HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1905-07-13, Page 3, July 13th1 190
• Scaforth.
A. Very AIMS but petty Weddiag.
took lilacs. at Winnipeg Or. 28th ult.,
Whew Na :Annie X.ROss, SeeOnti
Yeangeet daughter' lot • Mrs. - Jane
ROSS, aed •sister Dr, jIL. Thigh
RoSs of Seaterth, Was married to MrS
J. M. Solith. .
The. peal of wedding hells called a
animte o•friende 'tO the twine of Mr.
'and MM. Jelin. Gourley At Minns -1.18a
Mariitsiba,„ on the eVening of June 4,
to witne,as the Marriage of War So-
lusgest daughter, Merrian Ia ella, I
• WiDram 1.1.1exander Ross, a, On: of
Mr. 'Alex. Ross of Mei('Ilep 'and a
prospe. rees young tarter now tiiing
near Minnedoaa. • s
A SUSTAINING DIET.
fa, These are the .euerVatiniesclay,e when
as somehofly hias said, 'also. Irron.hy
the senatroses as 'if the 'Day nt Vire
had dawned. . They. are fraught with.
danger to people .Wlidse -systents
poorly sustained ; an. this. 'leads. aris
to say, in the interest of the lessab--
bust of •our readerS," that -the futl el -
al Hood s SarsapArilla is .Stails
as to suggsst the propriety ot eall-
ing this medicine sontething••beSides
• /blood .purifier and tianie,s-say. a ..stiS-
taining diet, It mate e it -Much easi-
er to bear. the ,heaVa.esures refresh-
ing -sleep and will without ,doubt -av-
ert much sickness at this fame ' of
year.
• .
pr4"
• SeaSorth. •
•
Mr. T. 13. Umpleby, until lately' se-
perintendent of the Seaforth woollen
• mill, ' has .a.ccepted a position as ass
sistant, superintendeet of..a. mill eel.-
ployins; sal en hundred hands at Ly-
nians v i Ile, 'Rhode lel and; and will
move his family. there the latter part
of the present Month. •
On Tuesday. of last week Mr: lief!),
Marshall of Seaforth was united in
marriage at Brussels Isa Miss Violet
Cooper, daughter of. Mr. Jas. Cooper
of that town. llse•ceremeny was fiers
fornied by Rev. Mr.. riangford:, 'lhe
young couple will reside- in Seder&
• • . .
0001) FOR STOMACH TROUBLE
AND COMSTIPA'FION:
" Chamberlain's Stomach a,iid LiV-
er Tablets have • 'done: me a 'great
deal of good," says C. Towns, of
Rat Portage, Onter'ai, Canada. "Be-
ing, a mild physic the after effects
are not unpleasant,, and I ,can .ricom-
• mend them to all who stalps arum
stomach disortlor." VW: sale, hy'•
• B. Cortibe:'
• • • •
Enain6er .James Duneart Of the C.P.
R; was hilleti instantly •.in.a eollision,
at 13ruce- •AVIIJS.• ' t•it •
Bishop 'MeEvay o Ittald'ort laid .the
corner stone of a ,820,006 Catli' lie
Out eh at Stratferd. .
Over twcnty thotisead people a ti
,deti the great Liberal .pieivie al Ln
.don, Ont., on. Saturday. •
The Clinton riowsivitseord
s —
GREAT BUT HARD WOR
THE RECLAMATION OF PRISONER,/
WITHIN THE DOMINION*
Many Ara Apparently Mere Creature*
of Circumstance**. but Other, Com-
mit Crime Beoisies. of the Devilment
Thsit Is in Their Make:Up — The
Question 0 indeterminate Sentence*.
Brigadier W. P. Archlbald, of the
Salvation Army, Deminiert .Conunie-
'atoner for Paroled and Discharged
seaters, Writes .of hia wet% atafollOwsc-
-I am aura all question, in connection
With the work .of parole will settle
thernetelves f Weiteep taithfully at work
on just and,rtglet principles': There is a
great deal that is illuminating in the
Present duty faithfully discharged, and
• the light of it creates an ample amount
of daylight in which to attend to the.
