HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1911-11-30, Page 3Cedes xowswei
THE hOLD 11EH)S
OF BRITAIN
Tbeisennds of Britisher* Explore the
Wilds Abroad for Geld Nem
lid of Various, Mining Spots : , •
at Home.
•
According. to a paper read by Mr.
J. M,. Maclaren before the Institute of
Mining and Mechanical Engineers,
vetiver gold has beenfound in most
of the Cornish tin -streams flowing to
the south, In Devon the existence of
:gold has been known for many cone
•turies, the principal auriferous 10-
;cality being et North Moiton. Gold
;haa also been° felind at Goldscope,
'Cumberland, and. Whalton, Somerset.
'XII Merionethshire, gold -mining has
:been actively carded on for many
'years, and the actual Value of the
geld produced from 18157 to 194
,amounted to nearly $1,450,000.
There are many Scottish gold lo -
malities, but the chief is the district
'of Leadhills, Southern Lanarkshire.
'The gold of this area is found in the
'streams as fine dust: but small nug-
lee gets also; occur, the largest on record
Baying' $ weights of twenty-seven
auneea.
seln Ireland; Wicklow appears to be
the most notable gold locality. The
largest nugget found there was picked
up by a party of peasants in 1795, and.
;weighed twenty-two ounces,
n • !I'lie total yield of gold in Great
Britain and Ireland, with the ex-
ception of the. Leadhills area, is es-
'timated at $2,500,000, nearly half of
which has been obtained during the..
past twenty years.
Puns in the Bible.
It has been pointed out that the
pun isone of the commonest forms
,of humour hi' the Plast. The Old
,Testament writers, especially the
prophets, are true Orientals in this
respect, for they use this, ornament of
.apeech most effectively."
Amos, the desert prophet, the
first of the writing prophets, uses°
puns more successfully than any of
the prophets. Unfortunately in our
translations the play of words is
lost to us, and we fail to see the
delicate shadeor meaning or the
mocking or scornful irony of many
a phrase. A most notable pun of
this prophet is that of the vision
of summer. fruit -°And he said
Ames, what seest. thou? And I said
a basket of summer fruit. Then said
the Lord unto me -The end is come
upon my people Israel." (Amos viii.
2.)
"In this verse the translation fails
to bring out the play upon the words
'summer fruit' and 'end,' .consequently.
Tthe point is lost to us. 'The Hebrew
word for `summer fruit' is kaitz, and
the word for 'end' ketz. The parable
'is made far more expressive by the
pun and much more liable to stick in
;people's memorials. Just read" . the
-aerse, substituting the original words,
'And he said What seest thou? And I
said a basket of kaitz. Then, said
the Lord unto me, The ketz is come
upon my people Israel' - and we at
'nonce see how sight and sound must
bare combined to arrest the attention
sand impress the mind .of the unthink-
ling Israelite. The beauty of this 'pun-
ning parable lies in the fact that 'the
,symbol and the word expressing it
coincide.' "
GANNIBALS OF
NEW GUINEA
Another Scientific Expedition Win
Shortly Visit British New •Guinea
to Study Habits and Customs • •
of Natives.
Mr. D. Jenness, of Balliol College,
lava -
ldn
England, is but to leave on scien
A a Q
tific expedition in British New Guinea.
which has. been Tate undertaking,
or -
'goateed by , the University, and the
kaost• of which is being: borne by
;private subscribers, will 'involve , at
least twelve months' work. . The ob-
'ieeta are chiefly anthropological.
From New Zealand Mr. Jenness will
proceed to the extreme south-easterly
-corner of British New Guinea, , to
which region work will 'be confined.
'The headquartersonGood-
will xb e
'enough Island, the most northerly
part of the D'Entrecasteaux Archi-
pelage. There it is intended to study.
the habits and customs, the arts and
'religion of the inhabitants, who are
'thought to be an intermixture of the
Melanesian and Papuan peoples. The
.district selected hair been specially
chosen, as although it is the most ac-
cessible portion of Papua for such an
'•expedition it , remains absolutely un -
r mission' station
' un-
touched.
There is one
.on the coast, and occasionally the
'Government official lands, but the in-
terior has never been explored. It
is known that cannibalism exists
among the natives.
