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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1905-10-13, Page 66 THECLINTON Sfek'W. AgliA Po$illively a BdUnicolabigi CROSSING THE ZAMBESI VICTORIA FALLS BRIDGE, NOW THE PUREST GREEN TEA GRCIWN OPEN, ACROSS THE RIVER, 1 Latetit and Greatest Achievement of • • ' 'Bridge -Building Enoineer-..13>e, Its Completion Cecil Peodes' Great • Project of a Cape-tO-Caire RailWay Is Brought Another Long Stop On- , Wardn-Dimensions and Environment. •. ,VEYLON NATURAL GREEN Teals as far ahead ot Japan tea as "Salado" Black Is ahead of ail other black teas. , . . • $.01.1 tinter in %naiad Lead Packets, 21(e., liOrs 40. AOC, and 6.0:ever' Pr9f' 'Darwin starte• a locornotive on • • The British Asilsociation's iirst meet - log in South Africa bee been signaliz- ed by the formal opening of the briege grossing the Zambesi at Victoria Fels. •RecentlY, after ' meltable "orations__ Its course oveer the bridge, and thue .* a4- tr nye tlrecers. Highest aosard St. Lomis, I . • - TALES OUT OF SCHOOL. The following story will illustrate "what strange ideas children entertain ins regaids that which is passing in • 'their teachers' minds. • In an infants' school the governess :Seed been taking the little ones in the 0-11Tery hard and unwelcome subject of eenetal arithmetic. Presently she asked, i•one girl to tell her what our and five • imeade. The child, after le few moments' 'cogitation, ventured to 'answer, "Ten." •The lady, very disappointed, then told ' Seer to leave the class room and go and think the matter over out in the pas - Image. Accordingly out the child went, looking and feeling very wretched. Whilst she stood there in -the cold, an , _der se o ar e oseyen-year- �1ds) came sidling into school late. "Hallo!" she said, on seeing her little .class -mate stand there in trouble, "what the matter?" "Oh!" answered the child, "cause I didn't know what four and five made, rye got to find it out." "Why, you silly," said the seven- 7ear-old, "don't you know that it !makes Mine?" "Nine!" retorted the little one, *you in and try her with nine and sae What she'll say. I tried her with ten, end that Wasn't enough!" • TALES, GUT OF scHogl., 1••••=i1•101•11,111 under the ausPibes ofethe learned,by of which he is the. retiring preelaeat, the magnificent structure was ushered into use. It is one of the latest and greatest' ttehievemen.te, of- tht bridge - More Merry Mistakes Recorded by building engineer. It proviese a way • Henry J. Barker, M, A. over a chasm deeper than the deepest •• crossed by any other rallroaa in ties . It is a remarkable fact that children world. .And, it almost overhangs one rarely or never make use of proverbs of • tete sublimest speetacles in nature. or ''sayiegs" in their oreinarsr talk Though of Air less volume than. he •and conversation. If their teacher" or •Niagara, the Zambesi makes a Jean at parents happen to use proyerbial lan- Victoria Fails in dietance more than, guage it is as much loot on the child as twice that descended by the Canadian though it were so much Chinese "or ,cataraet. On the bridge the spray of double Dutch. I came across an • the. falls above. it can almost be telt. amusing example of this witlist was" To 'reach' the river beneath the bridge , examining a cities of South London the plumb-line would have to b^ drop - boys on the coalfields of England and ,• Pell at least a hundred yards, Ts Prees Wales. s 1 • despatch gives the height of the bridge I After a certain lad had corree,tly at 420 feet above low water. The En- • informed me that one of the most irn- gineeringeetecordof the 2nd September, portant coalfields of England was that howeven gives the distance between the • Inviting • Prospect NOtifing better f o r YOunoth. ing more ° . inviting than a mea.1 •of Mooney's Perfedion • Cream Sodas . • MooneY's Biscuits ai•C an eVenly • balanced,' wholesome, nourishing food, equally. good for young and •old. Made from Canacla,'s flnest Wheat flour, rich. .rea,rn 'and "pure ..butter. be:ked . by the Mooney baker in the Mooney way.