&al,- that comes. next. Ii *8 like walla
Ing .with a lantern on a clerk night se
long as you keep. going the light Will
'keep far enough,. ahead • to show you
•the Way, which le Much more IntelU
gent than to sit down as wetly do with
their Problems and discues the quee-,
tion as to how to get through the dark-
ness that is a mile ahead of them...
Recopstruction of .the
The fundamental principle of our
week te reeoristruction,to make men
•new creatures. Everything elSe With
Me is slitesidiary matter, ,Society oder
punish the evindoer. I say not only
punish, sitt correct httn-if a Man has
been An prison for years it la a race
menctOus instant. for hlm when tha
guard slips thelsolt at the gate arid he
steps out a freeiaan, But if this Man
was. a criminal five minutes before he
'wag discharged. frees prison, go is•
Ave minutes after he had, been let Mit
into .1he fresh air. Moving the bolt
only reaharpened his circumstances
Without doing anything to change the •
roan and the proof is often; verified
by this man's return to prise% in a few .
days or. weeks as the • case may be.
'Change of :circemstancee is no, index
of • 'change of. character. Constructive.
'Work has Arca 'of all to lie put into per-,
•sonality. Jt'is not conditions that trans.'
form the man into the new -creation,
but •tonditions have both place and in-
• fluence as a means... •
• Creatures..of Circumstances.- • •
It is a painful fact, but there is no
denying rit, the great mass- of men liv"
ing today. are. tools of :circumstances;
thistle down to the breeke, straws 'en
.the river Of life, their course is shaped
lorrthem by the currentsana the ed-
dies Of the treams, but oily in pro-
portiOn•as they are things, not trite
men and women. ' _Man Was, intended
not to be the slave but the master of
-cireurristantes;, ancein proportion (tithe
recovers his.hutnenity, in every sense
Of the weird, in •prOportion as ..he gets
back his inciniinesa, which Is truly self--
sacrifiee;affeetion, loyalty to his nation
and to a God above himeele so far wifl.
he srise above his 'circumstances. ;it
woeld be ;tearer the mark to say that
Man. is theatchitect• of cireamstances:
It ie character that builds an existence
:out Of circtiinstanees. Our strength is
.onlypteasured byt, our pies*, power.
.Frorn'the Same rnaferiar.one Anal builds •
.palabes, .ancither. hovels, . one axe*
• houses, another•villas. Bricksand mcir-
tar. are ,slinply mortar and bricks With'
the -architeet can; take. and make thein
iioneething•else: ..Thus it is .that in the.
same family, in -the. same. eircum-
stances, one man, reara a stately d1
Ace, .while his .brothere•vaeillating and
incompetent, ever lies among:the ruins
-and finds' his way at leattOttie:feein's
:cell. The liloplt of gratite which was
aa otistaclein:theastay of the weak be
: comes a stepping, stone in the pathway
• �t the Strong... True hamhnity consists
not .the startling and shrinking at
tales- of • misery we -cOrne in coated
'•Within the 'prisons but in st: disposition
of heart to. relieve it True humanity •
appertains rather to the mind than 'AO
,.,.the nerves and prompts Men to Use
real and common sense Malteds in ex.i•
tending to the fallen the helping hand
In. a praetical way. • ' • •
. The Relapsed Criminal. •
; •,• The great plague of society is the re-.
Oldrvist. He is.the man or woman who
.bas gone to Prisen- half a dozen times,.
or it may be fifty or a hundred, in
, some, colintries. a criminal wile -has been
to prisonAwo or three. times is regarded
as a recidivist ,without reference to the
.natine Of his offence, Under, the Ger-
man system he le regarded as :a rott
ciiviat only. when he, 'repeats his of
-
. A Stayiog Family..., ,.
te . Cranbury (ownship„Middlesex
county, ig. J.., says the NewarksAd .