A Grand Waterfall.
A/ Bir T. Crossley Rayner, Attorney -
the
of British Guiana, is one of
'
the raw white men who have ever
seen Kaieteur Falls, which he declares
the Most beautiful and impressive in
the world. "Kaieteur Falls are far
'inland in British Guiana," he told his
interviewers en shipboard, "so far
inland, in fact, that they are about
200 miles from civilisation. They are
829 feet in height and about 400 feet
wide."
THESE GOMEOF
OLD FAMILIES
Residents of ilarftain Today Who Cate
Reliably Trace Their Getteolegy
Back to the Twelfth
Century.
There le, of course, a goad deal of
truth suggested by the familiar sand
oft -quoted couplet --
When Adam delved and Eve spell.
Who was then the gentleman?
But, like a great many other truisms,
the suggested answer to the question
10 only a half-truth; for, though it
goes without saying that we could no
doubt trace ourselves back to a com-
mon stock, the fact remains that neat
people cannot get very far back into
their family history.. It speaks, there-
fore, very strongly for the stability
et a tensile, and ter the capacity of its
members to hold their Own in the ups
and downs of the centuries, when a
genealogy can be traced far back into.
the early days of our history.
Perhaps the most interesting line-
age, as it is certainly one of the most
ancient in England today, is that of
e family of 'Wake, of Courteen
Northampton. This is one of the old-
est now existing In the male line in
England, being directly traceable to
the celebrated Hereward the Wake,
son of Leofric, Earl of Mercia, and
Lady Godiva of Coventry fame, It is
not remarkable that •in 'the family
which boasts "the last of the English"
as its founder, the name of Itereward.
Herewald, or Herwald should be of
frequent occurrence, and.a lIerewald
Wake nobly sustained the honour of
the name during the Indian Mutiny
when, although a civilian, he held the
Puckah House at Arrah against the
Sepoys, A daughter of this house was
mother of Joan (the Fair Maid of
Kent), the wife of Edward the Black
Prince; and Sir John Wake, with
characteristic loyalty to a falling
pause, mortgaged his estate to raise
a troop of horse P or
Charles I.
Another very long pedigree is that
of the Cornish family of Sainsbury,
Trelawne' . The name is taken from
Trelawne, in Cornwall, which one
Eduni, an ancestor of the present
family, . possessed in the reign of Ed-
ward the Confessor. To this . family
belonged the Right Reverend Sir
Jonathan Trelawny, Bishop of Bristol,
who was one of the seven bishops
committed to the Tower by James IL
The family of Scott of Antrum, in
Roxburghshire, boast an antique and
singularly romantic history. "Uchre
dus, filius Scote" was witness to the
foundation of Holyrood Abbey in 1128,
and it was to this house that there •
belonged the famous wizard, Michael.
Scott, mentioned in the "Lay of , the
Last Minstrel," and also, as is pro-
bably less generally known, in Dante's
"Inferno,"
Few people can claim a more dis-
tinguished origin than the house of
Perrott of Plumstead in Kent, said to
be of ancient British descent. The
founder of this family, the British
Edwal, Lord of •Penfro, . married a
grand -daughter of Alfred the Great,
and the son of the marriage first took
the, name "de Perot" from hiscastle
in Armorica. A later Perrott was Lord'
Lieutenant of Ireland in the reign of
Elizabeth, and the family "took a
vigorous part on the Royalist side
during the Civil War..
Some Apt Proverbs.
Instead of "More haste, less speed,"
the Japanese say, "It in a hurry, go.
'around."
While we say, "Accidents will hap' -
pen in the. best regtilated families,"
the Japanese say, "Even a monkey
will sometimes fall from a tree." •
Tile• proverb about edged tools and
.cut fingers the people of the flowery
° lurid vary to, "If One plays With. tigers,
'look out for the claws,"
Where we say "Out of evil good may
,come,' they have it, "The lotus
springs from the 'mud."
For pains in the side or chest
ctatnpen a p P iece of flannel with Cham-
berlain's Liniment and bind it on
,mvlr the seat of pain. There is
nothing better. For sale by Al
Dealers. •
1:a
Cleopatra's Needle.
