Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1905-11-10, Page 6_ TUE CLINTON NEW EBA 10,000 MILES OF ENS The Habit of 116alth WHAT IT TAKES TO FEED L ON PON EVERY YEAR Many people have a habit of ailing. How much better it would be to learn to keep well. For health, after all, is largely a inetter of habit, which all may acquIre with a little practise. BEECHANI'S PILLS teach good habits. to Stomach, Liver, Kidneys antirliowels. If you are subject to Bilious Attacks, suffer from Censtipation or are, irembled with Indigestion, Nervousness ori eadache, Beecham's Pills will reform all these bad habits and„eeit an example of good health,. which the bodywill quickly folloV. You can break up all sickly habits by occasionally using tiP." health suggestions trans mated by Beecham's Pills. Prepared only by Thomas Beecham, St. Helens, Lancashire, England, Sold by all Druggists In Canada early. S. America. In boxes 25 cents, 401104 Hs.ye 3.41 seen the Handsome Catalogue 67 "Peninsular Baseburners" Keep Homes Warm. • Next to "Heela" Furnaces, Peninsu- lar Baseburners are the best heaters. Canada. Because, • between the magazine section and, the portable jacket, is. a • constant cir• - culation of pure, dry, heated air, whiclt comes out into. the room through an opening in the top.of the stove. By attaching a pipe, an upstaira • room tnay be heated at the same thne as the room in which the stove is placed. ' Let us show you the latestmodels -and the details of construction. "Peninsular Baseburners"are full of interest to prospective stove buyers. 10,10MMI• 1101•0111M, Local Agents: DAVIS & ROWLAND PheelPbOttilliee Tbe Great English is an old, well lislaed and rotlabb vreparatioa. Ras beta presaribed and new over 40yeerst ailment gists in the Dondula of Canada sell so e• Recommend as -baba Before and After. the eine medicine a tte amet t,hat einem:sot ghee universal eatisfaetion. IA tsunami, rese Peranattently eerie, all torms at Nervous Weat • neeejmission% Spermazorrhems. Impotently anis admin. or souse erezeteses ; the*.ie OW 14 2beacce. trgiunt or 'Stun Lamar= sad muss Wor•ii .eit or silica lead to Coueumenou at. an nitro? treave. jt per peekage or etc for OassobS' MX wil.1 mire. Mailed prompts_sis es. cdprias. mod tor nee Pamphlet, a=les the Wood Ourapanes Whidsose Ouse cannek Woods Phospholine is sold in Ctin, to by R. P. Reekie, F. W. Watts, H. B.Combe, and J. E. Hovey. Druggits If not, you are not yes familiar with the work being done in Canada's Greatest Commercial School. 370 placed lett year. Home courses in BOOK -KEEPING, SHORTHAND or PENMANSHIP, for those who cannot attend at Chatham. If you wish the home training write for Cat- alogue E. If you wish to attend at Chat- ham write for Catalogue F. Mention hie paper when yon write, ad- dressing D. McLachlan & Co. Canada Business College nov3 .2mtf CHATHAM,, ONT., Call and examine Our kook of high art pianos of la* ' est cage deeigns, and containing fineet no tions purohasable for money. See our very latest styles of sweet -toned organs, at ' prices. Instrnemente rented. tuned or paired. Gramophones and mimic in vat iety at e. HOARE'S music: Emporilita A warage of -Ter Good Health garand -Mogul is the nicest possible blend of the, finest and ripest teas. Grown on the sun- kissed- -highlands, each P'ackage is a whole bouquet of delicious fla- Vors. q Cold, tepid or hot, it is always a family luxury. Pleasing to mothers, palat- • able to children, it is Ceylon's beg mountain gift to you. High in theine (tea -tone) and low in tannin (bitters), it is the beverage of hy. gale. 25c, 30c, 40c and 50c per pound. ' Grand Mogul Te Thames Water, When John Burns, the English labor leader, was in Montreal the other daY, nays