
nuunipulations 1 gm about to meloinight
with ease break the bones of the leg. It
Le not necessary to break bones, how-
ever. It is only. necessary to know now
to handle them? A aeries of rapid, deft
turns twists and pulls followed. Sud-
denly the surgeon paused. He held the
leg in cme hand and pointed with the oth-
er to the spot where the dislocation had
been So • apparent. The spectators then
saw the culminating point of the opera -
Eton. The ugly protrusion was gone; tbe
depression beside it was gene too, and
except. for the discoloration of the Reale
the satire hip appeared like the other.
The eight hundred onloojcers brelaskout
in applause. No knife had been used.
nothing had been done, as was formerly
' believed indispensable to PrePFP t,111
sooket for the presence of the dislocate
femur. Knowledge,. skill, a certain
amount of daring and precision of move-
ment, which showed a knowledge te a
hair's-breadth of how far to movss and
twiat, had wrought what medical men
say will be IC cure. It had taken five
mints 1.00.-0
•
1
•
a
TELL
CO
itS.T
•
Of the rave of a healthful woman with
the face of one who is sick proves that
quite .often a sad face is a siek face.
Many a woman has credit for a sunny
disposition who would soon be sad of
face and irritable of temper if she had to
endure the womanly ills which many of
her sex have borne for years,
Dr. Fieree's Favorite Prescription
cures the diseases which are the source
ofso h p ern g o women.
It establishes regularity, dries debilitate
ing draine, heals inflammation and ul-
ceration and cures female weakness,
We. corsage neutron, or cannon, Boyd Co.,
Icy.. writes: "In October t889 live birth to a
babds
of t4e mildwife lett Inc with feauing eat e ettatig i
I nad no satin to speak of for three r .
• had another baby which was the third child. MY
healtb began to fail and found myself corn-
mtgYm;Tfiri:;It'a imiggnst%me and also to all
many pains and
the family, for Xs was nervous and, cross and I
could ot II doclors COflIC to 555
me but ;Wiest found I was shn ly dying. The
doctors said I had liver, lung andvuterine trouble.
-I was in bed for mouths and when I did get up I
-was a sight to behold. looked like a corpse
'walking about. r ceinmencee to take Doctor
Pierce's Favorite Prescription,'G I Id I
t,eneve? tentte gen
Discovery'and
have been a well wecinalean. I have suffered all a
w man could suffer at my monthly period until
since began the pse of Dr. Pierces tnedicines,
but now I can say I bare no pain, The dark
circles around my eyes are going away and I feel
better in every way. My cheeks are red and my
skin is white, but before it was as yellow as
saffron."
Accept no substitute for n Favorite Pre-
scription" there is nothing just as good
for weak and sick women. "•
• Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are easy
and .pleasant to take. • A most effective .
laxative. '
tra r hal*
41444.14.411
A
There is an old story of a eallor Who,
seeing for the first time e bass viol, ex-
preseed a strong desire to behold "the
fellow who rould put that fiddle under
hie chin." The ressent disseovece inMada-
gascar of on egg sixteen belie* long and
thirty pounds in weight led to.a
anxiety on the part of the diseoverera
to find the bird which woe eapable of
laying. it. The monster egg was ac-,
quired by a German scientist, who recog-
nize&t it as -the egg a the itepyorms,
bird of the aetounding height of sixteen
feet, and supposed to be extinct. That
there may be epecimens still living was
judged by the fact that the egg was
fairly fresh. Indeed, some of the scien•
tine enthusiasts on the island actually
held a banquet at which a portion of
the vgg was served up in the form of all
omelette! (The whole egg, by the way)
would have neale.ninety-flve•omelettesof
ordinary ize.)
As a result of the discovery a German
scientific expedition has 'been fitted out
to explore the interior of Aladegafrear in
search of a livthg aep3 ornis. If it is
found and captured there will be ereex.
citing time, not only for the hunters, but
for naturalists throughout the **anti. It
is the tersest bird that ever existed -
His Secret.
14.449.44.4.
Student—How would you advise me
to go about collecting a library? Pro-
fessor—Well, I'll tell you how I man-
aged it. When was young I bought
• books and lent them Now I borrow'
books d, k .
- -
Friend—Why, eolonel, what's the mat
to with your .han4? Colonel—Confound-
ed nuisance, sirr, Had a little birthday
-party last night, end $0111a idiot get
drunk and trod on my hand as he was
walking across the rcrom. sir.
Sir Henry Irving's Speeches.