vertisee; is a farm that • has rena,:a2d
for 130 years in the' se,ple fataily. • It
is nhw ,owned hy Sylvania Grovs.T,'Iluf
first . Grover to Oam ..this place was',
John, who bought the tract of Jand•in ,
1775. He had seven' children'. • and in•
1829 SPvatst,s Grokx came into pos-
Session Of the place. He had •Wrie th 1.
dren, • all bore le the old' faian 'h tilee,
In 1864 the propt-rtY ' Passed in o • .1Ita
posseseion .,of John G. Grover and h:14,
family consisted . of • Si; .ehild On . •Iti
4888 the farm became the property • of
:Sylvanus Grover,. the 'present -owner,
and stir childrtn constitotehis•lamilYi.
•
Of the 26 children wbo we 'e ban
the olcl house, 14 are Still • \ iVing. 'The
lartu house was substantially • hail
with heavy oak' tinihers hewn, out Of
logs, and put together .witlit wrought
mails, It was well huilt aini is in aa
excellent state of •preseryation. ,'I'lle
last time it was .sliinglal was in the
time of the Civil War and the root is
still in good condition. • ',. . •- ' .
essasersierearareareeeissaageoseseassess' r=
...
son. tet rae ate the ISWiasi eYsitelts ft
dealing or reducing the recidiviets and.
dlacharged Priatelere lja the Canton Of
Netichatel. The recidiVISte in.their pripl
sone i't the year of 1870 Winlber 75
per cent. of the total population. With
the indeterminate *sentence syetem
from 1870 to 1892 tecidiviem decreased
to 4 per cent.. Now the reeldtViet Is
iceldoin found in their priecent Our
liresent sygleta in Canada hes but little
effect on the recidiviets. Very few
relapsed criminals desire to reforus or
Change their Way tif Uyng, hence on
their discharge they refuse any Work
offered or provided to aseist them.
IVIany have said openly to me, "1 prefer
,to follow the graft." Something mina
be done to lessen, this great evil. Give
the indeterminate benterice syetem • a
trial and the axe will be laid to the
root, and tine 'persistent parasite will
begin to diminish and disappear tinder
the geed and Wise administration ot
our Canadian prisons.
Friend Poor Criminal Need*.
True friendship gin only be litade by
true men. Hearts are the soul of honor.
.There can be no lasting friendship be-
tween bad men. pad men may profess
to love one another, but 'their friend-
ship is a rope of sand, which ehall he
broken at any :eonventent season. If
a man have a., sincere heart within WM
he can be true. and noble, and .can
confide in him and lift lath to his feet.
It is ell noneense to say that all men
'are had who are tient to our,.Prisons•
It takes years ot study from 'practical.
experience to be able to.:_deterntine
which Is the criminal - by intent or
choice and. the criminal fallen by temp-
tation.
, • • .
JAPE) SEEK OUR SEAL ;A?
. .
.A141.4 DEA-14MS
Recommend ind .Sell
044iiiNiChasoes
Medicines'
• •There are reeldivists Who are pro-
tessienal and azitasocial: kis the last,
Whether he be a general recidivist;
committing a. variety • of crimes,' or a
special recidivist, confining his infrae..
dons to a single line, who 'is the most
dangerous. The real problem in 'deal-
ing with this rnattar is to •distinguish
• between the accidental' or oecasional
• and the habltual critntnal.. • .
.bischarged prisoners. •
We &intuit sejArate tbe proper treat.