The Herald, he syent to 'the moun- tain top in company. with Mr. Baker, member of Parliament for East Fins- bury. Mr. Bake; it will be remember- ed, is a Canadian who has won Point - cal prominence in the Old Country, and he is naturally enthusiastic respecting the beauties of hls native fend. He was pointing out the reejestic St. Law- rence to Mr. Burris, when the latter remarked in a bantering tone: "Why, it le only water, after all." "Well," replied Mn Baker, "of course it is, and what else is„ the English Thames, of whose -glories you are al- ways talking?" ' "The Thames," Mr. Burns said, qulek as a flash, "why, Itis liquid history." More Deadly. than •Panit.4ne • Neglected catarrh • eaciner or . later. causes consumption which destroys -more briman-being.a" than 'Moine. -and' war combined. The way Catarritozone. cures Catarrh is very. situ pi& ; it that.. kills .the germs that cause•• the ivrita.7 • tiro .; then bySOothing *tWay the Con- i gestion and nflamatiori it cures the discharge, • hawking end dropping in the throat. "I suffered so continuant.. ) frton nasal catarrh" Writes Ernest '11 Dakin, of Rosemont, "that I searaele knew whatitwas to he .free front head. - ache and pain over the eyes. Oataxrh-• ozone relieved me at 'once andmade a thorough ciire." No other remedy cures like "C itarrhosOne"-try....it for your next cod. • ' - - LOST WORKS OF•ART. Masv Gems Destroyed ThrosIgh Coro. ti lessneli or StnyilditY. •• The workman stumbled and his brawny fist went through a Splendid Everett Shinn pastel. . "Drat It all!" Laid the pastel's owner. ..... . a millionaire collector. "Stupid people are always destroying 'works of art." He discharged the Werkinan. Then, a littlecalmer, he resumed: • "On New iond street in London a Turner worth ged,000 was 'destroyed •by a charwoinan, The Turner VMS a • water color drawing, and a pointing in oils hung beside it. The owner Pointed to the painting an said: "'That picture is dusty. Rth it dap* cloth over it.' , . "But the charwoman by Mbitake rah - bed her dant) cloth over the water col- or, turning it into. it blot, smudge, and thus one of the finest Turner disap- peared from the world. • 1 "A hey shot a marble front a sling in Paris. Tlifs faarbte went through a win- dow of the laixemboorg gallery and •titterly destroyed a Meleeortlet worth "A Named:tales Statuette was fifoleti . from a van in Boston, and Some Iola. rant students en Commeoweaith ave. nue stood it up aud stotoo it. "I brought frem Apart on one 0604. 01011 itts ivory tusk that was carved from end to end with iionkeys-4,over a hundred monkeys walking, tuoleaW together. holding ono Ititektier's tails. IThe piece was fifteen century Work, ' and It WAS Valued mildly at $7,000 Wail, I dropped it *tit of a ilfth fitory Wiitiow oat. ilk* attar a *Mt mope. Ilow bettor Mow* tr. I* that teak . assegiettemeak ...Ar en Million Sacks of Wheat, 2,500 Tens of Coffee, 68 Million Gallons of Milk, 80,000,000 Pounds of Butter, 4500100,000 Eggs, and a Great River Of Seer Are Areong the Startling Figures. "Two butters, one bread," reneated he 'waiter, glibly, as he made a hasty niereglypti on my bill, handed It te • me with a yet more hasty "Thank • you, sir-Inuch oblige," and' darted away in response to a regular eus- tomer's imperious "Albert!' ' •The scene was a busy restaurant in the heart of London's business "city-," and the time that rush -and -scramble hour, when every "clty roan" may be found taking in food, says The Edin- leure•h• Scotsman, All around were silk - hatter men intent on • nourishment, darting here and there...end everywhere were perspiring 'waiters bearing dan- gerous•piles -of dishes; much rattle of koives and forks and human voices. Dishes were emptied