Sir Menry Irving has won a Teat re.
The Sign of the Stork. •
--:— •
In certain town in Norway the fig-
ure of a stork appears on the church
and over many of the house*. Tour-
ists who go there often, find on sale on
every :hand images of the stork in silver
and gilt; or earved in wood. The story
of the origin of this sign of the stork is
unusual and moat interesting. The hero
of the tale is Coniatd Jonassen, whose
name will be forever associated with, the
stork. • •
•Many years ago! when Conrad was a
stork 43 fititsthef f
puts.tion as an after-dinner apex er, but,
according to Harry Furniss, his speeches
are parefully prepared- and printed in
very large block type, easily read at a
. distance, Herein lies the triumph of the
actor. These slips are artfully Placed
on the table, out of eight of the ,audi-
ence; and while one of the speaker's
lotpeenedosh,rests artistically on his hip, the
as they are read. So perfectly is this
acted, so grace y docs d body sway,
other toys with a fruit -knife, and with
it psiges of the speech are turned' over
and so welttimed are the palms in thei
that only those seated in close
proximity to Sir Henry are aware he is
!say, a u ne on roof o • n
the houese. Conrad and his mother fed•
the bird, and go. encouraged its return. .
reading is speech. •
I ti th bo t 0 da
the ship fell into the hands of pirates,
-and Conrad, with his oshiprnates, was sold
into slavery in Africa.•
Hardships and indig,nitita of all eorte
were haled upon them for three years.
n rae e y wen to sea. ne y
. .••
, • • • •
YOU NEED NOT
DE AFRAID TO
romorsiUSEemomor
.IRONtOX
. TABLETS,
'Avery day Of, your
life, as an aid to di; -
gestion, as a gentle
laxativeior is a ton- ,
• lc for the nerves.
They axe AftecIutely Stale.
• They .re Invariably
Effective. •
SO TABLETS
. FOR 25 CTS.
, Oa aii English 'Tramcar. •
The Unmet -conductor was not '
good humor. Someone bad passed a ban
sixpence upon him, and that accounted
for his starting the ear before the three
women an a child were fairly aboard. •
• Oneof the women was savage at being
dumped without warning into a seat;
• the conductor saw that as he started to .
colleet their fare, but he Was savage, too.
"Madam," he said, as she tendered her
fare, "this _child that is with you Will•
-
Ono day onrad saw a stork flying about
overhead, and wee filled :with -homesick
lonings. He whistled tciothe bird sue he
fisd to do at home, and to his delight
the stork frame near, and finally alighted,
sacs if expeoting to be fed. .
• Ife had nothing to give the bird tben,
'but the. next day Inc saved a pert of his
breakfast, . hoping that tbe ato.TIC would
conic* again. It did, and for several days
continued to come.
At length it eccurred to"%the homesick
'slants that the stork would •soon be fly-
ing north 'again, and like an. inspiration
came tne thought that by means of the
bird Inc could mud a message which might
nnswihlY fall into the•hands of friends.
He wrote a few lines 'on a'hit.of tough
paper and bound it fast to the stork's
leg A few days later the 'bird disap:
.'PeOarillciey Jon. aasen naked the
stork, Which had returned again to its
nest on the roof, picking at something -on
its leg. She fed the bird, caught it and
removed the bit of paper.. raney the
mother's feelings when she found it to be
•,t Message from her own.son, long since
• gleen up -for kat!
It would be too* long.a story .to tell of
the interest of the pariah, of the ntoney
raised,•the expedition sent to reseite (Jon -
rad and his nintes. All this took place,
however, and Conrad jonassen. came
home. In alter years Inc became a rich
man, and did much for the welfare of his
. native town. The stork was neiter
• gotten, and it is' small wonder that
ecame.ithe .emblem of the. Norweg'
• •
marc to be•.at 101 flS wc117
eLeyaientelie.....eLOttnt ........................
iPfits sneneit °fen answered the
'Then.' shallpu _rope.
.conductor, retie ng, or tho
"You don't dare," fleshed the woman
. ing e ten Ite or roue, CaT.
to a stop,' picked up the -child and de. •
posited. .it upon the .etreet and rang ' to _
ge ahead. • . m
"Madeira" Inc said grimly, yon w
find your child bank there on the ems
oison-
• I • In , the •Blood brings
r.Humors. and 13611S; -Salt
•Th "-A j
Jule= ..saczerna gnu
1 • /
Scrofula,
,
WEAVER'S
. .-
ner.
