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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1904-03-31, Page 6roinTARIfillIFIentanu is at x sa azInnalag; HI 111 1-31 ig Tar Lonilea.'.0e14,225-:Qeoca's 'Ave, • Clin-ton • Office •Combe's' • ." • store;' , . • . • . . • Hoere a a. M. to 4 p„ Dat - Et es of visits--Tuesdays7-Vela.• 2; rff , Mar. 1, Mar, ee; May 3, May El 31, J1Ille Jul".' 26; Sept. MI Oa. 4, Nob. 1, Nov., 39. , Iliffratreir7. ' • Fats. irti.ng 4•S 6 f The Clinton News -Record . 1.1 •I , 11,...I 1 1 1 ,iiri siss le 1, lei I iri't.T11T ' .:•,. , „ ss. ' • . • • 1111111111111r . VI. • • •• •••• •••••••••s•ss•ss,ss s. : S's•S •••• •'. • ' . sss _ • 040000•0•040440000•000000002 his college friends lie had jut time . March 317s1 1004 WHISK BROOM HOLDE.R. THE WOMAN WHO PROMISES I To brighten the Eyes. 1 • BIRTH OF A FLOWER. ' 'r A harmieell and rattler benefleial ' . • es left his office, which he did, arranging On That Is Easily made stail NV. Allvtlyl Charming*, but AgesravatInte Method which I have tried for making , • • to zneet him at the elevated etatien and duce* a Pretty ierreet. and Irresponsible. the eyes bright tor some special oeca- I 0 0 0 The fleet effervescence of their meet- bolder that is easy .to make and one ery association of women, there are -0 cR - • ' from reading or fancy work is recoins ' ' 0 IF .• D. FACip 9 to each Min by telephone before he ••0•..* THE 0 The illuetration shows. a whisk broom In every social circle, every club, ev- • go up town with him. sion or for resting them 'when overtired 0 Ing over, Stoughton's beaming mended by a former beauty doctor. eyes that proaucas quite a pretty effect au those who delight the novice by their • e • A roved over the other paeeeDgers. A I Wall ornament. It costs but a trifle and obliging readinese 17.1 help, but nre Moisten small bite a absorbent cotton • : .. . (ii AV KRIM' Gordon Ir,. slight figure at the far end of the car yet looks like an eepensive article. Shunned by tbe experienced. "Let me or pieces of soft old linen with witch • 2. held bis glance. Ile looked again to be I Get a euff such as butchers wear, do that for you," 'tot will attend to it," bezel and, placing there over the cloSed : 0 Copurreet, Me let 2. V. Zia Itgru o l' some manila ropesenough ribbon, width "Leave it to me," they cry aud straight- eyelids, Ile perfectly still in a darkened ' 044000•000•0•00000090•0#00 sure. •"Pardon Me a Minute, jack," he said, 1 ono and a half inches, and brush. NOW ' way go off .and forget all about it room for about half an hour, thinking Who that bas been unhappy enough of nothing in the world but the beau - to have them on a committee will seen Wel rest that is being taken. -Good . After awhile she came to look for rising and malting his way toward the I. Mw wben the train stopped at the girl, with whom a moment later he Fifty-third street atatIon IP the morn- was shaking, hanas cordially and. talks " Ing -the tall, broad Shouldered man ing with the easeof long friendship. • with the aggreeelve clihx end deter- Presently he returned_ to Renwick, and ullued. mouth. She felt vaguely dls. as be did se a revealing look passed appointed wben slte dist not see Mm. between the two. A bridge at lastl Insensibly be became the -touch of "Ws Maim. Alston, a COUS111 Of Mine, • you know," be explained to.Renwick. romance in the dreary menotony of . "Tough luck- they had, I tell you. But her tiers, five. and a half out of seven .she's a plucky girl; She bas earned her of which were spent in WhIl street a own living now for four years." place where the advantages Of being d "Will you present mar demanded a woman ere not glaringly apparent. • Renwick eagerly. • Often during the (lagging afternoons - "Certaialy. • take yen up there of summer; when business Wart 'dull with me. Natica will be glad to res and the hands of the clock approach- mire any friend of mine." ed. 5 but slowly, she woild sit restiug "Thank you, old fellow; thank you." IlenwScis paused awkwardly. He her face on her hands and wondering seemed to have something else to ea', about him. Who was he?. What was bet scarcely knew hoW to say it. be? Was he married or single? • e , When I -Raid -hatred you to intro - The noise of the street blow, dello e• :duce me -I didn't Mean the usual thing. - by distance until It was as dreamy es Pm going to ask you to do something the humming of bees at noonday, geom.