ment- of the discharged .prisoners fron• t
the large awl important euestion of pri-
taiin administration. When a Man re-
turns • to prison* st. second •�r .third time
it 'may be because when he Went out
he was not properlyeducated to go
back into society, or it may be because
• society was not properly educated and
• prepared to receive him. If the con-
vict has learned a. trade, or • has the
Manual, treatment and. employnient in
prison whielt lies at, the beefs- of all
trades, it is not So difilcult tO piece
hint. But, if 'a man come out ef prison
without the fundamentals of industry
inculcated into his life, it le hard to
tell which is the mere helplesssaimpri-
enner.Who. asks for work, or the man
•Who watild ince to befriend him by eV'
ing his employment, 1, have dome to
theconclusion that our efforts, to be
effective and lasting, must be earl -led
en as a supplementary effort in behalf
Of the diseharged or paroled eonviet,
-when. he leaVes prison, following up all
the influences for his good during his
incarteratiom for he intent tap a rule)
an 0,Pathetie and aotnetimes hostile so'
clay when he begins to breathe the at:
ntosphere of freedom. This is where
the reiralees of the Prison Gate. DePart-
ment are active and potent. We stand
by the _inert till placed in a situation,
Mould Ile fall we will endeavor to lift
hire Up. ShoUld he hold fast:111s deter -
initiation to reform. we encourage him
itt his good intentions tin the man once
SO weak and almost helpless begins to
feel his toting end in the '00W:se
thee he beeonies a sodel unit. Time he
to saved to time citizen and State,
As to Indeterminate Sentences.'
The indeterminate eeritence system
would greatly strengthen our hands in
Working out this problem in'tonneetion
velth the televised -criminal in Canada,
ttivould apply this eYstent 10 etteryitian
going 0 jail or prison Ori the third tone
• Mitment, and Iremetimes on the first
and rieeend. /f •ts titan had made UP
hits mind to follow a ern -atrial life, he le
better oft in Priviert than at liberty. So»
eiety also will benefit by tine prettetiom
When toriditionally released he will
haste the opportunit, ef proving hintSetr and*it ha. should 'epee Int a hie
forM,er ita Wank& immediately for.
telt hie foxpole *1 he Warned to• Ptis
• `1,
. t••*••••••••••;•
Venturesbme Schooner New ' on the
Canadian Paeific Coast. •
Indications 'how the :progressive Jap-
anese 'is turning the tables industrially
on the Causlan s well illustrated in
the latest development of settling in,
dustry. For years Yietoria's (3r1t1sh
. Columbia) *sealing fleet has crossed the.
Pacific to hunt cticiag Copper Islands,
and in waters contiguous to Japan.
Lately a fleet has finning' up. at Yoko-
hama 'which has exploited •tyleterit dn
the Asiatic coast, not till this sprhig,
however, have they crossed to this side.
News received from tna west coast re-
cently by the steamer; Queen City, de-
scribes: the arrival at the old historie:
port of Nootka, etthe jai/Wiese sealing
.schooner Eiratei Maril. She canto in for
fresh water and to seek shelter from
recent southeast gales. She left Japan
on December 6, and has already' been
down the CW14,11114 coast - after pelts,
• along the very routes followed by Vic-
teria achoonere. • The'fact that some of •
the best- white hunters of the .port.ef
Victoria now hunt off Yokohama prob-
ably acceurits for the Japanese knowl-
edge of •these. Waters, They • have a;
catch of a, hundred skins, and alter
leaving Noetka •win hint along- the
British Columbia coasts and Aleutian.
• Islandand finish the season in Behring'
The veseelaxill return to Japan about'
Christmas:. Shel fa , •a. staurich-built
eehooper ok 1:30 tons, and has, a crew
01 :30 men only.. four of *horn , are
The crew assert thie•is an'ex-
: pertinent on theepart of.the•ownets, and
'should they be successful this season
cfaite a. number oa'ves.sels• will 'come..
'aerciss•.tiekt•---year and: trytheir hick -
The "JaPariese enjoy a great 'advantage •
Over British . Columbia. sealers incis-
inuch.. as they are not hound-. by the
-modus •VivendL and can hunt within
nine Miles, „instead. of „sixty miles, of
-
the 'rookeries.. They have. no close sea-'
son to observe such as *British Colum-
bia /minters are compelled- to observe
between may 1 arid August 1... • ,
• • A View. of Edward Slake,
The Hon. Edward
ably With the permission of Mr. John
Redmond,who had allowed an hour to
elapse settle:Mettle-king a speech—led the.
resumed attack on the Commissioners.'