The London County Council have
erecteda scaffold round Cleopatra's
Needle, and cleansing , operations• are
in progress. The monolith had• its
last rub down some fifteen years ago.
It is to be feared that the London at-
mosphere is beginning to tell upon' the
sharpness of the hieroglyphic inscrip-
tions, and nobody has yet completely
solved the problem of preserving
stone or even granite surfaces against
sulphuric
acid deposits. The County
Council's chemist has been giving 'at-
tention to the matter, and he has ad-
vised the useofP ar
affin -wax pro-
tective
a ro-
tective
i coating.The e monument will
therefore be scrubbed all over with
water and' the paraffin, ' wax will be
afterwards applied.' . The column,
which was placed on the Embankment
thirty -le -0e years ago, is about 87
feet high.
BRIEF BUT INSTRUCTIVE
Never trust a friend in ' business.
• Whatever .is good for humanity
comes from ambition and the struggle
for life. '
It has been said that there are three
sexes: Men, women, and educated
women.
You can achieve no laurels in any
career if you will not scorn , delights
and live laborious days. s..'
The real . joys of life are found in
the simple things which rich and poor
alike have within their reach.
Idleness and ignorance amongst
women,withh
tefriv
frivolity and waste
they cause, are dangers to the com-
munity. '
True patriotism begins not with
Empire, but. with Home and school
and suburbs and. city, working out-
ward.
The cleverest man imaginable, with
the utmost possible knowledge, is a
perfect ,nuisance if ha is not
"straight."
There can be no more demoralising
idea than to suppose that the honours
of life are, all dispensed by the goddess
of luck.
We are sent into the world to be
supremely happy, and, if we do not
achieve Wes, we make a hopeless
muddle of things.
The King and Queen were met at
Fort Said by Lord Kitchener,
The Government at Obtawa gave a
sympathetic hearing to 'l;ve Toronto
deputation that laid th.5 proposal for
,a Federal square before 3t.
Train Versus Elephant '
Ahnong th'e remarkable photographs
published in the last official report of
the Federated Malay States Railways
were two, showing the wreck of a
passenger train and the wild elephant
which caused it. The animal, ap-
parently frightened by the noise of
the approaching train, started to cross
the. track, and was struck by the
engine. The force of the impact was
sufficient to throw the engine and
tender from the track. The elephant
was almost instantly killed by the
force of the blow and thrown into a
ditch,
TO $AFEIIIIARD
TAE SAILOR
Dangerous and Tedious Duties of the
Lightshipmen Who 1'oiut Jack
the Way Past thi* Rocks to
Port in Safety
Sailors say that there le a little
cherub sitting u> aloft in their rigging
to keep and guard over Jack Tar.
The real guardians of those who go
down to the sea in ships are the brave
fellows who man the lighthouses.
Ships passing outward to Sea,or
inward to port, are guided on their
way at night by the beams flashed
from these lighthouses, or warned to
steer clear of the dangerous rock upon
which the lighthouse stands. In fair
weather and in foul the lighthouse
casts over the sea Its unspoken mes-
sage of guidance, encouragement, and
warning. It seems like some unfail-
ing machine, and few people ean
realize that in that lonely watch-
tower are men imprisoned, week after
week, perhaps month after month,
It is a man Who lights the lamps and
keeps them burning, but he is so re-
moved from the everyday affairs of
life that he is hardly ever included in
he company of heroes to which he
belongs.
Only men of exceptional character
are chosen for these distant posts.
They undergo a long training on land,
in the management of the machinery
which controls the lamps, and in all
the routine of lighthouse duty; they:
are taught to cook, to sew, to keep
house, for there are no women to cook
and mend for them in the lighthouses.
When they have had all this training,
they are sent from place to place to
the less lonely lighthouses, until they
are finally qualified for the more iso-
lated ones.