and seats vacated. A hasty Melt by the waiter. (Deposed • of the at eustomer's crumbs; a clean • knife and fork, more bread and o customer filled the vacancies, and hese., Presto! Off they go. again, • . I" checked 'my bill, in spite of "Al- bert's" hasty figures. My bread 1 saw Was •responsible for a modest penny, • inY butter for two more. From what distant countries 'I wendered had come these two to meet through the . medium of the waiter's introduetion • upon that city table? • • Ten Million Sacks of Wheat. .1 impovefisiteg Soil Impoverished soil, like impov- erished blood, needs a proper fertilizer. A. chemist by analyz- • ing the soil can tell you what fertilizer to use for different products. • If yonr blood is impOverished, your doctor will tell .'you what you need to fertilize it and give it the rich„ red corpuscles that are lacking in it. • It May be you need a tonic, but more'likeliyou need a concentrated fat food, and fat is the element laCking in your system. There' is le fat , food that is BO easily. digested and. assimi- lated as The supplies seemed plentiful .• enough, but My imagination took me - to • piles :upon piles or periny rolls and circular pats of butter orie for :each inhabitant of that: hugte.„ coonty, and. imagination :staggered. Russia, India, Canada, Hungary,- the States and Aus- tria all aid under centributionto make Penny: rolls! What a •Capaseau;, mouth has this London' Which consumes more than ten milliotr sacks of wheat year - JY. Look at it in: figurea-10„0110,000.- it not 'a Portentioua Meal? ' would' *sit awhile and ponder, and. so ordered cOffee, of whiOn your , Len-. dorier • takes increaeing quantities . •whilethe imports for the country re -- main ahnost. stationeryS, Anon, Albert 'briniglitT. ciTlittle -share . of tOnCion's, 'annual coffee „heap-eiome 2:500 tons, equivalent to about Ilea lbs.• a head, poured: inthe smallest drop , of a dub- loue-looking • bluish Londoe'e s‘rntlk.. Its annual 'milk. pail Welds some 05 'million gallons . of mills -no, I 'Oheck- ed. the base:interrogation rig to water; . - that is Only:need to make- ups,Vonle ecaYeri m1liioi gallons of the -fluid • re- sulting from '"condensed." • • •'"Butter ," called my neat neighbor, • briefly.. I via.teh •the waiter dive a* fork into it. bowl of water and .extient . a Slab of oleaginous yellow -quaint fish, indeed,- for such qUeer fishing. Fifteen pounds' a yeara conservative esti- mate of a Londoner's need in that 11 - rection, ,inaking the 'total' amount of butter consumed 80,000,000 lba, .nine - 'tenths. of Which Is fdreign. And what of .substitutes? • Margarine., "cooking" butter?.. r .gasped- at the Mere.. thought. • . Ten Thousand miles 'of Ee,es. From butter to eggs. New -laid eggs, fresh eggs, Cookingeggs, and -- eggs, as the , lamented -Dan .Leno to say. Here provision 'Must be •tnade for an eXteaordinas'Y' aliPetite, because each inhabitant. of London -County; .man; • woman . and, •chtId. :accounts for some 80'.annuallye4e0,000,000 egg of all sorts -four hundred : and fifty millions -br, if laid (apt 'expression. for, eggs) end to end, upwards of 10,000 miles of . eggs 'artilua:11y, and 'equivalent at a penny eciell to a totalegg bill of. near- • ly £2,009,000.• -enough to strike terror into the heart of any housewife: • I sipped. My coffee. reflectively.. .0h, for the. chance' of supplying this Woo- derful customerfor bat a day. . I Saw my fishermen collecting the doily Portion of the twenty mililoti oyeters, the .25,000 boxes of salmon, and the 200,000, tons of fish which stray to the London 'fish emarkets isitilngs-,: gate and •Shadweil. yearly. Vpietured Myself .with landisesherds, and wealth Df alt kinds I -grew -exile -naives-. I, or-- dered a sepend, toffee. • • • lialf the Salmon cOnitibted-eIn the Metropolis is Seottishs abeut one- eighth Irish , and •, about one-twentletli the remainder beingstipplied•• by the usefel foreigner; good ''preflt there, I thought, The foreigner only sends. abeut 20,000 thris. of fish, but a, greathr portionof the • 80,000 tens of.. potatoes.. tvkiently there .muet be more. Irish in Loneon than the census re- turns allow! 