•• • Sa./. Mooney's '..to your grocer. , . n) Oct *18till 1906. CANADA'S SEA HARVEST STARVING IN CLINTON - HER WEALTH IS NOT DRAWN EX- Nen oEd Women ide are In Nea— 1 cLuswELY FROM THE SOIL. •* Liberal. Offer • There are scores of people m Ninton -Yield"Howsrtferi. Varies - According;to..a-nd-vieinity who are--stervine7.in the IzethiaideeyYst:°111,efenot digest the food they eat. plenty. This is no because in need of food, but because tshoeokReyuens_ofFisrhishb-yTthhee Mmuilitiiifoan:ioAuns Almose0Tligitiable Sight INfir.. To help these unfortunates our velem' instinct of the Salt/1(4.1"-e At a Cannery. , . • • While we are congratulating our- selves tipq.n the size of the Western harvest, we must not forget that Can- ada's nr,ealth is not drawn exclusively from the soil. The sea gives us a Mighty contribution to our supPort. It throtigh the bole, the lobeter, the mackerel, and the minim that we de- rive the larger degree of profit. The yield from the fisheries, hoWever, var- ies according to the run of fish, and especially is this the case its regards salmoe. • The Multifarious Sockeyes. One year In every four years the • rivers of British Columbia are crowd- ed with the luscious "soelteyes.e For three years the yisitors are few, but on the fourth the rush is so tremendous as to be unbelievable by these who have not witnessed it. The pherio-' menon is one of the merlosities of 'na- tural history. .Indeed, there- aye man' strange phaseS of tbis 'fishery puzzle,. The fish are hatched far up -the latt- er% and thence they find their way .to the Sea. How is it that these same , fish return to 'the place of their birth?' " • How does. it tiaPPen that they can see of Northumberland and Durham, el . . • • asked the question: under it as 480 •feet. 'The bridge. over lea from among the many" openings bridge and the surface, ,of the water . en sanmense tract Of swampy country • • between Victoria Nyanza. and Gond; - alOng the coast- that which leads to t tio that 'it is like ti ; h the "old homestead'? Where have "When you hear people Pay a.s re- this abyss meastires. 650 eeet. • 1 . B li Advance of Rcit carrying coals to Newcastle; What •do , • hodes' Rai !way. , have i,een greatly facilitated by the dis- they spent the period liatervening be - •By the completion of this bridge' Ce- covery of the fine .coal deposits at Wan-. tween their departure •• and their.. re-' ! Out of a large class of over sixty.' cll Rhodes great projeet of a. Cape -to- • tutn't Na investigator has-been able . boys enly two Rut up" their hands; C,airo PAPAW' ie. brolight another leng i . Cibiect°"" . • • to discover their whereat:louts in the . ' and tbey did, I noticed with some hes- I 'stet) onward. It is Just sixteen years • To some critics who take a purely ocean during their absence from home. 1 itation and diffidence, . • i einte he entered uport this trans-Af- economieeti view of the 'undertaking it They are nee seen; they are not caught; ' "Well," I said to one of them, "what Mean 'railway scheme. In 1889 the seems an unwise one and they venture in fact they are out of existence. so I do people Meiji by the eirpression?" I northern terminus of the Cape Colonial '. the opinion that ' it will not be com- far as human knowledge of their ' "Why sir " he answeied they mean ' railways was Kimberley, the diamond pleted within thin generation, They . habitat is concerned from the time that carrying coals to Newcastle would centre, 647 miles northward from Cape' regard as e they leave the rivers until invast, number's they reappear How dims • it " •• ` ' ' Town In twelve incinths he heti an- Imperialist, not the scheme 'of a. h that the come quadrennially, • Prez- • However, it is in Scr1pture lessons, The lad had evidently in his mind the • other 127 miles bent, from Kimberley ticel railway mane They hold that the aPPeaY be very hard .work. I • 1 like. a Methodist conference, or tie rhaps. that the little scholars -both Picture of a man carrying a sack ot on to Vrythirg. To everybody who had brahdli rtirining to the seabbard, P is 1 •••• res yter an assembly? W et .know - Cyr; and girls' - display the most scuttle of coals all the way from Len- any knovviedge of the difficulty 0; such, as•that en ing n 0 asa, . a don to Newcastle. . .' I transporting Material ane-supplibs Over • the Indian Ocean, and that heti* built idg4 have ,they of the ,passing,of time, ' • • e• and of the proper perioct.to place be- te t t amusing naivete and innocence. • With a smile, I turned to the other' 'the' heavy and waterless roads end to..Suakin on the Ilea Sea, are fate