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The Clinton News-Record, 1905-01-12, Page 31. e t, January 12th 1905 ..„, .?•rs The Clinton Newl.ReCerd ,This Big Sale of Men's CLOTITING and FUEVISIIINGS .................... ...7..:....CONTINU.E.. ILL .THRO1Gi ... A L . . Here's' a fresh list of bargains WHICH GO ON SALE .AT ONCE. Men's Fine Dress Overcoats in sizes from 36 to 44, Made from fine black beaver cloth,da, k grey cheviots and fancy tweeds, beautifully lined th black farmer's satin. This is the best $12,00 coat we sell, sale price.. , .. Men's grey and black all wool frieze and beaver cloth, Overcoats, made in the new long full style, first class.linings, our best $10 Overcoat and leader 4. at that, sale price. ••••• ............ ill. tin./ • Youths' Overcoats made from fine dark greywool frieze with .velvet collar, &so with large Storm • collars, sizes33 to 35, regular $7,50 to $10 00 Coats, all .at one price „ „....... , ; • • . 0 MEN'S $20 BLUE SERGE SUITS.F0k$16.50 Dining this sale, we will MAKE TO ORDER any ot our best $18'to $20 Navy Blue Serge Suits, with first class linings for $16.50 • We are offering liberal reductions onall •made-to-or- der Overcoats. We have a first class Stock of black and navy beavers, 'cheviots, meltons, fancy . tweeds, etc., co choose from, at almost any price yonxish to pay. ' BOYS' KNICKERS AT 49c • • 50 pairs Boys' Knickers made With doubleseats and. knees, regular pr4 ice 75c, Sale Price " • 5%; 'Metes Tweed- Solt Lengths [3% yards] Given Away Free of Charge • If there is a man in the country whc wants a suit here Is the chance of a life time. We have about 20 Men's Tweed Suit Lengths that we got in the Holloway stock which we are going to.give away ABSOLUTELY FREE.. Here are the conditions --You may pick any pattern you wish and have it made up by us and allyou have to do is to pay the ordinary price for making and ttimmino,. There is not ono suit length in the lot worth. under >8t0,tsomeara 'worth $10.00 each. • MIN'S $1.00 CAPS FOR 50c. • 3 doz, Men's Winter Caps in all the new and staple shapes, made from beaver cloth also tweeds, to • 9 only Men's and Ladies' Beaver and Black AStrach- an Fur Caps, our best.$3.50 and $375 qualities, ..•,en • one price • . LoOrt, 2 doz, pair Men's Genuine Buck and Mocha Mitts and Gloves in all sizes, our best $1.50 and $2.00 • .. •• .. • Gloves for Saturday only the price will he $1.00 .BOVS 35c CAPS AT 10c -- (one only to each boy) 2 doz. only Boys' Winter Caps with peak and pull down band, in Sizes qi to 7, the best 25cand.35c. 106 Caps we have, all one price • Boys' Overcoats made from dark grey all wool frieze, ' velvet and storm collars, best $5 Coats for..... 50 BOYS' Small Sizes $1.95 Medium $2.50 Large $2.75 50 Men's Suite made from newest Canadian tweeds . and serges, in sizes 30 to 44;' Your choice dur7. ing this sale of any of the above $10 suits for.... 6.95. FUR COATS REDUC18D- 1 only Fur Lined Coat with Persian Lamb Collar,• •:;1, our. $75:00 coat for . , MOU 1 only Coon Coat, $65.0.0 Value fOr, • .* ‚s' $50 2 Dog Skin coats ,[blackl $25.00. value for $18.50' :100 pair Men's extra heavy ribb.all wool Sox, home- . made and factory knit, our best 35c and 40c so' • for. • • ; • , • • : 25cf 3 dozen Black Way Mufflers 35c and 40c for 25c: 20 dozen Men's fine' fleece wool Shirts and Drawers, insizes' ficim 32 to 42. The best 75P Under— . wear we have for • • . • 1)Posite t e are ,•. • • A Leghorn. • City l'slieee—W1Mt kind of a chicken is that, Uncle Josh? tilde J;Osh—That is a Leghorn. City Niece—How. stepid, of me! Of course I ought to have no tieed the horns on his legs: - . . . , The Altdoight if4onteartde. • ' '. She;. -Henry! 116-,-Hult? She—Xuat im..: agine baby is one of those sick friends. you sit' up all night .with. . • - i Blessed is be who has foetal his work. Let him ask no -other blessed; tuess.