-and to do it without Asking too droned softly,th her. oars' a Bert of BY- many questions." Ing melody, and her thoughts deeed , • "W kind kind of ,a mystery is this?" ollice hears Ind went far afield ia a. sinquired Stoughton. "If I didn't inow fentastc search for the reality about that there isn't a grain of romance in. him among the crowd of possibilities. you I should certainly think", ; Over and over she gaVe him 'a local "Now, don't think -there's 'a good habitation and a siarue but these fellow," tseothed Ileesvick. "Just rot- ehanged always with her mood.. Ne low instructions. Tell Miss Alston all nanie that she could hit uPon seemed abeet me, and nand that •you tell her to express Ms personality,and she everything good that you can or I'll finally discarded them all and thought wring your neck. and make anlippnint- of bim only as The Man. wont for me to cull. Don't make any . The weeks melted into months, but mistake. 1 seant to see' her and see 0 her interest in him did not flag: Rath:. • her'alune. I don't went you.there." ee, it became 'deeper as time went on, SWhen poor, mystified Bill Stoughton Curiously enough, it was .what might blotielied the subject to Natica her be - to termed the nonessentials that bats heeler wee dombly inyeterious. No, fled her.. About the man himself -Ms she didn't want to know. anything character and what he welild do hi ,:alsout. blin. Then a moment later: h lt the yeti say ha is n bachelor?" (ID- ' forget the anguish of Ousting at the Reesegeeping, last monsent that, their part of the work is untouched and must be clone Ames -lean women. Dent:earls claims a point of superloris by oneself instanter? The aggravation of it is that the Ir- ty over the United States by Insuring responsible wdman Is often so charm- old maids. But, then. the United States Ing and so endowed with other good has no old Melds. That forlorn, de. Vendee. The reliable sister Is often pendent and despised class of the Me undeniably dull. We can bave her and man species is extinct in this country. depend upon her, and her price is be- yond rubies, but she does not sparltle, Independent.henowlannn di a°1114 everyelewomanerelw. alas! The woman who promises, if sertive to a degree that no man in Ms oho would keep her word, is the wow- sober tenses would dare to condemn. -- an we want. Yet her exasperating Beishnese American. fa.ult makes her impossible to work with and unpopular in spite of ber Word Blandness. gOod laolnts, .As for those who have • to live with her, the less said of their Some curious instances of the physs ' bat defecto "wordn n s sufferings the better. To keep one's word is the very es. given in the Lancet. The disease is ' fortunately uncommon. In eve case sence of personal honor. To make promises lightly and hold them ctiettp the sufferer, • an Englishman, thIrta•- has been held dishonorable always, for Years of age, who knew Greek, Latin and French well, suddenly lost and it makes no difference where our all knowledge of English, though he. word is given or how inconvenient it may be to redeem the proraise. The could read and understand Greek per- fectly and Latin and French in a raths inconvenience to which our broken smaller degree. Another and al - promises will put other people is what er the mind must dwell upon.. -Pittsburg most more curious case was that of a pian who lost the power of reading at Dispatch.. sight. This patient was able to write accurately from 'dictation, but was TALK FRANKLY. completely unable to read what he had A. Word on faiseerement and Truths written. Word blindness is apparent-. * fatness In Conversation. ly akin to color blindness, but is cer- What a good thing it would be if tainly attended by Much* more incon- women would be true to themselves vettiont consequences. s and converse intelligently when in the society of gentlemen. There is nothing esss-seseeeeesee*eseese that honest men deeire more than to enders nd that mysteriousrace that le ta so like 'themselves and yet so unlike,. P same assurance that she. did about her; nocetitly.) et thought•he was a wid- • •WHISH BROOM HOLDER. :who share their homes, but not their - • thoughts: who are. so .shrewd,. so 'prac- any given emergency in on at center where • , self. • • . ' startsew