13ut Wisest a glorious pro- fit X would take otir of tbot quarter •mitilop piiiincis.butter .b111,. or the Z650,- 000 Which Was to PaY. fel, some 7,000,- • 000 bushels of fruit. • . • Evidently the . city dweller knows of the health -giving properties : of fruit, 'Does he neglect that Other healthy, exercise, the cold. bath?, . Could. r .be blamed for asterning thathe didn't,. with a water 'total •of. ope hundred ond twenty thottsand million gallons? Sere- 1•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1 1 Appetite. comes with eating •lariorcloidornu senraocesrshrnsosegreuern.asre. but ofc torisp de- e 1100110,eS Perfection •'Cream Sodas aro cietrent from any other cracker., Nothing heavy ow doughy about them but so light and•,crisp• that they are trans. parent. Mooney's biscuits will Ism& rasedee_ delresset vnue...., Scatt'S Et11141Si00,' of., c�d -Liver • . _ . It will 'nourish and strengthen the body when Milk and cream „ fail to .49 it. .Scott's Ernulsion .• is a1 o' the. Same; always Palatable and ahs beneficial • V•7.liere the body is wasting from. squareknot, as shown in the.. second 'any :cause, 'either Children diagram. The. next move is to cam or adults ; the end or the mid matted A clOwn- : • :•. wird through the first leteP• Ti* third . We will send yogi a sample free. -.(1Fagrani silo"' the tangle thus furgludf • • • • • • and it is such a thoroughtangli that to Be • sure that 'this pies pull the two ends of the string would tufa JO • the form • of es , snake .a hard '.and con1Plieated label is on the wrapper But the end 4 of. the cord ' is • noW' . of eVery•bettle of Einal- brought up Over the outside' of the fIrSt• ision you buy. • loop. and is carried' down,throughthe. COM& IONE. second -loop, :corning' out in the sp.me direetion with the end 13,,: as in the 0.02111STS. foprib. diagram; New, .by taking hold .Tortnte,lota of the hie ends of thia cord end pulling . • them the-cord,May be •drawn out per 50 and 41,00 feclly straight, the Inieta disappearing. AR:Bruggitts: The ' peketitiii illi de may 'ble.76111.4 more Mystifying by: asking SS Spectator to hold both ends of the Cord, -while the • A STUDY IN KNOTS. This Trick Is a Uttle DIIIIcalt, but . Volt Call Master It. The untying of knots in a String by tying other knots in the same string is a pretty feat whit whicli those who care to learn it may amuse and mysti- dy those who have never seen it done. It Is quite easy, and there is no trick: about it, A careful study of the AC, companying .diagrams will make it easy to learn the feat, which can be perfortned with a stout cord or small • rope. A simple knot is made, as in the first diagram, and then the second knot Is made, forming what le known a's a ROW THE Minn SSIIE • :- -------- - .. - . _es...sees . ,---r- ..iy •rney don't arink this, notsvetristanci- . ing the infusion of 35 million pounds - operator,concealing• the knotted :pore of tea? If tea drAikine: itis vice., as' eolith t People *Mild:. hay e US believe. ' Don in his hantle, rubs the 'Isnotil soute ' London unist ,haVe se yeey boa attetek!. • leaving the spectater In PeaSeSSIMI of , -• , • . ' - .. ... • . a smooth and 'unbroken String. P(101, ARiver of Beer , • ..And yet so. hfige a: mouthful :of.; tha'A'7e-bly the -spectator may fallow the., whole ...Operation so closely • as :tie be able to dry. commodity, chepie, as. 30;000 tons . m et' ie d' - . ' . ' ' hi- ' • . • • .