There mar :sure than three men
in the big lighthouses, where there is
machinery' to manage for the produc-
tion of gas or electricity, for the
winding of c.locks the manipulation
of the lamps, and so forth. There are
never too many. Six or seven years
ago the three men of the Flannan
Lighthouse, in the Hebrides, Scotland,
disappeared, and to• this 'day we can
only guess their end., For several
nights the lamps were seen to be
unlighted, but nobody could approach,
owing to a storm. -
When the storm passed away the
light still failed to shine. Men went
off in a boat, but not, one of the light-
house crew could. be found nor have
they ever been found. Two hundred
feet distant from the lighthouse there
is a recess, cut' -for the reception of
lighthouse ropes and Implements, It
is supposed that the three men, seeing
these latter in danger of being washed
away by the . storm, went down to
make ,them' secure, and were them-
selves°swept to death,
"I do not believe there is any ot-
her medicine so good for whooping
cough as Chamberlain's Cough Re-
medy," writes Mrtl, Francis Turpin,
Junction City, Ore. This remedy is
'also ,unsurpassed for coide and
croup. Por sUle by All Dealers,'
THE CRIllNAL':
M!O1i PLANTS
Thugs of the Tr cgt Lalile World that -
Have No Honest Ways, and Live
by Strangling Their
Brethern. •
•
There are plants of bad character,
which are the thugs of the vegetable
world, for they live by means -of
strangling their victims, and have no
honest ' way of gaining their ..own
livelihood. The Broomrape family are
all of evil repute, for they throttle. the
roots of the vetches, of furze, clovers,
and other the
plants, robbing
-them of the rich nitrogen which they
have collected from the air for their
own roots, and- seizing this private
store fur themselves. What could be
more like the 'actions of human
thieves? The Tooth -worts which in-
fest the roots of nut -bushes, elms,
and other trees are like' unto them;
and both •a
re.• singularly
wanting
in
beauty being
clothed d iu dirty -brown
n
tints, as a rule, and having' no green
leaves.' Even one of the Persicarias
(Black Bindweed) has taken to evil
courses, for it climbs on the stems of'
other plants, and strangles them . in
so doing; and these evil=doers by no
means exhaust ' the list of • the
criminals of the. vegetable world. We
can, however, scarcely blame the root-
stock of a grafted. rose for starving,.
the graft, and throwing" up its Own
suckers; such a proceeding is' but too
common • amongst ourselves, for
selfishness is almost universal.
Birdcages anti Disease.
Bedsteads and birdcages are among
the sourcee,'of plumbism --:- the deadly
.ead poisen disease -- according to a
report by Dr. Robert Edginton in the
current "British Medical . Journal".
"In putting" together chandeliers and
gas -fittings white1 a lead is used ed in the.
joints," he says, "and it is the custom
of the workmen to test the joints by
sucking the air out of thetubes, so
that'. in this case the lead is probably
conveyed directly into the stomach."
The process which figures highest
(with seventeen cases in u list of
eighty-four instances of plumbism) is
the painting of motor -car 'and coach
bodies, safes, and stoves, whose glossy
enamel -like surface exacts a heavy
' toll from the workers owing to the
lead dust inhaled during the repeated
f sand-paperings involved in securing a
perfectly smooth surface. House paint-
ers come next, and on the same level
as regards frequency of poisoning are
the girls who smooth down the paint
of bedsteads and birdcages with their
hands to get an enamel -like surface.
Cases of lead poisoning among tin-
ners and kettle makers are ascribed
to the mixture of lead and tin used
for the inside surface of kettles rad
saucepans.
Another lively debate took place in
1'tiarlia*aent on the address,
The agreement for the extension of
the boundaries of Manitoba was made
it Ofitswa,
Touch and Go.
Willie ---Papa, what is the meaning
of the expression "touch and go?"
Papa -It's very simple, my son. It
means extreme spded," and refers to
the professional borrowers who make
a touch and get away so fast you sel-
dom see them again.
"I am pleased to recommend, Cham-
berlain's Cough Remedy as the best
thing I know of and safest remedy
for coughs, colds and bronchial tro-
uble," writes Mrs. L. Il. Arnold of
Denver, Colo. "We have used it'
repeatedly and it has never failed to
give relief."( Pot sale by All Deal-
ers,
In tieerltn the of'ieta! story of At
reedit British -German crisis was pub.
ilahed,
THEY ALL FALL FOR IT.