gropetical and so irrational. The poor men She had decided that he 'was a la.W- Stongliton, indignuntly, "I tbought tassel is and loop around in figure 8 yearn to break down the invisible bar- yer, though precisely why she thaugnt •Ydn knew nothing abeut elm?" . • style until you cotne to where you be- , rier and see Into the real life of these day she sew him with •41 child a girl "That was for his mother:" • • . Start at bottom of etifL sew rope iu.cits • • smile and chatter and say pretty things so she could not have told ' Then one.. " "I don't hut he wore tuournin,g," gan, cue rope. aftet fastening securel ' well. But the loved ones Y. :.they love .86 • . • . of ten, who boie a certain fleeting' • * .*.....* • .. • • • e.• • e cies to edgeelettingbe- •the eireles come .... and Ingenious things, things they have semblance to.him, • le •the dlie little parlor of the smell • low. Make Integer of rope with tassel e uorrowed froni nsep sand Improved in , Ile wee 'married, then! An .almost apartment Where -.1---......1 lier • mother • sand bow of ribbon. • Put •anotberstaseel. the borrowing; but never a word of the imperceetible sigh escaped her. 'Time, • 'lived tbey •thet for rant time alone and bow where the ends' of. rope •are really . true and, in • many instances, as the absurdity of the matter dawned 7.S47',7 f41' the- aced eud gofastened in frost. Cherry ribbon gone Aletons , thoughts oughte that are working in their * :its a • . • . . • busy brains, says the •Busliseas Wo - upon her, she laughdd sof tlr• to• tlutt loOktid down, upon theth.flom the very Pretty conteast . s ••• MItrie Louise had ne•ver dampenedber meeting beSere, s• • • ..• Pieces of rope one foot loud,. put four . go the Men flatter and lie. because • svhere they. .are . doubled and then. Pull 'men' decePt to feel a mild interest in the lady. NatIca, lotilOni.; rather more like a lily. • .It ellsbecause they think It each other. It was after one' et these' greeting' hith. inost 'fern:al inaps . OF -LONG 'Lire, • . and the women think men are. fine, iris .. • . , Tassels are made by taking twe wet. What difference?. Josephine and 6" • ; raan's Magazine . • ' • • • ends together, tie with. strong* fazing they think women like it and, thnwo- • affection for Napcileon. She 'even be: • -.When the Mehl USI Mtn in, gan . the strands ape . , • is. matee nature And thesmen *think . Sometimes, tot 'Os* ot then' 'tempi in lice lane :soft black the • a stretch,. they would not encounter • .gowu,.• yose with ()Very.: iptentten oSIGNS f • ' • 'women are dear, empty headed angels,. • • • • nen !then a meet unlo6ked for things , • ; • . . telligent brutes, and the two elasees go breaks that sylitalling' him Sas '1:e en.. . . : llovi 'a Wenten May Judge of ' the on loving and despising one another ac. tered the car, her Inteiest nud stab- oveloweds. ; E'er S'inement they loOked into each • . asenutls Iler 'Dais: • cordiegly„ and all•forthe want et a lit - faction at seeing him again sbone 1 his o. ,,..a. toward her, find she pieced lived than Men, Some -experienced per- conversation. • . unconsciously in bee face, and • hie other's eYes. Thell he *Stretched out .Women are Sepposed to be :longer tle discernment truthfulness g ance wa • . ced ai wits steep's" up into' les arms es if she %signs that will tell if her te be.a.• • •• • •LALJNORY. LINES. • As the faint color touched hea.cheekiS. hers in 'them. A mement later she sou 'says that. every life Is woman carries- , . • • . • • • had been a clehlas he murmured sot- short or long one. • s • •• • • away. roe a moment he jied ,thought from the 'welcome that he had :S111;•• "What shall we tell. mamma?" WA* niust have eyes round and Vide rather : stained into hot soapsuds. s. 