Mr. Blake is sornethiag. of a • Parlia-
mentary mystery. 'He•,was a • great.
politician 1.n- Canada, leadee'of the.14/3-
eral party, among other things. A.
learned man and an eloquent, he join-
ed: the Irishmen at St Stephen's' thirs
teen years ago arnid a perfect salvo of
flattering predictions of inevitableUnction • • •.
Unhappily, his admirers, have been
disappointed- Mr. Blake has not moved.
Whys a Housescognizant of his great
gifts often wenderd. he only explana-
tion.is that Mr. Blake is too mild of
manner and too .inoderate in language
to becoirie a successtul Irish politician
He carries, no rlietorieal hifle1ab. A0,
compensation, he.. can, and did yester-
day, say some deliberately pointed
things in Latin. . Thie style, hoWever,
aid not appeal to his Irish colleagues.
• in appearance Mr: Blake is the pf
tut, e of:cleverness, • A finelY-Chiselled
face is spanned by a pair of geld Spec-
taeles, and a mass of-curlyhair, tinged
with grey,, is brushed back from a
broad forehead. If the member for
Longford were asked what other great
man he' Most closely resembles,- be
would probably answer, and with truth,
771111arti Miticepeace Thackeray,
s. stale and unprofitable debate end -
'ea with a division on an anteadment
:loved by Mt. Blake to redeee by 4 100
be C1II Seraice Vote. , 'This motion was
i'efertted 'ay a majority of 74.a -London
Dany Nail. • • .
British Minster at. Lisbon.• •
gr. IVIaurice-Willicern Ernest de Bun-,
sen, C. B., Who hae beezi appointed MO
MajestYls Envoy Extraordinary, atid
1VtinIciter Plenipotentiary at Lisbon le
the place of the late Sir Martin (40a-
0elin, says The London Star, was nom-
inated an attache in 1877, and appoint-
ed in the followieg year to Washing-
ton, He served subsequently at 'Berne,
Madrid, Paris and Lisbon, so that he
does not go to Portugal as an entire
stranger, In 1891 liar. de Bunsen was
appointed Seeretary of Legation at
Tokio, and he has since served hi
Slain, Washington, Constantinople and
Paris where he was appointed Secre-
tary of Embassy In 1002, with the rank
of Minister Pleniootentiary, He mar-
ried in 1890 a. daughter of the late Me
A. IL Lowry -Corry. The lion, Reginald
Lister, who heti been appointed Conn,
enter of Embassy at Paris, is a bro-
ther eif the preseet Lord Ribblesdale,
and was born ifs 1865. Re entered the
diplOrtiatio seeviee at the age of 21, and
served, successively et -13erlin, Paris,
Constantino•ple,,again at Paris,
Copenhagen and Home, 'whither be Nstes
sent last year as Com -miller of Ern,
baitsY, with the deeoratiOn of the Vie.
torlan. Order,
The Prencb and :German repro:intl-
. dyes have agreed, upon plans for a
'ont;ren ce on the Morpeenn uestion.
AS A CONVALEISCENT 1000D.
Mi, Wyman N. Thomas, Ompatt,--Ad.
tifitgtort Co., Ont., writes, : "My wtto
had congestion of tho lungs along if -
tit other troubles and heea ne very
weak and run down, lly th uso of
Dr. Mittae's /sleeve Pootl:s1 o was
made as strong and welt as ever. Or
course I haa it doctor, but site was
weak anki It Watt Dr. Chase's Nerve
POCRI Wbith built her up."
*
1111111akeesssessa —
Veteran Historiers of kr. E. Uoyellet
I*Ink With the Piet.
Dr. Wm. Csiartiffone of the tine old
gathers of the Provirice, whose life
etory is a luminous vempeadigin of
. the history ef 'Ontario clarify the past
70 years, Is in Torente again, after an
absence of nearly a clegade, says the
Matt anti Empire. Though now past
the allotted three -score -and -ten years
Dr. Canniff. is still comparatively hale
and vigorous. His recollectione oe a
strenuous life, full of varied expert-
•ences in peace and in war, in Profee-
Itienal and in public life„„in literature,
politlea, and travel, form a remit in-
teresting commentaryonthe develop..
merit of the people of Canada, socially,
commercially, and .politically, during
the pat half Century.