—Cariyie. I Every Two Minutes Physician's tell us that all. . the blood in a healthy human body passes through the heart once in every two minutes. If this action be- comes irregular the whole body suffers. Poor health follows poor blood ; Scotes Emulsion makes the blood pure. One reason why scoorrs EmuLsioN is such a great alai is because it passes so quickly into the blood. It is partly di- gested before it enters the stomach ; a double advan- tage in this. Less work for the stomach; quicker and more direct ° benefits. To get the greatest arnOlult of good with the least pos- sible effort is the desire of * everyone', in poor health. Scott's Emulsion does just that. A change for the better takes plice,even be- fore you expect it • — We will send you a ample free, Be aure that this !ileum in the form of, t label le on the mope per of every bottle of Etta:Wort you buy. Seer!' ge DOWNS Chemists Ttrantos Ont. pet ete end ors Allem/glue J Bregabkor It Gently-.• • Danny O'Brien worked on the sec- LOOKED LIKE A TRAP. tion And was as tender hearted a ntan as ever got drunk and cracked h ,pate with a shilltilah. At the time of Pat D'umphY's great misfortune Danny was chosen by the section gang to break the news gently to Mrs. Dum-. phy, , • ' "Goad marnin', Mrs.. Dumpily," 'mid he. "Did ye hear about Pat" • "I heardnothing about him since 'breakfast," she answered. "Did he seem to be all right, then?" . "Ye noticed •nothin' ..wrong wid his •-; mind?" . • • ..• ' • • 'Nothin' at all. Phvilly de ye ask?" • „"Well, I hear that his' mind do be watiderin'.a little." • "An' phwhat.do ye mean be that?" • *I mean he bare lostliis reason, Mrs. Dumphy." • ' ' ,'• '•• 'Lost hiereasOn, it? Ani heyr did he do that?" • . Well, 1p1iytdY; .seratching hie bead, don't know ex- actly.. Ye gee, I:Wasn't close by whin it happened. But 1 do. be hearth' frotn the rest o'. the •12'ys' that be fell .110okt: the trtick, Me--e;train eut his head off," . —Brooklyn Eagle. ' • • • • , . Late Beichettied. • Sir 'Walter' ScOtt began to write his celebrated novels at 'fcirty. Milton be- gan "Paradise Lost" at fifty,. When lever Oriental Stamtimeur That Was • a 6i2atilete—streceurs. • . - ' Many a• man hes .failed'Io: guess tln easy riddle becaase the -simple.sOlution looked like a triqf to' him. • Ilere is .612 lestanee in wide"). this -trait or innan::. nature' Was 'cleverly' played aeon by a Jae:mese-nobleman, • • The: old lord , had been forced to flee with only SOO meld hetore an enemy' with 10,000 , and barely had time. to • teach • his . castle ahead . of his foes. There were no reentorceirients near, at hand; and lie . kiIew: that if an attempt was made to, storm- his defenses.' he and his men, would he dead before hep could come.. • •.• • • • • -• The etierny's;foitei advanced, • rapid- , • ly, .and scouts rode up ,near the castle to reconnoiter. To their amazetnent, they found the gates,' door and win (lows open and all the appearance of a holiday celebration they rede_hasti- ly hack to inform their master that the toe was deneine and that bands were • ; • wood Pulp raper. • not yet been able to use wood pulp °"'"' .8"1":rY' ' . • Three Feet rt DEW. Clintoi eimpopm max A RESTAURANT PROBLEM. THE BAMBOO PLANT. Despite all rean's ingenuity he bas The elan Who OM Solye. It - al it SoMetimes Grows at the Rate Of — 1 After the "'Who Is the greatest- restaurateur, In ....; alte;Word bamboo suggests le Inc* 2 cans a fal hfu fis int, rod his neighbors' ciaint y fan, To tne..japoneso ancl: dm. who sometimes goeS.