'This gete some .halt. forgotten 'acqstaintence .15', "XIY deer; Clew . • , Th 'tiroman who deeires •Iong life • • t t that b fruit • prised in her. eyea, but hersianick ed Nailea in despair. a half hoer later. • than long and narrow,' and If they aro • • • andlixes the Stales. noyence .she returned to her reading AIOW- canswe ever Mee otirseives?" ,breent or hazel life will be lo,ager.than Embreldered linens should- mit be. fortably... "'WO Might just ats re-'. • inuet be emple and .slope beak slightly .rials•of rust .or stein may bnavehled by She did not look toward Mtn again; • • "We .cau't's replica ltenwick•:com- if they were black or violet. The brow vrashed in tin or wooden 'tabs. All forbade that itietts• eignsourselyes to being .thought mad. from an absolute •perpendicular: *The. Siising An. earthen heveL •• . •** : • - ' but more then once Lis. keen, hie° eyes • sem • • It • all from the- riaieuloes ;Su-. • head mutt be wide behind and over the rested upon her as she sat tbere, Flatiron. holders, if lined with a lay.. and straight, with :masses •ss • pale perstition that hi orecista 'knew peeple • ears. The mouth niustba fulland well • er olcl, soft.leatherS like the.top of. a You Must tttlk to tnem " , •••• set and the .cliiii.sqUare.and firin, The brown hair piled tipenberssinall • head beet, proteet your hand from heat ed' morning. A. habit is very' . easilyeform10Ve .• „wotld elle its opinions. to talk of far whole length and have open, easily- di- w • " • her things. ,, s . letting nostrils. This, Indicates .agood fi .a:nd•tben:-weitthen the -sr forgot the' • nose must be wide and. fun through its • e oti ce or • 'Wooden laundry tubo should. be farbetter then if made in tile ordinary ay • , Afterehis he, too, began to vsatch of a . • - heart and good lungs. If th Then for weeks he disappeared The • • • • washed out and dried. If they are. w- THE THEATER USH.ER.. the ear is low, deuotieg a deeply seated th ' • . . ' brain, there is a better chance of long • kept in a very dry place .ey• should Ole ondered anxiously what 'lied. be . Had be gone abroad? _ A is i_ be • upside down and the bet come of him - ncident.h What Raised. Rini In the nee. • . , . alayhap he ,was ill -or dead! *est the.. old. Patron's Estiznation.* . • - • ' • • toms covered with e. little water. . ifurt' • ' Tbe woman Who appeers taliar• in , 1. • "I heye never been able to appreci- proportion 'When sitting' down thin: • To prevent blue spotting the clothes thought she shrank ,:like one "fo ate the insolent theater usher in *,the standing has a*good chance to live Icing. . put some net On &piece of white cloth, he had become, in a usleAlsical way, .; A part of her life. Drif had beetime as • past" said the confirmed natrop of the.. If the body Is long in proportiontO the. gather up the comiers and tie together. playlet:nee& "it is different now. I limbe, the heart . lungs and digestive. Dii) this bag In the water and squeeze • near and dear as onarrideals etiti:lies ' . happened to be In a. theater the .other organs: aee large. The. 'pnise should it until the water itt bine enOegh, .' In whvu be dies-riPpear one nioraing,, „ evening when a pis of smoke, w e beat ff'hi h ' witb full and normal stroke. this way the clothes will never become towering above a crowd of leseer men . • and go' for a feW eeconde Whether or , well formed; the flesh neither too hard . • • * • -..• ' . snotted. •. 2. . like a god, there was a new gritv147 in . half the audience saw, Made it touch Limbs -Enid joint$ •sbould be large lied his face which held her attention•even ' - before she noticed that he .was in , aiW d d 4 . , . •net the ays rea e fire panic Would tier top soft -New Yoik Amerlean. - • • seeving Brett . • , . mourning. • , . • ,• .. . „ .... stolloSe.• 'Enter' • at -this.. point our ' Old . ' .- . .. . - . - . . . of absence froni business Meant. • Sick; • . -•- • ' • • ' or long dish with' square' corners than ' ' • • . ' . . • . • ; s '. - • ! That tben,. was 'what these weeep . fried the cations' usher. •* ii s onr,n the A Hair Tonle Worth TrrIntie. aisle. from ;the rear he strode with- a '. A hair tonic said to be' unsurpassed, • on n round. plate. ICeep the breed knife ness and suffering- and *death. Ills. ,dlegusted look on his.tace. . • . • . . . One that. will develop the growth and • -sharp, and the seed. will ,not ,only. be ". ‘A.w, ' sit dowel' ' he said to the . • improVe the- luster, i$ givee here. It bet Will be. leis haggled in-• oppression that he' showOd. ' The quick chdirs. • 'Ave, say, sit dew's! What's is not a dye, is -perfectly, barrisless and more evee,' to crumbs add waited •There is a faslis wife undoubtedly, from the aorrow, and . sympathy that she. felt hoVered.in her ion in cutting bread as well as in shea- the We! Tbere.ain't any' fire . . *Is indeed whale food'. To .sixteen Ounces - • "The' bored flavor 'of • the' felloiv's of bay runi.add two ounces sulphate ing a garment, and if You wish to heed soft, wide eyes as they rested briefly • . 