-perform. it hintiself • on the -fitst trial; Btit, 'staYS. how. 'would beer fulfill this but he Will be apt to 'inage .a •mistake last duty" ; 'Tie ie thirsty Lendon, for - in forming. the second leap and •reverse' . it needs,: according to . Mn Charles : the" twist shOWn, In the second diagram. ' no'oth, six-1.4111ton barrels of beer each In that case he will stmeeed only in : Year to titierieh ita thirst, ' and a barrel,. holds thirty-six -gallons -- seventeen ,tying a knot that will be diffictilt to un- holds million '`pint s of beer." .,What tie after:the attempt is made to , Pull the cord :straight:: The eity, men around me were de- vouring steaks, joints, fish, chops, • all with .'a healthy disregard for digeetion. The • huge needs of London troubled them: not :so. leng as immediate indiv- idual 'necessities Were satisfied. Roast beef of old: -Englasid,--from :• America; Southdown mutton-refreen New •Zea- land:: "Surrey": • fowle,--froni.. Russia, butahered to make a. LOndon .luncheon heuiS: • s • • • ..• • • . "Theysderbvoedr'sup ..Salmon;• venison, :and wna By hundreds by'.,dolen% and. in seores, Mutton and 'fatted beeves;'sWare and . bustard" • , • ...„...s.50.000 tons of Meat in short they serve up, Only half of which come from the 13ritieh Vmpire, and none of. Which ..iiand comes o ..,frm Europe, ,outetde, of these .s It was a pleasing:,picture 1 had' Corr -- lured up: The world paying tribute in meat, meal, and malt .for the hunger- Aatisfying of great, over-grownLondon. How seldom' does this question of sup- ply. enter into .the minds of visitors to London, How vividly do these figures bring home to us the unvvielciynese of .:this Empire City.' • • • But -new. S -had swanderedsfar -away .in thought: from My city restaurant. was picturing vast armlet of cow% a ,sheempigs; and 'fdivla marching on London as .11to overwhelm it,sand: yet being devoured •ae- fast as they arriv- ed. , Anon I pictured ail London laid Out one tremendous' cornfield and its five and. a ball million people singing the words of R. 13. blasskmore: .• "The corn, Oh, the corn, and theyet- " low mellow' born, • "Thanks for- the corn, with the bread . upon the board"; • •• • .a.0 yet quite futilely, or the whole arca of. London if cultivated votild only. produce abotzt one -eleventh of .the amount required to feed the singers fOr a year. So little spare room is. there .that everything capable of being ini- ineos,, rtedready for censuniption is so im- ported. Yet cominoclities are cheap m copared.' with many Continental nit- , saw a picture of arinies of butch- ers, bakers, milkmen, and waiters ministering to London's 'needs. The pieture seenied to fade -and finally re- solved itself into "Albert" bringing me a supplemental bill for my coffee, The reetaufant Was nearly empty. The workers had 'retorted to their hives, My phantom arrnies of cows,' sheep, butchers, end bakers had disappeared, and roy last coffee was cold. • . "Was It indigestion, or have L slept?" I asked .royself as nay bill. • • Ifyietleei has petfortned almost: ni ir- iseul....us cures of catarrh; • and is today • recogrtized"by leading inenibera Of the, . Medical ..profession as ,the 'on.y ad- • vertiSed remedy that can be relied upon to do just What it Clairns. rte. complete outfit of liyotnei costs $1.0a, and cintsists of an inhaler.a medicine dropper, and a bottle or Breathe Hyomei „through the in- haler fOr a few inmates • four times a clay. and it Will cure the a orstscaSe of catarrh, s it soothes and . heals the naticou4 membrane of the ait, passages, prevents irritft ,ion and, •effects a coin: • • ine e