to. There are some teachers who insist on their pupils making' '"complete state- Wents" in delivering their answers ra- ther than responding in one or two brief ords. This is a commendable practice On the pat t of the instructors, as it ac - Systems the children to express what they mean in good English. During a scripture lesson in an in- t& i,chooi the teacher -who was one of those who theisted on "complete statements" -asked the question: - "What was the name of our first par- ents?" And one little dot of a girl answered, "Adam and —" 'Teo," interrupted the teacher, "re - ember you must make a complete statement in giving your answer." The child pondered for a moment, and then replied: "Please, ma'am, the gentleman's name was Adam, and the lady's .name was Phee."-From 11, J. Barker's Comic hoot Tales. ... ..... Making a Great Speech. A: lawyer, whose eloquence was of the spread-eagle sort, was ddressing 7. the jury at great length, and his legal "opponent growing weary, went outside itet rest. "Mr. B.— is making a great !speech," said a countryman to the lbored counsel. "Oh, yes; Mr. B.— always makes a Igreat speech. If you or I had occasion ito announce that two and two are four, we'd be Net fools enough to blurt it ,out. Not so Mr. B.—. He would say, !If by that particular arithmetical rule 'known as addition we desire to arrive at the sum of two integers, we would lind-and I say it boldly, sir, and with- out fear of successful contradiction - we, I repeat, should find by the parti- cular arithmetical formula before men- ' eldoned-and, sir, I hold myself perfect - •1y responsible for the assertion I ant 'about to make -that the sum of the 4 ;two given integers added to the other :,two integers would be four.' "-London • Tit -Bits. boy, and, asked him „what he thotigne .across the Vaal and .Hartz. Rivers the; was the meaning. . • I rapidity With Which the work- was. done ' "It means, sir, that you'.d Most likely seemed incredible. - This 127 miles, 'Was-. be persecuted for cruelty. to aniniala." purchased . by ' the. Cape Groverninenr This lad tbo, had evidehtlY a .1:nature' and • added •to ' As line. In the latter of some . poor broken -winded horse part of 1223 •the' e6 miles from lerybiirg drawing a load of coals all that .dis-• to .Mafekin•g Was -begun .and finished tence, and being Urged •on by the drive ' before the . ciese, of .1894. British mile. er's whip or stick. , . 1 'oeization bailing been begun- in Mash - The Church's Ferninine. . • ' :1 0.naland, .and Matebeleland having been e_ ,aequired . by , the overehrove .of Loben- The masculine arid feminine. ..genuers gula, further relict:ay eittension betame of nouns and pronouns often prove ne,tiecesiao. . Early in ..1894...constructiqn. great difficulty with children. . se -_ se • write..vegun from. lelistekifigi: an though 'A •cettain inspector, .after elielting . a .Matabele eebelliore had to be .put, from a 'class of 'London: boys that. the .down in the meantime, Bultievairee, 49? feminine of 'Jew " was. "Jewees'e, • , f ° - einilec•further north, - was reaChed -in "bachelor," "maid"; Of i'tneiter," "iiiii- -October, 1897, after 500 days' •work The, tress," eta, proceeded' to, give them.: Bo_ - Boar Wer• intervenedi, and it wa..i. not. some rather harder ceuestions. ' ' • until. May, 1901, that the fitst election of 'What is the 'feminine of inspector?"-.. the Plulteerityle-Zambesi line was isegilli. he asked, pointing at a little ra•g•ged .It was finished to Waulcie• coal field in urchin' behind. • Deeeinber, 190,3; 'giving' a through line "There ain't none," . said the ad el • ' freeze Capt Town of 1,572 'rrii"..se. The • re- thinking, , possibly that the inspector.. .mainder of the lfine was pusheti, on,. and was laying. a trap' for. him, the rails were laid to Victoria Falls,. 68 "Oh, yes, there is," said the gentle- *miles further, by the -end of April, 1904. man; "lady, inspectors are Plentiftil .