'voice- was the fear absorbentstbe audi- of gelninnand one-half ouncnof oil of it cut. the slices of meditnn thickness, upon his face. • And he, reading that • Bread looks better serve on an oval The • pretty Leirene That Tells the Origin el Rao Navelwort. 1C elm!' and years ago and ever so many years before there lived far away In a lovely .country a youth wiles was the most beautiful DISH IR the world. His name was Narcissus, and he had a fester As beautiful as himself, whom be loved very dearly. Narcissus often lifted to go hunting in the Woods with his sister. Each of them knew that the other one WOO very beautiful, but they did not know the wane about theraselves. You see, they had no look. ing glasses in those Ways at least -only the mermaids had them, and they nev- er n 1 One day the girl died, and. poor Narcissus was gv oer very buenthi eafip pbyy, Adel aftereel f. Once hwe hen be was thirsty he .canse to a stream and was just betiding down to drink when he saw his own face in the water, He had never seen it before And thopght it 'was the taco ot hi dear sister, So he tried to catch hold of her, but could not. When he had tried for a long time he was so disappointed that he killed himself. Then the fairies came in the night to bury him, but they only found a pretty svelte flower, which is still called narcissus. -London News. "What kept Strong 80lateat business last night, Archibald?" demanded Mrs. P°"Pl'haakining stock," replied Popham. "I knew it," she replied. "Smelled it, 'on your breath the minute you came In. You'll keep on taking it till you get In the workhouse, and then, I hope,. you'll be satisfied." • Getting it Straight. "So your husband tells you that .he never plays cards for money," said tlie neighbor, with a sneer. . "No," answered young Mrs. Toekins. "Charley -didn't say exactly that. He imid he never gets any money by play- ing cards." WORLD'S FAIR, ST. LOTUS , APRIL 30 TO DEC. x7 1904 ONE WAY EXCITRSION •••••.•••,••••• Prom Clinton . To Billings, Mont. 535 as. 'Colorado Springs, Denver., Helena Butte, Ogdtn, Salt Lake Lity $40. :10 Nelson,. Rossland, 11. C., Spa - ane, Wash. 540 ltle Portland, Ore.,. Seattle, • Vancouver., Victoria., B. C... 543 30 seri Erarcasco and Los Angeles Ca i .rnia 54.3 /5 • Proportionately low rates to other POints. . Tickets on sale daily March lot no •tal April 3011:, 1904, , SPECIAL SEVILERS* TRAINS TO Cant.dia.n North-West with Colonist Sleeping Car will leave Toronto every Ttiesday during Morelt told April at 9 p. m. • Passengers withoot live stock should • take the Pacific Express leaving Tor- onto • .451 • • . Tickets, reservations an• d 1u'.1 War.. -Motion from agents. Por tickets and infornin.tion to P. R. lIodgens, 'rown Agent. A..• Q.. Pattison, -Station • • Cutter's and Slei,ghs Vrefliave a very - fine, assortment, of' cutters and eleir ghs, -All made Ali our awn'shop from the best of in6rch-. andise. • Prices low.:'con- sidering quality. des Torture Be sure and call Many People - before purchasing.• Who do noeunderstand the nature of their ailment, and hesitate to undergo • a local examination. Piles, or hemorrhoids, are small tumors, which form in and about the orifice of the rectum. They are caused by an enlarged -and inflamed .pondition of the veins, which are very numerous in this portion of the body. Piles frequently attack women during the. ex- pectant period or after childbirth. • In bleeding piles the hemorrhage is some. times so paguse as to cause death. Protruding piles are the most dreaded because it is commonly believed theta surgical operation isThe only means of cure. : Any form of piles causes dreadful suffering oti account of the itching and burning which. accompany them. Qne can scarcely walk at' times, and during the night, when the body gets warm, suffering is intense. • • Dr. Chase's Ointment is the only absolute and guaranteed cure for every form of. piles. It has a record of cures unparalleled an the history of medicine. 