ilnd lasting cute. . • IIf yotl cannot .obtain i-lkornei of Your dealer, it will he forwot ded by • I tiled, postlige paid., on receipt•ot price. i'Weite today, flit' eonsititaliOn •bilink that will entitle.you to serviceS of our med iecif-dep tie 'tient NVIth011f . The R. T. Booth. Conlioany, Rvwxiei Building; I t haca, N. Y. • • . SIMPLE REflEDY • FOR CATARRH. . . . . Just Breathe liyomel Pour Timex a Day and Be Ru.red!. THE NEWWOMAN She Is both Disciple and ApostIe of the Gotipel of Good Health. The new WOMM1 is simply the one who by experience, education and cora-, I • DRESS HINT.% moil sense is qualified to make the lar- gest anti. hest use of her capabilities. A bit of old crape la the Very best She Is More delightfully feminine than thing for dusting one's gowns. eVer-the attractions of her WoMall- Always ilaS4 the bones and hooks and hood more .charmirig, But she is both eyes from discarded, or wornout gar. disciple and apostle of the gospel of merit. . They will be found. Useful up. health, She is gradually breakhlg on another frock, down the terrible conventionality that Don't get, your raincoat too iong. It bas bound Woman to styles of dress only gets wet and muddy, besides 1101)* inethode of life and inane activity of ping around year ankles in a way cont. mind 'and body whieh heretofore tot- dueive to your catchlog a heavy tolkt tered her fullest development. ITer one garment nbenid never be huag marvelous individuality seeks more oVer another on the same hook, To do freedutt 6t•gtUsVt14 "14 "Presslutl` title would take all the freshness out of , either animate or illanimate, and the the tintlerin6st garment, and It would new woman would follow this uttiver. most • • J-I.ER FAVORITE VEHIDLE. Next to the Gocart This Woman Likes the Wheel Hoe. sorry for the woman whose standards, ifocial or .p Ysical, do not permit her to handle a he:. It seems to Me as graceful an instruxtent as a golf club, An hour's exercise alotlg a tidy garden row will prodUce the finest kind • ot a glow, and, withal, you get so much more done with a hoe! It is but a poor spirited person who will "putter with flowers," but dare not work in the.veg, etabbe garden for fear that Some one may think ehe has to do It. If the neighbors are scandalized because I turn the baby loose in the shade on the grass and push the Wheel hoe instead of the perambulator it Is their lookout. Perhaps now they are..dying to dig and have not quite dared for fear of nly scathing criticism!' Let them know the worst. I purpose to dim to rake, to sow, to weed, to hoe and to harvest for the sake a what 1 get out of It in men - tat growth,' fiowers, exereise, aesthetic uplift and vegetables. I shall take mY , torn, too, with the bicycle, the tennis racket and the golf clubs but next to the gocart the wheel hoe Is my faVer- Ite vehielei---Mary Rogers Miller in Suecess Magazine. not Imbrove the ono which lay upper - se law to, a reaeonabie extent rather 00 of tho most weeenful woo to dead Iota of nal- den "Al ILIad ginla 11 ACESSiail&P'' tliirn bbilt to tepression Ot bir int* WhenThat Biting Pain Tells of Kidney Disease Nov, 10th, 1.005 , 4 Pruit-a-tives are the firet step in the cure. In fact, Pruit- a-tives'will'eure ordinary Kidney Tront;les without assist., ance, They do this by cleaui,ng° and, regulating the whole system. ' Fruita-tives" stir up the liver -cure ''Biliousness -make the bowels move regularly every day. ' That rids the system of poisons that affect the Kidneys. Then'Pruit-a,tives correct digestion -prevent aeiditY ' of the etOmach-insure food being completely digested. It is by their cleausing,, purifying, curative powers on the other organs that Fruit-artives have subh a healing, soothing effect