Re Is a veteran' of the Battle ot
Ridgeway. Ile is one of the oldest
medical practittonerS in the Province,
having been liceased as . medical
Practitioner for IIPPer Canada in 1854,
and, becoming later the first professor
of pathologY. In Canada, lecturing ors
that su34eit tr the • medical depart -
merit of Victoria, University before it
.beeatne merged `with anis Toronto
School of 1Vildicine, Be wap also the,
first 1VIedica1 Health Officer of Tor-
onto, to•Whieh„eflice he was appointed
in 1888; and ihich he Organtzed with
signal success.. While occupying this
Peeltion. he was, 0110 of the prime mov-
ers in securing the passage of the Pres-
ent Ontario Health Act. • •
• Record* o'f U. E. Loyalists: •
As a writer, Dr, Canniff has .done
Much to preserve for succeeding gen-
Orations 'the records of the stirring pio-
neer days of Upper Canada. ills work,
"The Settlement' Of Upper Canada:" is
a standard reference Wok of Ontario
history; and an invaluable amount of
the patriotism, Indomitable pluck: ewe
ergy, and genuine heroism or the Unit-
ed Empire Loyalists, whose influence
aeon the whole subsequent social and
.politiecci life of this Province is only
dintlY appreciated by the present gen-
.
elation. Among • his other numerous
literary efforts may' be inentiOned his
"Manual on the prinoiples of Surgery,"
and his' "History of- the Medical Pro-
fessioa. irt Upper Canada From. 1703 to
1850." 'Both works have had a large
sale; and are hevi'arrieng the most Val-
• ued reference bpisks on the eheives of
the Provincial ArchiVist • , • ••
The other day Dr, Cannift talked for
a most interesting half • hour of the .
memories cif Ontario's "boyhood days."
Re remembered. vividly the .old.' days,
. of "the little -red schoolhouse," When;
as a, yoang.teacher, he hoalitied round
• witty the farmers in the school section
where he taught, in the Bay of Quints
distriCt. • Thoee were the days of open,
• Voting, Wiled money and wniskey and
tree fights . Were sthe arguments used
during the week of open. pone. Cholera.
• and yellow fever and amp -apex, were;
•• also .seree of' the prorninept features
of those good, oldidaYS:
DurIng • a tele to England; as. •a
yoang meaicai man, Dr, Canniff re-
caItedtravcling company 'with the
• late James lvioNeli lghtstler; whe'in-•
•.vited• him to dine •'.with hint at Paris,
calling at the latter's reeldence,•
noWeVer,..'the ..deetois found that
Whiatler's Botiernian• eompentorie Were
not .exactly congenial, and he 'accord-
ingly' departed Without w.aiting. -• to
. dine. During, his -stay in England he
met prof...Jarnes hripsOns the discov-
erer _•of the anaesthetio-preperties 'of
chloroform, and the latter gave • hint
an .ocular • dernenetration of the effects •
of • the -anaesthetic. -on a patient;
'brought .in for. operation, . • .. •
"
Among 'Carina -Vs polltieal rernin-
iseences are included many Stories ot
• the: early years and else to power of
'Sir John A.,'Macdonald, with whom he
alWays held •a cleee . friendship. •' He
• was a prominent workerie the Canada
First party, and -was oneef the Viand-
- ers of- the National Club sand of the
'United Empire Club ea Toronto.. •Re
was a political co-tie:miter...With-Mr. J. 3:
• Foy—then a very. young . mane -when
the great -politieat turnover in••:- the
FederalHouse caine in1878, • •-
A Princes Version. _
• It IS pretty hard to keep certain. hie.
torical.faets bearing upon royalty rom
the childrennowadays. Eleven- ara •
old Prince Edward of Wales, in reply
to King Edward's questiew said ,that
he hact been reading about Perkle
Warbeck: Aelced. -vvho Warbeck Was,
the prince replied: "He Pretended he
was the on of the Xing/ but he Was-
n'tt he was the son of respectable
patents." • • • .