•
1
yspeps a an
• • • Head Trouble •
. . •
,., " •
Mr. George Webber, St. George Street
• Chatham, Ont., states:—" I was very ner-
vous, trembled some with my heart and
' b sufferedagreat deal from nervous dyspepsia
' and indigestion. Dr. Chase's, NerveFood
• has proven a thorough cure in my owe.
After having used it for some time I am
pleased to say that I am entirely restored -
to health. The indigetition • does not
trouble me my • nerves ark. strong and
vigorous wild the action of my heart i*
regular." •
. Dyspepsia and heart tronbl^ freeneutlY
.gotiand in 'hand. When the blood is.
thin and watery and the nerves are .Weak
'and exhausted, every organ in•theshody is
liable to get slovr anctuncertain in action.
•Dr. Chase's Nerve Food is the Most pew,' •
erful blood -builder and nerve restorative
that medical science has ever devised. It -
curse thoroughly and permanently by
restoring the whole system to health and
vigor. so:cents a boy, at all dealers. or
' Edmatismi, 13ates,& ToroSto.. •
''' •
• •
1 .
"aly .child?" eriopped the Woman. "It •. I SYRUP
Isn't lime!" . • 1 ••
"Whose is it, then?" gasped the COA •• i tv,'.‹,;-:•r.,•5 z,-,••
. - •
iten'itlie_slighteaf. tdpa:Lthe_an_,:c1A4,111 cure' them perma- .
nently by purifying the 1
swered eeolly. a -a ---
engaged. in an exciting discussion with •' ' . • '
. Tlien the ehild's mother who had bees . i 1 . •
a
her friend over the mente of a newa
. gown, awoke to the feet that lier child
Was missing, and then Me fireworks tut
played around the unfortunate cenclhe
,teea bead reminded him of a, Oryntal, :
•Palane display.—"Plek-Me-Up."
Timis Ilia Squeal
•
• NERVO
despondence moml or weak unueelthe name, ere r sponsinie tor more staltnestiese
_ ssacring teen slay other disease. If you have e secret erain-trent slaty abuse, liter ex-
tesses or exposure, you cannot expect bealthy nerves rattle your vitelity Winans wasted.
I Do not elm out a miserable existence on account of your folliei,. you are not safe until
ourea-uature never excuses -no =eater bow loupe, °la or Janette)* one mita Do.
Humor i etrdly the quelity one et.
peets to fled on the editorial page of the
tanelon "The," yet it gives a zrioet cf
fact -ie turn to a plea for the restriction
of the advertising bill -board nuisanee.
'Let as think," rave the "Times," "of the
• .
opening of Gray's 'Bleat'
The :curfew tolls the knell of parting
• day!
!. The lowiug beal winds slowly o'er the
rhe plowman homeward plods his weary
way,
And leaves the woild to darkness And
to ma,
4 and consider whether such lines could
ever have. bem, written if the poet, mus-
t ing in Stoke rogis churchyard, he4
• looked in one direction and seen the low.
leg need manning -east aarebody's adver.
tisement of a patent oiteake; in Another,
and seen the weer*, plowman eonsiderine
whether he should buy some gaudily
flaunted nostrum warranted. to ease his
weariness; in a third, and spied some
garish hoard offering bint art oil to u•
aminate the glimmering landscape an it
eileded on his eight."
Dr. Chase's' -
Nerve Food
. Immoral Plays. - •
'Commentinn tlic immorality of Fin- •
. .; .
exert new play, `Ins,":-Whioh has just
keen produced 111 New•Yeris Virginif:
Harned„ Wilhelm Winter stays; • . '
."It is alarays .'eartenuatiori of
the offense of drIumns of this hind; that
they teach ca, lesson.' Perhaps they do,.
-But it is invariably a bite and triviai
ilas,sen' and completely superfluons.
will burn. . Be virtuous and you will b,
happy. Twice two is four. " That is the
subatenee. fleeeenes .the want
of the Prophet—Figse• ::11either'resin-rios•
ivoman needs to he warned hgainst a life
of vice and shame. Neither man nor wo-
. limn not naturally unchaste, needs any
• enlightenment tie 'to the importance . of
chastity. '.And, as a matter of fast, dra.
nuts of the .kind are not preseeted froin
any morel: impulse or with any ethical
purpose. They can easily; be made, for the
. reason that 'love is • their •
invariable theme—in ,its motion. and ie.
n otion upon human charaeter, in the ex,
isting environinenti readily oper••
atea so --its to-. create effective. dranertle
'situations; and these dt•mmas .are tunde .
sommonly impress the• amiable • Multi-
,. India and aro, therefore, remunerative. in
.13100.
cal effect is to fill the mind of the ob-
i ni?'1.1:t
I of thenn sir ever will. Their only practi. •
speetator ever profited by any one
•
I server with. images of immoral eliaradter
'and pietetres of lieeritions life; to set the
• bavia&Lawreneiy Co., Ltd., jr
' 11•14111•VIIIMMIIII
Con utile
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Mint Dear Signature of
-See PaeaStnitie Wrapper Pete*. '
. . ,
Vety emelt luta 8651157 .