on sick kidneys. " 1 save beth troubled latelyvri. th my back atid kidueys and have received great benefit from. taking Fruit -a -dyes, I am getting along Eio Well that 1 intend to continue with Pruit-a-tives until 1ant cured. I recommend Mein to my friends.” MR% jcirIN P0x, Cobourg, one (- V' you have those sharp, shootingpains in the back -if the urine is scant and scalding -if you are bilious or constipated -cure yourself With or Fruit Liver Tablets. At all druggists; sona box. Manufactured by Fria -a -lives Urnited• ottawa. To Be One of the Most Wonderful Structures I the: tieW Quebec bridge. which is to serian..the River St. Dawrende frein the Chaudiere the south • tide to Cap Reuge on the'. Mirth 'side, seven Miles west of Quebec,' Will,' when completed; inh e the one wofo•trha,moSat-Wohderful struettires , The Weight. ofmetal to be pet- in the structure will be 33,000 tens, and up to the present :only .3,000 tens have. been Plithed 1 'position.. The false work alone that had to be..erected be- fore anything could be .dorieonsthe superstructure is a, regular .bridge in itself, and weighs..five thousand tons, sand when it hag done duty on: • one side will .be taken •doWriandrebuilt On the other tide Of theriver to promote the. erection: The Metal parts ' be be .used ineputtingstogether :thesgigantie structure weigh ,frOrn five to one hun- dred tons each, according . to size and the importance of their relative posi- tions.: The Phoenixville Bridge Co. of Phoenixville, who have the contract, were obliged to construct. new machin- ery and enlarge their mills to menu, facture these parts, whieh are the larg- est used in bridge work the world over• . Specialf..cate had to be constructed to carry the: metal from • the ritills • to the Chautliere, • ;Where ,• eleetria traveling •carnie arfet.., 'rented.. , to'. handle the :s . • ..The approach work 'front the. Chau- diere Or main. line.. of the L Cele,. and R,.•isabig contract in iteelf; and beskip %three Mlles .of' trestle work,. rook mittizig, • and ..oulverts, includes steel. bridge • eight hundred ..feet in length aerose the. Chandiere Alver. • The main bridge is •now Well under way, and the •.contractors..for •the work ,feel minfident that it.will be dompleted. by the tan .of 1907, barring Unforeseen:: accidents)... The . bridge runs out from theshore to the main pier. . "Alt the bottern. chords,' eleven in,„ number, '-Weighingfrom. sixty. , to einetytons each,. are laid', and the floor system to the main pier is nearly •completed O'vvo shoes .weighing seventy-five tons: each; . are being , placed :at the . main. • per, and the pins to hold -them, six feet •teninches long . and .teventY'four inches In diameter, iveighitig -flYe: tone each, are being hammered intos. posi- . • . Difficult Trip to the Mackenzie... ,A.b. interesting Peep into the difficul- 'ties attending a trip, to the Mackenzie River district mere than thirty years • • ' ago -Was- given at 'St James' Cathedral. 7 • '50 YEAR8,- EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS Anyone -ending a sketchC anti fdRal Ge e r tHeTt 130 na imaa . • •quicaly. ascertain pur Opinion free whether an Invention Is probably patentable.. COnnnunlea. tion s strictly confidential. Mom on Patents sent free. Oldest. agency for securing patents. Patentir taken through Munn a co. receive • • spectunetice, without charge, lathe Scientific iernasolite.nt illustrated weekly. Lergest•elr. 'aulation of any selentala journdl. • Terms. 53 a year: four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. MUM" &Co 36113roadwai, New yerk ursine. .e oce. 425 TP St,. Washington. U, ....e.minimmiatumorp R. ritzsinions & Son Ve- are -still- in the But- chering business, and are in.a position to fill .all or- ders for seasonable meats, intrusted to our care. , , - Our new business stand is in the 'Combe Block. R. riiiiiraonslo'.