• • • •• • , enough: For instance, I daresay'you ' • Still Onward. • • • know there is a lady who inspects, the laundry' work in the girls,: department -ofethis school:- Now,---what-wetubleyeeta_ call her?" • "Why," answered the urchin "a ' washerwernan, of course!" •• Another inspector informs Me .that in dealing with the genders Of nouns, he asked (playfully l•aying a, Uttle trap for the boys):- • '• "Has the word 'church' a feminine?" • After a pause, a thoughtful -Woking lad cried out. . . . e the through Cape -to -Cairo ' road to tideveaters These lateral lines, it is • held, take'the logical direction, where- as• woeld -unnecessarily parallel the. began • route. • . What's hi a feernei • , I . • . A, curious collection of . old • enve- , lopes is possessed by George Wilson, secretary to Mayor 'Urquhart envee • lopea. upon. which the Mayor's, name is . missPelled. .Some are very Much awry„ while ethers Miss the correct teethed " ' by . only the transpeiellion of 'a,, letter or two, says The Toreeto _Stan One man who leans to phonetic epeil- ing writes at "Urkerte' Another chap. who tries to exhaust the alphabet has it Erqueheart. "Er.charte appears sev- eral times, but the -Hunt was just about reached when one man wrote e'Eeleira- • e • heart "Eckert" is cominon, and then .• there are "Ukheirt," "Uleuharte and even "Burkhart." Eekert •was utilized • mice, and so was 'Unkilhurt. • , "The pronunciation of the name eine-. • ares about a fourth of the people who ..tween one event, •the outWard.passage, and another the return? . , Fish by the Millions . It is a enerveioue instinct -that vvhich impels the fish to. nto.ve away arid ,to return to, the stmt. which' they. • have left fou years; after their emigre - ton. • This year is the yeareOf the' great salinort run From July le whea. fishing eortitnenced, tintie the beginning. of September the activity at the river 'Meeths and in the. canneries ,has been uhprecedeated; and the yield has been enormous. Cif cahned salmon; the Sup- ply. will be . veey. great. The business • of catching the fish. and Of doing them sdavernis one ef theemost interesting of the Western operations. In catching .stime six thousand' men.are emplOyed. The fiehermen sail :out to the mouth of •ene• Fraser in what we Should .eall mackinaws and spread their nets, sortie of •them of 'great lertgib, across the likely' route's. 'These ,nets are of,. the. proper size to 'catch ;by the ,gill the la.rger elshe and to let the smaller Pass ,And. now the Zambesi, at a point come in," said Mr. Wilsori.."Theother 1,640 miles from Cape Town, is crossed day a man asked, for Mayor 'Nets -hart'. b the new bridge. But the croesine Another man said 'jerk -hurt.' He gets, does no Mar e en o • lie k-huite and _eetir- •ed line. Already the rail head has been kurt,'. and 'Her -quirt,' ana eeit-ej . carried a hundred miles Mirth of the hart,' and 'Her -it," and one fel- river, and by next July it is to be 200 low Saturddy Said 'You-heerte mile still farther on its way into the• , ,.• interirk, That will leave only about 200 rniles.more be be built to the shore of .; Lake Tanganyika, which give a water-. way stretching 490 Miles notthward. As ' • •• the holder a territery:omone shore of . 3 Makes Your Mouth Water this lake Britale has rights .of trans- e , • • . • Porte.tion upon it:. On its northern • Appetizer, :Bracer and. Thgestive shore the road Must enter the Criego• That's Free 'State or pass threugh German: territory. In the Congo country, how- ever, is has, a tight or 'way`, After a stretch. of. 300 miles it would reach Uganadrie a. British protectorate. Here. it would be Joined by the Uganada "Yes, sir." •• . . "Oh, indeed," said the insPeeter; With a smile; "pray, what is ttri . • "Chapel, sir." • • mit Physically..Ex t anted Lacking in eburage -not of • jeint with everything -'scarcely on speale- ing terries with even fair health. • Such • l'ithrotigh• on their journey. up' the riven When . the net ,is hauled up it• ' . . . . „ mess . of shining, Wriggirrig creatures all of them- good,. fat healthy salmon • .1 . • . • - ' At the Gannety • ' The scene at the • cannery', is one, of., riee.denctivity-sseeeseette-nshearreire they are cast at once upon the- wharf,. and are • passed to the first handlers - Chinamen -who behead and °than them, They then. move me to the next peo- eese, in which they are net to the, pre - per size, to fill' a .eare When thus treated the 'eteesty cane, in procession, move along ': a bench; and the work- men .dOPOsit edetion• of a salmons in each ohe as it paws. The -filled Cane glide to the next process, the laying on, �f the Covers by. machine: Auto-: maticaily, thecae travels towardsthe: soldering • table e Then it elite to its side, and the co -vee runs through' a stream. of solder. pith seals'the :fish- herineticatly. 