WHA -I' DaaYOU 'THINK
*NR LIKES YOU AND
3A10 drOMS MARY Nif ,
THU16S A0oilll' you
ABOUT ASKING MR* i Potr'T
JoNes INTO OUR. THIMkt'IUCII
5InNING CLua? OF IT. I Dotty
Too.
*-.-
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I KNOW MOLLY THAT we
RAVE HAD QUITE A BIT OF •
COMPANY LATELY AND EiIERY ONE
RAS SPOKEN ABOUT YOUR. ,to
COOKING. IT MADE* AN
JUST LAST NIGHT AT PINKER
osonon spoKe of YOUR
COFFEE, HOW GOOD IT WAS,
AND poW LucKY WE ARE To
HAVE YoU WITH us.
`NAs
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.
Rvl=_RY LITTl..e
sHB,SAIe Tifm-100
WoReSUCta swEli_
GroWNS. AND
ALWAYS LOWED
UNNIN�s--..
pt) The
DINAR,
SKR SAM THAT N5HE
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TROOG11; YOU AND
t13r cHARMIN6 AND
diva 1.4M) you 30 SHE DID.
MUCH REALLY?
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'AND YOU THINK..
SHE. WOULD REALLY
CARE TO JOIN ?
MRS,JONEs.,WE HAVE A Lerma
(AWING CLOS AND WE WOULD
LIKE so. M UCH' To HAVE You
JOIN IT' WON'( LEASE
COME IN, OH-YOUYESP-'
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There was a good dame of Cape Horn,
Whose clothing wastattered and torn.
She remarked, debonnatre,
As she pinned up her hair:
"Three bargains I purchased this
morn."
That a susceptible heart is: no ex-
cuse for bigamy. . .
That love is an indulgence -matri-
mony a habit.
That' happiness, , like a wild `bird,
seldom sings in a cage.
Ambiguous'
Arnold Bennett insists that old
women make the most satisfactory
characters 4n fiction, although he does
not say whether he means to 'the
author, who gets the royalties, or to
the reader, who pays' them. Or is he
currying favor with the women who
want to vote?
• Cumulative
Little grains of . short . weight,
Little crooked twists,
Fill the land with magnates
And philanthropists.
THEY ALL FALL FOR I•T.
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver
Tablets do not sicken or gripe, and
may, be taken with perfect safety by
the most delicate woman or the
youngest child, The old and feeble
wilt also find them a mostsuitable
immedy for aiding and strengthen-
ing their weaking ._digestion for me, -
plating the bowels. For sale by
AM Dealers,
Several men were liljured in the
tali of a scaffold at ikrrieton.
There is little danger front, a cold
1 or trom an attack of this grip ex
cepa when followed by pneumonia,
and this never happens when Cham -
1 berlain's Cough Remedy is used.
This remedy has won its great re-
putatton and extensive sate by lbs
remarkable cures of colds and grip
and can be relied upon with inlie-
it confidence. For sale by Ails
Dealers.
VVHAT CANADIANS
ARE DOING
J. E. ARMSTRONG
Mr. Armstreesg, who represents
Cast Lambton, Out., is one of the
strong men who were returned at the
recent parliamentary election., During
the last term be ,tuns chairman of the
post office committee' of the Con-
servative party, and is a reeogn,z'd
authority on all points connected with
that important department of On
public service.
J. E. ARMSTRONG
Represents East Lambton
Mr. Armstrong, in business, is an
oil producer, mann fare. -ee a„<i
ipolitical,
farmer and started his rarrer
In 1896, when he was an unsuecest •
ful independent . randiriate her w
returned at'the byelection in 1904. Its
was born in York County, Ontario, ;n
1864. ;
Wild scenes marked Clie demonstra-
tion by the sutfragei+tes ii'n''London
and over 180 were arrested.
ETONZYTStiferat "R+o'�1r ��'.L
AfeatbS Meal
0.a.
iFIZER.
O. B. FIZElI, Mt. Sterling, Ky., set's
..I have suffered with kldaey asd
bladder tr9uble for tea years past.
"Last March I commenced using
Perms, and continued for three months.