$0n...' Pliiine161 APPLES WANTED • —AT THE-- CLINTON ' EVAPORATIHt, Any and all varieties. , HIGHEST PRICES PAID. TOW CASE Clinton, Sept. 13th, lOOo.' flour feed Seed Store Toronto, recently by Ilishop Reeve, the Missionary in. that , faraway diocese. Thirty-six years' agO, when he and his wife hied first. gone to Mackeezie, there was no communication between East- ernsarid-Weetern Canada. They had to go to New York •and travel from there to Minnesota. Then they Went four days by vitagoti sand four Moresdown the Red River to Fort' Garry. Thence they traveled nearly three menthe' more In an open bolsi; manned- by Indians and • halfbreeds. Month offer month they pushed along until Fort Simpson was reached, on the Mackenzie River. Three and a half months Previously they had finished the railway part of the Sour- ney.O obtaizt supplies they had . to Write out a list two years before the goods reached them:, Lotter si were :re- ceived btst twice a, year,' and, the late est news was five months old. The nearest doctor was 2,000 miles away, TO -day they, received their fetters four times a year, and the railway came to Within 1,100 miles of them. Supplies weee brought in once a year. He said' that a new diocese, of Athabaska was required. • • If Your Liver is Wrong You are Wrong all Over :3EALER iNj FLOUR. AND FED OF ALL KINDS ATAI ORDERSPROMVTLY FILLEIJ • ONTARIO ST. CLINTON We have Somelhlag to Sag And take this method of BAYING IT. Separate de Sheep from the goats ' In feed mills, and van find . the LondesbOro Mill Oa the right side every- time, for Fine .Meal , and Groutel Chop it is without an equal ABREAST W/TH rut TIMES. This is (madly where we arewith FLOUR. -- Our SWRAIGIIT Ii0f.Lila is hard .to beateand our HATA, MAZOTOBA le a little ahead of the •th fell ' o r Pt-orMAvtroim.P Est A torpid, inactive liver goes hand in hand with constipation. Stteh a chronic condition requires a system- atic effOrt to Overcotne it and estate lish good health and perfect body drainage. Smith's Pineapple 'and Butternut Pills, containing the two needed, elementsto increase laver am- tivity and muscular action go sem- lately to the sluggish liver And bow- el, restoring them eotnpletely.' Suppose your bowels failed to move for a week or ten days, Don't you know you would be, quickl • pros - 'Med.?' It is just the same, cllffering t degree, when your bowels do not love at least once a day. 'Stott knew you soon become languid And tired your blood gets bad and you fee mean and sick all over. VOA should have a full, healthy passage daily. Don't let serious conditions 'develop, Sinith'e Pineapple and Butternut' Ma will drive bowel poison mit Of your system and establish regularity. They are partly vegetable, and cute in one night. We will oehd you a inou,..:1 emu* sample of thou pill' Abaohd07 nett sealed and poatpald, that wiu onvince you beyoad doubt a their trOadetfill. ensath. ivert1. At. , W. P. east* ci., Ids St. luau mood, • is PERFECTION; and sontds as the head in , thia line, where we intend to lead. Dear read- er, if you have not tried ottr flour, do so at once. 11 szsinegi at brAlam prices arid GRISTING Witt4T our SPEOIAT,TY ' Inglieet Plratge33),arnfiot,Iheat, Oats, T, SQUIRE, 1'roprie4or Looesboto, Oct. 26 X+*++++++++++++++++24 Before placing your orders for your season's supply of Coal, get our prieee. The very beSt„g00cle canted in stook and sold at the lowest possible price. Orders may be Ieft:at Davi Ilovvland's Hardware store, +with W.,J.!Stevenson Inectrle Light, Plan X++444444444444+ .,,M10411tithk* WINGHAM TRIMNESS L-seit