'Bolleng eollows, • and whin the cans. are cool the fish is reedy. for the market A selmon can •be carried through all the 7procesees, from the Wharf to, the canned article, about five Minutes., During the see- . son ferty Canneries Work" night . and day making bay or :rather canned fishee .notenly. the_eunehineee_but.whene , the moots .is • • Value of the la.dustrY. • . . . The Value' of the industry .dhanges. with the, rum In some years • the cash yield is not very great others is large. In 1893 thee canned, salpten ax. .porteel Wes wetth $870,378. There came a big' Salmon run in 1897, and the. fig- Ures• for that year . readied. $3,430,000. ,Then there was a, drop, to an annual ,PrOduct. of a minims tie 'wise In 1901 the big run: again 'occurred, and the • result nate an exporttrade of $5,012,000: 'For the suceeedeig yeats the catch has. been small.. •-• But 1905 is • the quadren- nial irrintigration of salmon, and large figuires are looked for., Nature has hitherto atteeded to the supply. Of fish. • The growing catch; hoWeirer, hasrather . frustrated •the -efforts in that diree- , lion.. As consequenee, our Fishery 1:t epartm en t • has taken' tip the problent, and for some years firth hetcheries haVe been in operation on -the Irraser River. - The hatcheries are protected'by dams approached by a weir. Here, a Month ago, a strange scent wan Witnessed. The outface of the 'Water below the weirs . was disturbed by the fins and backs of thousands and thousands of sockeyes 'waiting the chance to pass through to the spawning grounds. On 'one day whon. the gates .t'q a weir -Were menthe the Sehnert pushed into the re- served waters at the rate of 80e a min- ute by actiial count. The idea of the hatchery is tilt the Sahnon shall be indueed to spawn watere that are protected from fish that feed UM the fry. Here the young satinet are, kept • until they ha,ve reached a fair size, When they pass out by Millions -20,000,- 000 the figure. for thls Year -to. the sea to fatten, and to ..return either. to the spawning *grounds or to the 'can- neries. It would.seent that the salmon bminess has been brought to a seience. The tare that is taken to preeerve it and to multiply,the 'fifth (night to make it a 'lasting indtistiry, adding continue tettet to the "Wealth Of the countty. ,. • lew Writs•are pitiable.. :Your brai , is road, line 584 ,miles, long: extending fagged, vitality so e..x.liautsed . your through •British 'EastAfrica from a ' point on Victoria Nyanza Mombasa, constitution well 'nigh.: ruined. The Robber Robbed. "What Toil. need is Ferrozone, that on the. Indian Ocean. ' "1 remember a long time ago," said great viralizer and nucritive tonic. It's I • To Khartoum: et burglar, "going late one night into by Making flesh and blood, by fortis- I There will be still the great link of t a room in which there was one man ing iron and oxygen into tk,, systerr 1,000 mites from Victoria Nyanza to that Ferrozone helps ; it it wen. c ...... f ;sleeping. His clothes were on a chair ismartourn. There the Egyptian-Sou- •hspo s ins ills new life into wortnont„_e • ismer the head of the bed. I was bend- . • • dan line extending northwara to wauY organs - nut es you ec i c new. • iing over ese clothes and about to • • of 200 mites between Wady /FIalfa and age from the old and Haifa, 600 miles, will be Joined. 4 gap take them out to the hall when the man 'Fermi:me lifts impai ts resilience an moyancy to • - . _suddenly wok: up. Without a mo - depressed. Be manly, ruddy.eniored, Shellat remains to see filled. At present rtient's hesitation las threw his arms cast aside we tkness and enter. the the traffic • over this stretch is handled *round me. I was young then and ' - by INfile steamers. But from Shelled on . strong but this man was four times as haPPY life thnt comes fk'oul using r. Ferrozone. Fifty cents buys a box 111 to Cairo, at the Mouth of the Nile, a strong as I was. I think likedould have any drug store. ' distance of 550 miles, there is an un- i.lerushed me to a Jelly if he had wanted. broken 'railway So• there is 1,150 ISIEW DIGNITY FOR LORD 'GREY. miles Of read built betWeebe Cairo and elite' It was he put Me out of the house ' 'Iwith the eateSt ease But before he , Khartourri, with a gep , in it of 200 tnilee, that he carried me over to the table .