'
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1 RAE rintemouslizsi...
,
R MR TORPID LIVER,
. CARTEKS 3:gftztalt-
,
,
PILLS•, rAii CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW.SKIN. "
PAINE 000ACOMPLEXION/'.X.1I.O..N
co: NyriltAVA UATUAC.
ttVze:1.1
MAE SICK HEADA6MIN4
. . . .
Apropos of 'Mane re now ...hook,
ati ngerlious English litersay inim has
worlced out two • "eryetograms" of •
Shakeerpeare's plays :winch throw a uese
• and startling light on the true •author-
ship of the immortal dranets. Iii thc
•flrist one, note the tilled letter from the
and of caelt linet ;
•Ti. M on, .,
The Wintees T A le .
Henry Fott It tit
Merchant of Von 1 ce
- 1 Moab 10 th '
S
' 'Xiti a Androni C tie
. Love'. Labor's; 1., 0 et
Tenting of the Sh It ew
• , The Temp B st,
Othe L lo
,
. MO& Ado bout /kioth 1 ng ,
Atilt
in Gm seeond nr • ngement note the
fourth fitter from te„ end:
, ,• . . lin Vf let .
. Antony !and Cleop A Us, -
• Cor edy of tr II era
11 ‘try the lif 1 fth
. Oth le 110
Ham L et '
a
B. Chard the ScAl and
• Arenus and Ad 0 nis
=deliriums Night'S P.
• / 1 ti
.. 4f Romeo and Itt filet
tube L ins
e Twel th NIA)* ,
iniagmation brooding upert iniquities, and
aYonn.
to sadden the heart 'with •art •ainiost de!
Spatting senseef hatinam frailty and wick-
•-•• SECURIT . A New Shakespeare theory.•
mosTwt. Pr p rletors, New
• "Wasn't it a terrifying experleneer
anim(1; his friend, "when you lost your
foothold and went eliding down the
mountainside""It was exciting, but
extremely intereating," mid 'the eol)ege
professor. "I could not help noticing ell
the way down with what absolute ita
enraey 1 whafollowing along,the line of
least resistance." .
About the Size of It. .
Leopold—Josephine, I'm nein' ter he a,
great. =Wishner like Paderoosker,
josephine—Dift, Leo, you never even
seen a piany. How etta you play?
Leopold—Don't need ter. All yer hese
ter do is have long halt ter run yer
fingers through, then leek efeepy-like,
and best a couple or keys.
• •
•,,k Giddy Thought.
If, as selentiata nver, the people tif
Mare, have lived a million years longer
than we have, of eeurse they are much
further advaneett One iss made quite.
giddy wIih the thought ef how meth
their eeclety ..wenteti probably opera in
entertaining, or how much seats in their
stack exchanges sell for.
°dimes, Annatour entice • •of life and of
the stege are always tremendously moved
by them, declaring them to be `strong. „
So, in a. certain sense, they are; but so is .
"an onion, Or a pole -eat. 'Let -us,' said Dr.'
• !Tatman, 'free our • minds limn cant: The .
- true motive of all such playa as 'Iris' is .
sordid, shop.keeping.eraft, and the itetuai
influence of all of them is .the'eophistiov
Lion of tertgoll, the defilemerit ot moral -
t , and tl e aversion of taste The*
)perate upon the mind very mush AS
,ater operates upon the hedy; in
. slisea the result is disease,
Whitt a jealous Wife Feutid."
• A invette woman suspected that bet
husband was In the habit of kissing the
hired girI,"irnd retroIved to detect him isf
the Rots Saturday night she saw hint
pass quietly into the kitchen. The hired
girl was out, and the kitchen was dark,
The Jealous wife took a fewanatehes in
het hand, and, 'many placing a shawl
e ver ler head, as the 'hired girl often
• lid, entered the bask e door, arid {mine-
diately elle .was seizell anti kissed and
embeaced in rill "Ardent Milliner. With
• heart almost bursting, the wife prepaval
to administer a terrible rebuke to the
faithless spouse, and, tearing herself
anew, from hie fend ahlirnee, she etattek
V match da.tid etood ?stets to We, with—the
shad nran.-*Sallebury "Press -Spectator."