I have not used it elnce, nor have I felt
•,
I�
The
Ideal
Beverages:
ALE
STOUT
LAGER
Made By
John Labatt
LIPTON'S TEA
OVER 2 MILLION PACKAGES SOLD WEEKLY
Bargains . in Furniture
Carpet and Shades
LARGE STOCK -NEW GOODS -LOW PRICES
•
White Enamel Beds -Beauty and Strength Combined $3.00, 3.50 and 5.bO,
Sanitary Mattress -$3.00, 3.50 and. 4.00.
Star'Felt Mattress -
Ten layers Cotton Felt made by machinery '$7.00 to t0.0E
each. '
Combination Sideboards -Made for the dining room $22.00, 25.00 and 27.00
Kitchen Cabinets -Useful and or�ppamental 8.00 .10.00. and 22 00
Medalion Rugs -Great range of Patterns and Sizes $7.00 to 19:00.
Brussells Rugs -Parlor Patterns Special Sizes made to order.
Cork Linoleum -Black ac and Floral Patterns C
60 and 600 a yard,'
Pictures -Hall Mirror -Wall M rot Wall Pockets.
k ts.
Extintion Rods -Chair Seat etc -We have' a Select Stock of •Musical Instrun ,
ents including. Violins, Mouth -Organs, Flutes, Pianoa'and Organs(,,
Drop hinny time. •. ' .
J. H. CHELLEW, 'BLYTH.
FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING. PHONE No. 7.
What Will The Settlement
of Your Estate Cost ?
We will be pleased to tell you,
if you will furnish us with par-
ticulars. No charge;
We will also supply you ou with
will forms and place your will,in,
our fireproof vaults where it
cannot get lost.
The Canada Trust Company is
,a trustworthy, experienced execu-
tor that will manage your estate
most economically, and imparti-
ally carry out the terms of your
will. •
Our intimate connection : with
the Huron & Erie Loan and
Savings Co. enables us to obtain
en
numerous investmentS which
come under the "Trustee Act,"
and of which a private party
would never hear. This enables
us to keep our Trust Funds always
invested, and Estates derive a
larger profit than otherwise.. •
Servllbes of Family : Solicitor
always retained.
Correspondence invited and
answered promptly.
LONDON. ONTARIO.
R
AN Extraorthiiary OFFER
The News -Record
.-----AND THE —•
Weekly ' Mail and Empire
ONE Y A ----T E. TWO
0
FORR
H
�
TOGETHER FOR $1.50.
Everyone who sends a yearly 'combination subscription for the two
above�ppapere will receive an art photogravure, 18 x 2d inches, of lion.
R. L. Borden.
This lateels,picii r cloak a C -m dian premier
Send all orders to The NewieRecord Office,, Clinton.
•
serf MWa, Iii GOMA 001ST
'PHIS NERn 'Jolt'' MSS NoW !
piss TH1MG or Cavia' CO14Rarf
Ilam 01MNECC AVERY EYENiH'
is Too MUCH. ALL I Do is
COOK --cooK - o ooic
ON MOLLY, You SURELY WouLf a�' I
Leme me LIKE THIS! we .
cOULS NoT GET ALONG tall ou't'
YOU, AND v4e, ALL .LAKE You „
so much.
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COMPANY LATELY AND EiIERY ONE
RAS SPOKEN ABOUT YOUR. ,to
COOKING. IT MADE* AN
JUST LAST NIGHT AT PINKER
osonon spoKe of YOUR
COFFEE, HOW GOOD IT WAS,
AND poW LucKY WE ARE To
HAVE YoU WITH us.
`NAs
,
lit1u
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t• lk
IIP .. i91
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Rvl=_RY LITTl..e
,1
F/�•
MOW •YYOU nEe.
I.YtYou
Cti$14.1SBfR4.
MOVEMENT
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Fr•
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iii
, _._. 'fir,ligir
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.
. . . 7.i M
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver
Tablets do not sicken or gripe, and
may, be taken with perfect safety by
the most delicate woman or the
youngest child, The old and feeble
wilt also find them a mostsuitable
immedy for aiding and strengthen-
ing their weaking ._digestion for me, -
plating the bowels. For sale by
AM Dealers,
Several men were liljured in the
tali of a scaffold at ikrrieton.