• 4 ' • • And iri SOietti Africa, and Rhodesia there • 4.1 lit a nett. As he looked at me my Becomes a Geandfat .et rough Birt•h is an unbroken line of 1,740 miles. In ours ract eef • it's:.Highlif.COncentrated or:i•Itt:arter teaspoonful is Siifficieht for a cup Of bouillon, a plate of soup, or a dish • of vegetables,* etd. SOld by •'all . druggists ' and grocer.. ARMOUR LIMITED, Tonntte •Savo* Catidensod Soups is teuieties. •Delicious, wholesome and eepetiziugs One thi will make 6 portions. Sea by A11. gro -Irateh chain caught s eye, o ef Eldest Daughter's .;,Son. . •• all, there hi 2,890 •miles of Rhodes itanse•. «emu know, that man took my watch and I • Says the Marquise de ontendy: African railway -project realized., About ' El.=1:14sasaalemulas n and kept thetn1"-London Tit- hiand.d • it*. t Through the birth of Lady Victoria, 1,600 miles is yet to be -constructed if - • - - - - Grenfell's little son, the Governor- - the waterway is ih all eases; to be du • - plicateci. by rail lin*,,. in the tropical - General of Canada and the count*** belt of Airiest into vvhich the•Monet , eeneeelereemeedee.e es._-,,eeeeeee _ Grey have attained the dignity °fO)litite on the south and the Egyptian - 1 grandparents. Lady ' Vietoria, le the , Soudan. line on the north now both ilf Your Liver is Wrong . eldest daughthr Of Lord arid Lady Grey ' penetrate the difiloulties of ' construe- ' and her debut as signalized by a . tion will undoubtedly be great, and i You are Wrong all Over- wonderful ball given for her in 1897 by possibly the traffic to be secured will her uncle, Capt. Ilolford, the Xing's equerry, at Dorchester House, trent not be' large, it is said that there.is A torpid inactive liver goes hand Jn ban with constIpntion. Such a ' which mansion, now Oceupied 'by the •ree - d Ameritan Ambassador to the Court of ; • thronic condition requires system- - .;,„Stie effort to overcome \it and estab- . St. 3ames, she Was married four years, neleh good health and perfect body • ago to Arthur Grenfell. may add that she is a god -daughter of the late CeMleti lee:Waage. Smith's Pineapple and • Victoria. Her husband is one of the 2Thitternut Pills containing the two ' nine sons of the late Paselle Grate ;needed element; b3 increase liver ac- tivitr and muscular action go • accts. fen. The eldest et the nine sons, • who bore his father's name, and who eerete y to the sluggish liver and bow. played in the Etrin eleven against Harem" tele, restoring them completely. I row in 1880, Met With rf;fete that re-" Suppose your bowels failed to Move mains lp this day shrouded in Mystery: !ora week or ten days. Don't you • for, berm in Africa about, the time of know you would be quickly pros- Tit b 1 eb ilio ,eated? It is just the same, liffering he started, Just before it began, on aft the outbreak eif e a a e e r e st, • a degree, when your bowels do not expeditibn northward, with the inten-s tove at least once a day. You know tion of making his Way to those .great 1011 soon become languid and tired, lakes which are the seerces Of the Nile, YOU!' .blood gets bad and you feel and from theithe d0Wri tile river tte •thean.and sick all over. You should hoe a fail, healtly passage daily. timroe,dabyttpstti.b;Lerciougetinntlistencsialy6rpeexr: ' Doi& let seribus -conditions dr-elop. 1 plorers. But Pascoe Grenfoll was,nev. 'it Pineapple end 'Butternut er seen or 'heard of again after his de- wffl drive bowel poison out of parture, tier the most diligent search, and tablish'arnerlarlirti i rrevliy etastn1 cure ettreled on fet Van regardleas 0X- it,to iligh 0 you a penee, ever diteleged the elighteet trace r or clue to File ,fate. Another brother, AtrOtig le oLthe" Atijita natnelY, Cecil Grenten,` IS married to E we PastPalt Lady Lillian Speneer Churehill, ene of eur=itel d el their lnce Yoe Ad. the slaters of the Duke, Of Maribor. 