6o cents a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates and Co., Toronto. To protect you against imitations the pertrait and signature of Dr. AW. Chase, thd fampus receipt book author, are on every isux. . ' • . • • . • DR. OVENS Or t,osiDpN- Surgeon, ' Specia.;ist, Diseases of•Eye, NOSO and Throet, visits Cliiiten montl:ly pr,Assits 1?120PISItLY 11 1hD 'Nasal Catarrh ,and Deaincis look, felt a embus t . d if 1 r e cut them in balves This Every Farmer should keep- - these three words. constantly in mind and concitict his farm _ on stria business , principles. Guess work and haphazard methods are no longer used by ups and downs of such a life. • generally be eaten with it. • . successful and up-to-date far- mers. 1 Long since he had begun. to re aid g .ence•,needed. ' /led he yelled exeitedlYS rosemary... Dissolve In enough..sp I • ir te • is ter breakfast For lancheon or tea • I or- moved hie arms he miglit have pre-: of wine to Make it smooth .• Any good . her with a sort of tacit, silent friend- .... Out It as thin as 0:wafer, and for idin- cipitated -a scramble. It was n hard • druggist *Ill put it up. for you 'or the ' ' ship. "The little girl with her soul in ' ner you -may. cut ft in cubes, measuring . :. facedesheree Sktv, say, sit doWnr that ; ingredleets' May be . :obtained and the - her faee," as he once described her to a tive inehes, placing a piece on the -fresh svorked the 'wonder. Hereafter I shan't Mixing done rit • honae. • Rub late . the , friend shaking his head deprecatingly • • ' napkin at each plate,' But, for .ese et . .• sass things Out loud when •the paste- Male at the rOotis of the hair 'ettcla ' ' at the thought af A woman. like her the family table, especially where there board loCator.shoWs raninto the wrong night. Itegniar: treatment for two or ' 'baying to wrestle. with the world. Sheare children, it is :well to servelt in not• S' d. t hi ni ste ter tbe . pair or seats and chasm me . and my .three months will slid/ surprising re. . too thick elices,"-because butter will seeme o m too exq s wife out again five, minutes later, for sults. . ye found at last that the theater ush- He watched her surreptitiously now onr Ancestors. 0 has his uses."- • • wondering Idly svlin she 'wee • aral Ivor the benefit of those 'who mey • s. Beitrotens. I whether he should ever meet her,. . : . • . •• . . - . feel "excluaive".Or. "stuck uP," or who NOthing••is prettier or more dainty 1 There was a way-he:Might follays her , SUNDAY SPORTS. • . orate about blue. blood, etc., it Will be for. bedroom decoration than the `up- and , bestow a quarter on the elevator - ' - . ,s----- ' well to remember that If we go back but holstery dimities in the old English , boy, an '' d the thing would be done But They Used . to ilo Pestered'. In Eng- twenty generations, or 700 years, 'each • style. They cert. be got in many pat- , , . . bra 'the coarseness of • such Inethods re: s - land r Relty. . °tie of us has 1,08:1,57(r ancestors .iind terns and launder beautifully; 80 are Veiled. lihn. *She seenled the sort ole Both 'Richard it; and Honey IV. had. Is related more or ;less closely to at more durable than a . nibs/ fabric. ' woman who wotild resent that kind bt acts- passed ordering' Sunday sperte, -least 270,000,000 of our fellows. 'Going They may be used In the entire &cores thing. • .• particularly the nsekul practice og, hack but a couple of hundred ••years. tion' of the room for bedspread, canopy; Moreover, in his heart Of heartened: archery. • .Queen .Elizabeth 'issued lis ' further and tracing -down our • geneal- window' hangings • and dressing • table In spite of his bigness and worldliness, . tomes to conductora of such festiVi• • ogy, 'We Wouldfind that we have more covers. At, the winaosve it is prettiest he was a fatalist. - it it were 'written ' ties, which contained directions to peb- cousins than there nee' people 'hi the to liang the curtains stritigbt down from the begfnning it wonld c * ! eie °dicers to overlook slick games and world and that on the basis of but each side with it full valance across ' No man could dabble in the affairs of • to do their best tO make them it sue- two children per family. The die- the top. Cushionsfor chairs and tor- Patelcess. 