`to fess for the-prets again. Instead, the' ' junkman carries it off and disposes a places to get dots on up.:to (lateness. . nese, who are most practical, Agri- . it hi -varione ways. . Waste paper, foe kna 'rePiY: "it isn't culturists. in the World, it is as Indianeeeseery to men- . instance, is steamed Waalleci and press- , tion Bellies; ed into a sot ' , 'I d do so. The greatest :restaurateur' in • ..; In filet, it isn't possible to:. . s pensable as the white pine . to s the ..1.12 * t onl 'for fibers. By. the addition a a utile . New York. or in the -whole - world m . iIWJ0jflL'. . • daily is read and thrown aside it IS use New'York?" nsk•ed hotel BlituPger Aine t h clay the surface, den' be Made smooth .• the man who can tell-toduy hasv malty. enough to: resemble metal. 'Under people hewill have to feed tomorrow." Pressure paper is also turned inte car , There is one house downtown where wheels, buckets., e P yerweights and statuary. The street Mit olio day there 4na.y.he„,500 and .an-• fakir who wishes to sell, yon a Venus other 150. Where is the hat that de Milo, Which' he essures you that you is to tell.beforehand, in tine for orders • ean drop and. it "Wont break any to -botcher, baker and candlestick mak- more," holds in his hand the eombined er, pretty nearly the number that muat product of whalf dozen old'newspaperS, he provided .for on the morrow? If • • there are 500 today• shalr enough food • • . .• for 500 be ordered for tomorrow? if Antiquity ot Engraving. so,' end only 1.50 come,' -what' ie. 10 be Game -Were' engraved-a-e-a-rerrearbe--tione—with—the—suipluesge—oe7Meate,--- pl t s enholders an average of 400•mouths are fed daily period of the world's history, The very vegetables, breed. etc.? And; 11 150 Id t ditnen of this tart in existence Come today and food tor 150 is ordered me dependent .upon it for ranch of their building, material, but make ' their ropes, Mate, kitchen utensils and in numerable other articles out of it There are many varieties of the bam boo plant, trent the species WWII :is. woven into mats to the tall bamboo tree .which the Chinaman uses tor the mast -of his large boat One variety 10 cultivated as • .a vegetable and .the• young shoot's eaten like asparagus, or they may be salted. pickled or pre-- . The rapidity Of growth of the barn; ils perhaps itemokwOndertui char- acteristic. There are Actual records served; ,r4e •powerful enemy Was foo' wise a is believed to be a square signet , for tentorrow, what is to become of the 13axabon growitig three feet -10 a playing' music' in the castle. • • mail to put lila head into any such trap' low *Seer engraved in the year 1450 'elatagement When 500 come on the single day, or at the rate cie One and a IN that he,...defenderie.t„the. ensue c_and no* te the British nameum„,..„..morrow and the larder RV elttPtyl• The 4alt 11161es 411 must have some plan„ to shInghter his The engraving. upon it is a fait picture --V-arieties--Ofz-bmithoO-dre..fettnd7e*:- forCes by wholesale or they would • of the horse of An2enophis II., and the probable business of Tuesday.10 worth erYWhere in lalnin: Oen where' there neVer lavite him in that way. He characters underneath have *been deci- 05,000 a year .to Any big restaurant • are heavy' fella of enolv in winter. It dreW back a safe distaece.. awl en- phered as being the names and titles of . But there 11.0 such man; . is a popular Miaeonceptioe that ham- booe grow only in the tropics. lapan Is a land of bamboos, and yet where these pleats geow it is not so War& iti • • ,u An Xnnillralk Story. . ' 7 They tell this stciry• dowel on Wall ,treat: TheAxedutive officer of a great insurance • company, ho.ppeeing one ' .day to n:ieet a. ittcn n the itreet, found. himself upbraided be -- Cause: conmany yefuSed to Invest in the bonds • of an enterraese With . which his friend was Connectetl. The intmeance man stood it a few „ ininetes, then seld•cerelessly, es if he were .ordering .a hex Of it neW' brand of cigars, "011, well, send .me up a mil- ! half of thcili."