40:44•71. to. smith crjiiirt. Jame* it),Ugh.. 1-14 served for a time as aid* de camp id his father's brother Gen. Iltresti Montreal, Oneida. , Lord Gretifell, eommatidereit•leohlef $ pintioppie andibutterand ! is /rebind, but ha!; sinus beeolire ullettismis Stock looker. Another brother was isoche in anis itilled OntdUriliets, and an Unelei Is the Mines athlete, Vitilliam Henry 0066 A Core it Great% P., of TatdoW C0111* It* tOtint **(0510 400.4 Meat* THAT'S TH SPOT! IRIght in the tonal( ot the beck; Do soon ever get pairt there? It ego, do you know what It, means 7 It Is Backache, A sure alga of Iticiravorroubla. Don't neglect It. Stop it in Um& If you don't, serious Kidney Trouble* two Sure to DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS Miro Backache, /Amu .Batit. Diatiotini Dropsy and 01 meaty mid Bladder Troubles. Ottos.50o. alio* Or 8 DOA* StibleitY PILL Tarot* *ea • Dumas . Scheme. • Alexandre Dumas, Sr., was once vis- • iting his son, who at that bine lived in a Villa near Paris. They sat in a tiny scrap of a garden, behind the house -under the one small tree it contained. It was a broiling hot day,. and Mime% who was very stout, said to his son: "f am: suffocating with ,the intense • I heat," •ppose YOU open your chamber Window and let a little air into the • • "What Shall I do father?" garden," replied old Alexandre; with It graV Y. • One Exception. "No," deehired Mr. llagget,..."there never was a Woman on earth Whe could refrain from turning around to rubber at"Hoine other woman s clothes.* I-, "No?" replied • his wife eweetly. , "Didn't you ever hear of Eve?" ,1 . • !• Now She Took It. e• Adolphus Bunt --'-Don't you think it • ; Would be a noble thing for you to do With your wealth to establish a bora* for the feeble minded? Miss' Bloke-. Oh, Mr. Hunt, this is SO Midden! e • Women And 1 Many a lady smuggles who would -no more tip her bail tato the hotter OW ton at eroctiet than She would mit a throat or scuttle a shipe-AhdreW•fstng. Gerinine,benevolenee 5,1a not Static)* art but peripatetic. !Igoe' Alio* 4e4 Isiiteede-44,10.0. leading druggibts have recently re- ceived a large supply of Ali-o-na, .the most recent discovery for the cure of stotnach troubles. 511-*-ua is an unusual conibination of remedies for the stomach and di- gestive organs that herete/fore have been little known in this country, •It soothes and heals the irritated mu- cous membrane of the stomach, stim- Watt s the EQ110 plexus, and. litreugth - ens the nervous system. One little tablet out of a 50 cent box of Mi-o-na before meals, and • you can eat what you like and when you like, You will have no more headaches, back -aches, heart -burn, or.” indigestion. Mi o-na, will give you perfect health and strength. , If you cannot obtain Mi-o-na of your druggist, it will be sent by'mail, post-paid, on receipt of price. Write us for advice on your case from .0. leading stomach specialist which will •>. be sent free. The R, T. Booth Com, • panyathaca, Y. • DIRSOhition Partnerahip..1 • The partnerehip heretofereeexisting bee ( tween 'gentian tiree, .hee this (Inv been dissolved by mutual (=gent. A. J. Tyndall retiring,, All accoonte due.'the, said firm must be settled by Noy. lste 'and persons holding olaints againet the.seie firm must send there iinte either partner by %lesson date. A. a...TYNDALL, • . L. T. TYeT,DALL, Hallett, Sept. §811,1905. • , • • SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTHWEST IIQD/LESTEAD leEG-TJLIATIO NS. • Ts NY evewhniebered gentian re Dem tn- Ell ion Lands in Manitobe .he N West Provinces, , exoeptite 8 ne .26, not reserved may be homesteaden ily pe , , son who is the tole head of e , re. • nit mile Oyer 18 yeses of age. to ;bees erica one -Tenter emtion of 1C0 "cree, mere or . less, Entry may be Made personally at the • local land office for the district in which the land is eitnate, or if the hoine.teader desire'', he may, on application to •he Min- ister of the Interior. Ottawa, the eioneeot Immigration, Winnipeg, or the local agent revive b aihoriSy for some one to make entry for him. ' The homesteader is required to perform the conditions connected therewith under one of the following plow: (I) At least sii months' residence upon anis cultivation of the hind izi each year for three years. . .0). If the father (cr Mother; if the father ia decea'sed) of the h0M00101idar resides up- on 41. farm m the viOinity of ths land enter ed for the rfquiremente as to residence rarty be statiefied by such tenon residtng. with the father ormothere . • • (3) If the settler hits his•permenent resi- demo upon famine land °wiled by him in., the II it:inity of his bornestes he rrquire- mews as to residence may ba eatialied be residence upon the said lend. Six months' notice it rerititig should be Riven to the (Jonstnisstoneer of Dominion Lends at Ostawa of intenticei to apply for patent. . • . W. W. 