November 28th,L902
-re 7 rase , ,
• tsei
KIDNEYS AND BLADDER.
l., nave you pain In the hack, a (fun ?cane in the region of the kidneys? At times your ,.
•4 water comes freely, a larue quantity light in color, while at cater times you no not maim
ahi""na"1461).b""n PAY WHEN CURE. D.
. it untie so freely. it is darlt in color, you make a BOW q uantIty.,or yo a may haveititunio us
td....eroitoisltstzhnprileiekattitantscloviionrsiasiend. immexnttrieg5rneynotugruCaOrildnittelOendahns uterenttioOgightleloortie. ,
•a ain;Ottti 'I::
. .
1 You,nortl 'nee Dotting unfit von aro convinced that a thOrougn and complete cure hiis _
: been *;-•:1;)11-..., A S.ic.•:‘, 1'; .••• .iR f ;V r. it m,you nnt Po ebar“.#5, u whITL,TATIoN saga s -
.. u ...ea.,. ,01 ass. were fa -mese tor home treutrnett, Perfect system Lf borne treat- -
ow., 4 4..„. ; •,.., w 1,6 ei41;,,o,t. #,In. re,0 s7 Flm. ,..irateincs far Canadian patien to shipped :
4..- , n Wind.. . -- , , r" ••• 4, tt I trA.,... — o .. 1.'14 •,•1..,` rrevaltl—ilvery thing confidential— -
son WOODWARD AVE.,
• Oor. wiis.os a...treat,
, ass;sat-r, spiart.
Clu lit the Best Prie tit Lo est
At J. IRWIN'S
-BLOOD . Redpatit and St. Lawrence best granulated and coffee sugar: lese
tObernewdb;oleldtchiesicpteDelai and Sent <, Can Corn ' Oc a can, Canned
OhiCkOtl 10c, Roast Beef I lb tins 15c each. .
BITTERS
MAKES
•
PERMANENT-
CVR.ES
.Of such severe diseases as scrofula,
running sores salt rh
zetna, shitigles, erysipelas and can-
cer, as well as boils, blotches, pin-.
ple,s, constipation, sick headache,
. .
dyspepsia, and all disorders of the
stomach, liver, kidneys, • bowels
arid blood,
' Burdock Blood Bitters always
• does its work thoroughly and cotn-
pletely, s� people know that when.
B.B.B. cures them they're cured
stay cured. • , .
. .
Why. London is. Attractive.
The attraction of London to the
annual . visitor, writee Chantice3.
▪ Depew m •a, recent • maatesne
article, is its cordial and charmini hos-
pitality. It is. at the dinner -table and in
the drawing -room that London becomeet •
the capital of the Old World. Social
etanding and place precedence being
so ets.ble and known, hosta have no fear
of impairing their position by having
guests Who are not in the smart 'set, Iii
the season, the ' visitor Well enough
known to find hospitable- doors opening
to luna every day, meets and talks with
thoee who are isonoue in every field of
human endeavor and .distinction. This
is. possible in .no other city or, society.
Statesmen, warriors, orators, writers,.
journalists, Artists, actors, travelers, and.
representatives* of -other -races and civil.
izatiens all of whom for the time are in
the eye or on the tongue 0.016 world,
pais in review.- With many Of them
there is opporturity for aconversation,
and that most • fascinating of 'studies,
the discovery or et least a suggestion of
secret of their success and power. I
always return home feeling as if in the •
world's unwersay rima met the workers
who Wild and educate, and. who are inry
portent factors in the culture, civilize-
--tion and promeess of their countries, or
whose contrioutions to the thought or Now is
.5.,
the time to get a good cheap tailor-made .:
gaiety of nations make their acquaints
, name a Valuable acquisition and enjoyable Stilt.' . ' . ' 7
ntemory. It is :delightful fbr a while to • . •• •
ip .,cp
breathe au atnicephersi where gigantic
25 enlarge them, which -fcrm so large a isount
fortunes and titanIc otruggles to gain or
part of our ditily reading and converse.-
. tion, Illsve no place in the programme: •
Teas—Black Apau and Young Ryon from 10c up, our leader is 250 per
-pound.
Itaisine, (Yuma,. Prunes, Dried, Peaches, Apricote and Cooking Fige
cheap. .