—Mr°°,?5 • 1ndigetion 'and •i 1SleepleiOnoss • Are symptoms. of rotivotis ex. haustion which disappear with the use of bri.Chase's • • Nerve 'Feed. Plenty of people who have a horror of nervotti ; • prostration and paralysis, suffer from indigestion, slooplessness, and. Other symptoms of nervous. • exhaotibn not realizing the day;er they are. in. • Nervous disease develops slowlyand by restoring orgerTo the -wasted nerve eellsby. the use of . Dr. . Chase's Nerve Food you can prevent serious results. MATTI•MW WHITIc, a retired farmer. ' . „ . ie , living at 01 EA& St., St. that monarch, The earliest instance of • . , Thorriag. Ont„ 'states f— eatnped. to aWitit develeinnents. • " For some years I .have • Soon the re -enforcements for the tea.. suffered more or less from • an engraved precious stone is the em- tle came up bebind..attaeked hien sud- inchtteseen Ind nervous Id in of Polyeretes 140 B. C. •The • VOLTAIRE AND ROUSSEAU. "East Lynne" appeared its author ' ' ' ' 13ible tells he that the ludaean bleb • ' ' • dyspepiat and AS a result Mrs. Ilenry Wood, was forty-five. risen which had risked all on Ito w.riests wore breastplates With the PoInted #folcen That Paused BetsveOrt the *two Author. ..1 have ooett 'subject to . , deniy and defeated him, while the gar- „ - ---- - '-n IV -- - e" atrategem charged him on the other naMes of the twelVe trlbs engraved • dizzy spelis and diseoinfort after eating. 1 used Dr. gan his public cereer, The year of the. side ' • • upon them, but nottvithstanding thie ' Voltaire and R011$Setta thOUgh Ott , Cronlwell was forty to e "hen ha b Winter as it is in California. . •• • Foot, but -4 chase's Nerve rood, and teued • it impreVed My , " Ant eothe money, do ye? ' Said the kind old lady. "NoW, I wonder ef ye % deserVe IC What wOuld you do With a '..% ere is , friendly terms, were in the habit of oder than the fifth eentnri., , . firing off pointed jokes at one another. • "One day -Rousseau was dining With Explained. - Voltaire, and oysters were brought on Mere is another example. a.fttulty the table, for, as somebody has remark. English," said the. teacher of the clads ed, nO dinner could be' complete with- in thetorie. "In this essay you have out them. The guthor "lemile," aft- . * • hegira. was the fifty-third of 'M�htlrn— , med, and Alarlberough reached hie in- dependeet command at the eanle .ttge. ' OLD SUITS OF AFtMOR. in spiritual examples Abraham was They Are Too. Short For the Artrogite seventy-ilve when Called but of Clue. Ertgliahluan of l'otlay. / ran, and alOses Was eighty when he • ./L, Walk throti h theToWer of Loddon stood before Pberaoh as the champion . of Israel. , tv..11 convinee any person that the ar- • 1 mot aid- knights of mediaeval days I,th.,,were Air night. I were puny men compared h•-•' the g ne was a typieal backwoods tamer. athlete of today. ills &fit visit a city restaurant, how;. The experiment of getting te suite of old ttrino ever, had taken away. none the ap- e in eciuntry houses has petite he had at home, where eery. often moved that the "lege" are lar too short for the averae man of the thing was placed in large dishes on the g reeent geheration center of the table and each one helIt- :p. ed himself. The waiter had piled the A well knoWn atithropologist at the food around the plate in the Customary British museum says, that undoubted - little dieheis, which the 'farmer eleaned up in turn. Settling be& in his chair; he bailed the passing Whiter: "Hey, there, young mina. Tour sant- pies are all right. Bring on the rest of the stuff." , ' ly the British race is tenet -than it woe several hundred years ago. "I think, however, that the mediaeval man Wu deeper chested and broader in the shoulders," be said. "The Old armor, it a man of good average height •could squeeze Zito it today; would be foiled loose fitting in the shoulders I and At the chest. The tallest men in 1 the World tome from Galloway and , 'Perthshire, and Yorkehire's average io a Ate one. Even that of southwest England end south Wales—five feet six incheS—is far higher than that of many of the continental IltitIOns. The tallest men after the men of GalloWay. Who have an average Of nearly AIX feet, are the 1'ulabs of the French Sudan, and the Patagortians are be. lieved to hold a very good average?