'DORY, Deputy of the Miniaer of Interior, • • • Oct. 6 h, 05 6 en ARE YOU MAKINO $2,003.22' A YEAR? tt is being clime with our goods. Work itte pleasant, permanent mid profitable. Goods thed in every house, entry day. No fake, 110 Ude 0 tree e it reputable bositiese. Vou can start 4:without it cetii o capitel. Vette toda. O. 1,taitetiteet Co., and CuEres, twortee PIK*01P.. ,an Illt"111114**0a. wen • Tblishualted andtsgligM , prepare time Has preen -Wed and • t4.4 0. ' :01611:112144 Yft ttib'atet.:011 -7-gisof "elialant124rada 1). sale,. ea. , .84Pre and .after; .• th* Pale mediae, - • se • 'iecommend as mine Our BuIk Teas. Are as goodas we eay they are, Probably better than you think they are, Thei , have no fancy names, they need none, • Simply ask for our 25c, or 35 or. 400 Tea, an'd yon Will get in your parcel this store's idea of Tea GOODNESS, without pay. mg more than you ought for it. Of course there may be people who have formed a preference for some other brand of tea, who wouldn't care to change. • But We, have noticed that the majority of those who try these teas of ours stay with them. T. O'NEIL; . .The Grocer! Clinton,.. Ont. CENTRAL MEAT libiliKET, R. Fitzsimons 415 Son. We thank qui' customers for. their generous patronage hi the • past, and desire 'to notify them -that .we have moved. to the Clornhe Block, Tf'here we have .much more room than- forinerly. • The very choicest fresh and cured Meats kepi . ' in. stock, All Orders will receive prompt and,careful attention, FitZ$IniOnS SOn • .'.....TelePhone 75. . .., . ghee imiversat satisfaction. It pros:mew Veneenently euree.all forms of Nervous Wee& sees. mteramis, Sp4;rmatorrhara. IVITIOW L .... „;. and effessot abuse ettexcessee she 2bbamo, Opium or ifitteraktbia. oda} Wee, eh of which lean to ty,,_Cimieuantion and an Zan/ Orme& 41 verpookono °esti for **. Ossatiel) see WU eure. Dialled prompting) ow, olosuo. %for hootenannies. .s Wood Company, Windsareent, Canoga, Woods FhoephOdine ie sold in Can, to• by R, P. Reekie, F. W. Watts, H. B.Ovintiej a.nd E.1-lovey. Druggits g am prepared, to buy this season's 1• ' clip ofiw,00l, as usual, a,t • onmffier Woollen WM - • for highest -cashiprice or in exchange for manufactured articles . . . have a, large assortment of • I.HOIVIESPUN CLOTH.. '1 Lor ladies' Dresses and Costumes. Thesaccess of forimer years induces .1 • me t ext nsively into the man • liffiettlre of this popular article of clothing: . . • • BET.TER IIIANEVER our petrenagerespeetfiillysolici6 every .d,ep Ittnoent of our School. -The JESSE GLEDHILL ie the splendid ACIvan tap. e6 offered in ' Seeming! Woollenftliiis: 1 . • • Or TORONTO. yor letiokly and thorMighly teething young People to sore good salaries in busibess posi- tions With 22 teachers. keg egoism -en% up. to -date et urges, mod,3rienietbods ana thorough system, We can guarantee excellent results. Our new catalogue is a "dandy". Write for it .Yonge and Gerard Sts., Toronto w. it. SHAW, • - PrIniepin. Turtle Bad Blood into • Rich Rd Blood. No other remedy possesses such perfect cleansing, healing and -purl, lying properties. •„ Externally, heals Sores., .01ters, Abscessesand a:ti Eruptions. Internally, restores the Stomach, Liver, BoWelsi and Blood to healthy action. If 'your. appetite ls poor, your energy gone, your ambitioe lost, B.B.B. will restore you to the x+++++++++++++041+24 'od Asti * _ • 4. Before placing your orders for 4. your season's supply of Coal, get eie our prices. The very best goods 4.• carried InAock ajtid.s.o.ld at the lowest posgJble - ' Order may be left at Davis 4.• RoWlancl's Hardware store, or 4.. with: w,-t.t. Stevenson, t1t At Electric Light intintf R444444+4444404.44441 CLINTON flour, feed g Seed SIOre JAS. A. FORD MALEE, IN • FLOUR AND FEED OF ALL KINDS • •ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED 64TtilARAO ST. CLINTON • •APPLES WANTED CLINTON' EVAPORAT()It, Any 0,fia all varieties,.• • niatipsT PitIcES PAW, • full enjoyment Of happy vigeroug TOWN 64 aSi. Olint'on, Sept, 13t11,1005.• • The Clinton New Era will be sent to NEW $1111SCRIBERS'for the balance ot: the par tor Wk. advaticei The sooner you subscribe, the ,m e papers et