Crockery—I have juat t petted out 8 crates of Dinner,Tea era Toilet eete
and fancy obine, new patterns direct front the factories in • England,
selling from 10' to 20% lees than regular price, Call and examine
_ _quality and prices.
• Wanted good butter and egge. " • Phone 45.•
,..... • • • 4
J. W. IitwrN, ounton
Another Drop-in Pieicez
The undersigned is offering kis $80 Buggies for $65. They
are hie 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 surpasse.
-and, we guarantee them.
JOHN LESLIEs Huron Street. Clinton
-NEW AND
1111
UP TO DATE
• A. very, fine line of DRESS GOODS le Our GRAIN BAGS at $2.50 end $3 firs
what our oristorners say. ‘, sellers
Such beautiful WBAPPERBITBS at 10 See our hendsome BUGGY BUGS, also .
and 12i• , ,. HORSE, BLANKETS and ROBES
Oar MILLINERY and FANCY GOODS
alwaye take the eyes of visitors to the
Emporium. ." •
.ciroutar woor.. SHAWLS & SQD.A.BES
PIIINTS that please • •
• • ,
'Then tee our $3 WATEB:F.SOOF COATS
for men. , • .
. • • • t
Great •Valete in READY MADB SLUTS, 1,
Mali° Cottons:de PANTS and SMOCKS
Londesboro Emporium, .
• • Spt Vrcl, 1902.
A trial will prcive thel yon eat! no well here
• es we carry a lame variety of geode, and
are' prepared fo sell et close prim foe ,
" clean Or 'firciduchs, Buell as butter, eggs :
large, tallow, 8se • -
•
R.
ADAMS
1 1 ,11.111.II I. I 111111.1111
• •
-
Who has moved his stoek ot 'TWEEDS
to the Searle Bloekt •
Is still giving 25°46disc4unt off all his Tweeds.
1
. •
•
•LEOS '
Ache all-over. Thrkat sore, Eyes
and Nose running„, slight cough
with ; this is La Grippe.
•
•• •. • .
" Rediieti ti 'Aloes
conktiley- L
taken in hot water, sweetenedabe- ,
, fore going to bed, will break it up s
if taken in time. • •
:there is only one Painkiiier,sPERRY DAVIS' s
•
..,. •
• . •
Eel e is a great chance to eeenre it;:firstrolassilliuggy ;at's! big 'reduction. No
these przces -
*Was ' • _ • • ' • • .
17-41 Z.• eat Buggies for flig 1.875 Buggies for -1065
11,1=-= 677,•'°. ' • $60 'Joggles foe -$60. •
Itemember these ere all pnr own make, which places . [a position to ',guarani. '
then3, as we do not buy any filaterial lint what is first °lase. •
se:_atisptly attended to by experienced men, .
C • uron • ree • r 11 ONI
.4
• , . 1
.
/ 4:4
•.5
-41y skin was sallow, rhad a bad taste in
Np...c, my niouth in the Moruing and my breath
Backaches Women.. was' offensive tiimeil and occasionally I
had a bad headache. By the use of Ripa s
r.rabules am now in d condition to attend
Not one wenten in twenty has a-
eitrong back.
•
ifeeicaohe is the ary of Weak Kidneys.
„
for help,
naoktuthe le the warning nate of 'nada
more sorlou9 trottblo to ocitnoil it not att.
tendad to immodiatoly. •
esokaoho OAR be mired quiokly SAC
permanently by using
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS
1
The great and well known Xid-
ney. remedy. They have cured
thousands of woMen. They will
. cure you. •
to my dal 31 duties, my appetite ecei1ent
and my dig6st1on is much improved.
R. /./. Lane, Mapleton, N. B., .
writor t "I was gres,tly trditbled with. '
136.okt...oho and. 4914.44, in ray side.
law Doeut's XidneysFula advertised, ad -
thought 1 Would give thetas triat. After
Ott first box I began to feel better Anal
I took two marc to to make _a templets
mire. / eonsider Deem's* Kidney Pills a
good, honest, reliable medieiee for all kid*
thtS,' troubles and can highly recommend
them."
tee. per box or a Inc $at All &alert ot
Tits Loot Nagar Pit& C0.1 Termite, Oat,
i\i‘s• k
S. so
.79
1.4•4
DRUGGISTS
The flve.eenrpacket is 'enough' for BA
o'rdinary oeCagioU. The family bottle; sixty
cents, eoutams a supply kr a year.