— , London Express, i • isiisthtplive. setenditil .i urith, , twenty diA tatiary in detinafty has been known to continue w einee trill for aligeff 01 nota ittil$2..---. L.... -", ,_,, 'Pe *„ written 'her sight broke upon a land- er helping himself pretty freely, made scape Of entrancing lovelinese.' now coot any °nee sight 'break upon' a landscape?" • "She might have dropped her eyes," timidly ventured the young woman bone of an ass) slyly•inquired Voltaire, 1 who had written the essay. . Rousseau dideXnotpense soonand souforget the lit. tle joke at his ght an , opportunity for revenge. Not long aft; erward Voltaire called at his house during his absence. The door being open,•he walked into the library, and, finding all the, books thrown about in confusion and covered with dust, he traced on One of 'them the word "eo.' thee (nig) with his finger. Next day he met Rousseau and said to him: the sontewb.n.t injudicious remark: "I am sure 1 could eat its many eye. /411I4 as Samson slew Philistines." 1, "With the same weapon?" (the jaw, Iktabliihed :879. Whooping Cough, Oroup,,Bronaltio Cough, Grp, Asthma, Olphtherla tiresoleeto 10 boon' to Aothrnitthite Onamea to a bit retalatebed and standard remedf for the' disease* Makatea. It arms because the etc /en* dered strongly anti/mph° in carried over the &MASA AM.- t000t Of the Ibtootqltiatto with over, breathi gtvlog prolonged and tonetant treatment. Those ot c0Ointitt. (Ivo tendency. Or enterers from chronic brondatir. Sad Immediate relief from Cough's or Militated conaltiono of tilt ttroit. Vapo-Crenoteno in told by druggists or ant pro. pita on recei$ at' lateto Vrao-Creaeleno ont• tnettiataft a bottle of Cronoleno Rto, gond for free Muitrated booldeL LttiOtN0 iitt.tt co., Idd., Agnate, he 51. t064 SW hainteel, Ottitdt, e06 604 60 '40 11116 herve, rt -ml made me fest 'and Sleep very much bet. Cir. I cm truthfully re. penny of 1 goy it to ye?" M.& WRITE rpnlmend die Nerve Food • "Lid3ra" replied the polite beggar, to anyone who suffers tram the: above ailments. "ver kindtieeswould touch me so dat •O1no0$0 Nerve. rood SCir.# a box. I'd bny a postal card wid de money. TO protect you against imitations the portrait ttal' it Yer not 0' thanks.". itad signature ot A, W. Chas , the farnous . • receipt hook author, aro on ovary box. . • .., • 0 6 • Do not. () onsider it a "I called at your house . i b t did t find Yon in " yesterday, hardship to du as much for • 441 knOW," replied thelatter. 01 found your card." - ,,, The Oldest Chltrolt In Europe Canon Routiedge in his "History of St. itle.rtin, ' Canterbury," claims the • proud distinction of the oldest erreh in Europe for that venerable e like. He describes it. as Occupylia the unique position of being the only exist. ing church that was originally built rte a church during the first four eetilti• , ries and has remained it thumb till the advance. present day. St, i,lartin's MN a sort of rival in St. Mary-in-the,Oastle, Dover, which Canon Vuekto believes to have . been ereeted by British workmen some thie.. in the .to.ur.t..h...e.e. nturr,, 0 1...) _ • %ous"I t our Adress Figures. • E NE • as you, do for ru city wock- ly or daily -----pay for it 'in 0 1044.4...4 at th. • 444 *Weil 47 IP