1 • . -. crepetney is accounted for by the fact 'nee seats can be :trade to match too. . a t wes nearing the end of the third One such document authorized "John that there have been so many inter- . year. lie took the same train now •Seetnaton, apoor man.fallen fete decay 'marriages We have ,only as many Trouble, like Cayenne pepper, is not With a regularity which made her stue and . having fear small ehildren, to Muslin; .as there are people in the very agreeable .in itself, but it gives Diets:is. The results of ehance were • have and use some plays orgames at World todnY, but are related to a great ' zest to other things. - . . . . • . nevc r so unerring. Intention wits' ap. -or upon several Sundays within the many Many times over., cOnnty of Middlesex and to remain in . *: .. t. .• NIP( •: t -through it all saVe at unexpeetell ono place not above three several •• mosanas when the eurtale woeld lift days -that is to say, the shooting With for n second end tin unintentional the broad arrow-, the leaping sfor the wrestling, the throWing • of the planee 1,etvey a deeper knowledge they roenieled well other With the haffllng, sledge, the pitching of the bar." , james L in his "Book of Sports" ep- imps:alive eyes we keep for the ult.; • eburaged Sunday games "after even - known. No twentieth century romance ing service," but "the' meaner sOrt" ever moved so slowly. Were forbidden to engage in bowling. Then Billy Stoughton, who In. this Stopped later by parliament, this Was partici:1er ease was the instrument of republished b3, order of Charles I. and fate, awakened one morning with an filially suppreesed by:. the •Iong parlitt- tinneeountable but imperative yeerning ment for Broadway. *rive years 'earlier ati equally compelling dealt% had landed treiee the A:rms. Min on the eanch, where be had bided TO prevent perspiration under the eohtentedly enough up to that particle' arms a beauty specialist advises first tar morning. Tim evening of the hextwashing the skin thoroughly With soap day found him in Denver, from which and Warns Water And then drying and place he peoceeded with AS much haste sponging With a preparation made by as the rail:toad fatilities /Would permit tatting half an 011000 01 rose water, two to New York. • scruples of tannic acid and two and a On the clay Of his arrival he planned half ounces of reetified !nitrite of wine, to dine with Ilenwick, the cionet of with three ounces of.water, liokeet • • 0 'Mutt your moustache or beard alieaudiul brown a rich WOO Use . -. , Sugar-oosted, eamr_ to take, mild in action. They tore constipation biliousness, Ilek-heaclachp. iggr.141.. ......... . , , . , BUCKNOHAM'S DYE By. reading THE WEEKLy Sing, the Farmer's BusineSs Paper, you will get 'the Very latest and most accurate in. regarding. your bust- tiRSS. THE SUN'S market reporte . are worth Many times the sub-. scription price to you. Every Farmer in Canada should realize the full value of -.. the serviee THE SUN has ren- dered him in a public Way. It . was due to the aaton of THE SUN in giving voice 'to the opinions of the fa.rtners that the law relating' to cattle guards, drainage acro§s rail- ways, and farm fires caused by railway locomotives has been antended. • We will send THE WEEKLY SUN from now to 1st ja.nuary, .1906, in combination with The News -Record •• Repairing promptly attended to. seoes•••••• • ---•••••• •••, . .."••••1 litlilliBaLL and • .. THE ". T. St., Clinton. , • . • • .1 a ma ge • e lain° , . • •••••••• • . •••••••• • • , . • • • .. • -.• •••••••• • ••• • ° A Talmage S.ernion will ' . • MARELC1111TE • ON!, Jac, Rlf-wfb .117k 1. t* • . . ° . be'' tiublished. in The' 1 i New..silecord. : : -4, , z, .4 ,0-• . • 10444* pri th 44•4 0 I Direct importers. Work m an- ..,. -...........14,... — • 4 > . . • each 'week, begi nfling i . .,. — ,, Rattenbutry Street Works •*. • nrtz 00001.410100,1on a. r. =Sat co., tasuussit.e. . For $1.75 It is the fence that has stood the testof time -stands the heaviest strain -never sags -the standard tho world over. Order through our loeal ageut or direct fin:nat.& ' 'THE PAGE WIRE PEN0E 00, unvarreta, wanttrvine,ent. nzobfro7.01,41ut. St. John' Nati Sold and ereeted. by Ed. 3Es. ford, Clinton. • • tea' shte s -e Materiel guaranteed. •••4•4t.. 6,SEA.LE' St Co- . . . . . . .. • • • • • • • `4; ' • •• -••0 printed at this office and the sale is adver- .the; umus, of The News - v Record. -• ..-We insert - the entire contents of the bill which of itself is worth the price charged for the bilis themselves. YOU ; • 4 4' 4 .4 AL NEM) • Horse route bilis or car. We have a ..•••:•,•••••-• j • . • good assortment of cuts and our prices are resonable. Let's • do the work for you. I • rimoll 1.4 4.0 0, , . : . • :