There is little danger front, a cold
1 or trom an attack of this grip ex
cepa when followed by pneumonia,
and this never happens when Cham -
1 berlain's Cough Remedy is used.
This remedy has won its great re-
putatton and extensive sate by lbs
remarkable cures of colds and grip
and can be relied upon with inlie-
it confidence. For sale by Ails
Dealers.
VVHAT CANADIANS
ARE DOING
J. E. ARMSTRONG
Mr. Armstreesg, who represents
Cast Lambton, Out., is one of the
strong men who were returned at the
recent parliamentary election., During
the last term be ,tuns chairman of the
post office committee' of the Con-
servative party, and is a reeogn,z'd
authority on all points connected with
that important department of On
public service.
J. E. ARMSTRONG
Represents East Lambton
Mr. Armstrong, in business, is an
oil producer, mann fare. -ee a„<i
ipolitical,
farmer and started his rarrer
In 1896, when he was an unsuecest •
ful independent . randiriate her w
returned at'the byelection in 1904. Its
was born in York County, Ontario, ;n
1864. ;
Wild scenes marked Clie demonstra-
tion by the sutfragei+tes ii'n''London
and over 180 were arrested.
ETONZYTStiferat "R+o'�1r ��'.L
AfeatbS Meal
0.a.
iFIZER.
O. B. FIZElI, Mt. Sterling, Ky., set's
..I have suffered with kldaey asd
bladder tr9uble for tea years past.
"Last March I commenced using
Perms, and continued for three months.
I have not used it elnce, nor have I felt
•,
I�
The
Ideal
Beverages:
ALE
STOUT
LAGER
Made By
John Labatt
LIPTON'S TEA
OVER 2 MILLION PACKAGES SOLD WEEKLY
Bargains . in Furniture
Carpet and Shades
LARGE STOCK -NEW GOODS -LOW PRICES
•
White Enamel Beds -Beauty and Strength Combined $3.00, 3.50 and 5.bO,
Sanitary Mattress -$3.00, 3.50 and. 4.00.
Star'Felt Mattress -
Ten layers Cotton Felt made by machinery '$7.00 to t0.0E
each. '
Combination Sideboards -Made for the dining room $22.00, 25.00 and 27.00
Kitchen Cabinets -Useful and or�ppamental 8.00 .10.00. and 22 00
Medalion Rugs -Great range of Patterns and Sizes $7.00 to 19:00.
Brussells Rugs -Parlor Patterns Special Sizes made to order.
Cork Linoleum -Black ac and Floral Patterns C
60 and 600 a yard,'
Pictures -Hall Mirror -Wall M rot Wall Pockets.
k ts.
Extintion Rods -Chair Seat etc -We have' a Select Stock of •Musical Instrun ,
ents including. Violins, Mouth -Organs, Flutes, Pianoa'and Organs(,,
Drop hinny time. •. ' .
J. H. CHELLEW, 'BLYTH.
FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING. PHONE No. 7.
What Will The Settlement
of Your Estate Cost ?
We will be pleased to tell you,
if you will furnish us with par-
ticulars. No charge;
We will also supply you ou with
will forms and place your will,in,
our fireproof vaults where it
cannot get lost.
The Canada Trust Company is
,a trustworthy, experienced execu-
tor that will manage your estate
most economically, and imparti-
ally carry out the terms of your
will. •
Our intimate connection : with
the Huron & Erie Loan and
Savings Co. enables us to obtain
en
numerous investmentS which
come under the "Trustee Act,"
and of which a private party
would never hear. This enables
us to keep our Trust Funds always
invested, and Estates derive a
larger profit than otherwise.. •
Servllbes of Family : Solicitor
always retained.
Correspondence invited and
answered promptly.
LONDON. ONTARIO.
R
AN Extraorthiiary OFFER
The News -Record
.-----AND THE —•
Weekly ' Mail and Empire
ONE Y A ----T E. TWO
0
FORR
H
�
TOGETHER FOR $1.50.
Everyone who sends a yearly 'combination subscription for the two
above�ppapere will receive an art photogravure, 18 x 2d inches, of lion.
R. L. Borden.
This lateels,picii r cloak a C -m dian premier
Send all orders to The NewieRecord Office,, Clinton.
•