BIIY IT NOW.
Now is the time to bey Chamiter-
la'n's olie, .( h )Iera and fliarrho it.
11 •114 ecrtain to 10 malls)
sumer or later. red leat thattfina
et;nies rot Will :tie' d it badly —,
IliTd it *quickly. Buy it •flaw. ft.
nsay For sale ly 13
Conibe •• -
..„--
rkieligrortogilltalvetWogiMliK*04144144***F110NONIOveliffe.0,4041*****Asi4491‘4144414•44
1:3441,resac,-11400004**Nitoteoweaternalawawatjatemieladyj . „ . . r.1*****11$1.10,1*****
Fancy .Mohair and
bress Goods
Tr HESE .ARFscarce goods and we were very fortunate in clearing
'out ten pieces of this season's prettiest patterns at lesS than cost
price which we will place on sale Friday morning.
^
65c-Francy-Motta..1.r at 00c :
..••••
These. -comein;browni, green; blue and shot.•effeetti, • .• .
. regular. 0„15 3 ............... , ........ . 500
s
• •65c Ltistre at.5Vc
In plain black, blue and brown, 42 inches wide,
• splendi I value at 656 to go tit •50e
,
.$1 and $1.15 Satt'een V,Vaists.75c'
• Good heavy biack sOtteen Waiots, several different-
- styles to choos1/43 from, all sizes; to gclat ... . 75c
children's. Straw. Hats
FROM 25 CNTS
$1,40 i.itnIre Waists $1.00
1 dozen black Lustre Waists nicely trimmed, good
.beavy‘lustre, sizes 32 to 38, regular $1.40 to
clear .at ; =
•
Fancy Dress Satteen 15'
A few nice colorings left ik•brown, cardinal, sky,
and pink „very pretty patterns,. regular 206 and
•
25c va,lues for .... .. . .. „, •,.4..„ 5C
. . .
. •
25 Traltenei*.!s Samples of Wrappers
• . at less than prioe •
.‘
.Successors to R. Coats, CLINTON.,
0 0-b•C1eoatl.ig4ki,* 00.0 Elli•R "4:=30
K C=1,1a0.
0 0 0 0 00
' SUM. Morris. Towcsiaip
• 'Messrs*, ". .3 Olin Barrett • and W ,*
. .
Scott, twoformer citizens ••of
: hat` e- f orins. d 'a, partnership • and st el' t-
sLl in the •g(I'VQ17111 store, busii),1.'85 'a.t
• 1Z ooativ e Aasituitoia. '1 Nr. Iler r t t
.. •t • '
sierved his appraticeship ,W ti11 MUSS-
1‘.;ICKinnen: & Co. in this .villag'e
nd Mr. Scott- was principal of glyt'i
"Publie • school, „for twO 'years'. •' Per
sc,veral. years • .past lolh youog •niesi
have. • been residents :tfde
it .os
. ,
*-• o. a.
• • Mr. A, S.:. 13ralltvitt of •the • S'i.andard
•ha i returnee • front a ten da.„Vs). outing
tt
the ..eaSt.• The; trip 'w.s,e'. ntade • by
12.oat front Toronto, titrotigh the *Ter,'
id -famous Thousand jslnd to...Itte-•
t.,.• \V iltiT tsVa. days were slant .view.r
• in ihe sights:: of the e nen n t capital:
'tht' ttturn 100rney was made bV ('.
' t refit.. froto. .(luebee to -1 oron t0,
iv i th t wo-d sv s 'toes .af Montreal and
:Ottawa. •*. .•
'Rev. 11,obert Vie's-de.. of' W'arele st
.Mageaeliusel Is, visiting .at the ho.
• nes or Itis mother,. Mrs'. Charles ?lave
: •. • .. • .
. • Nirs. James :I wi f • (Mitt, n,
ttreptnpfluipd • bv Nies! er• trite.. find
M1ss Clara:. were gtiests rcee31113,` at
, • • • '
a.. • •‘•••'... .••• . ••••• •
1(...r777-1
11
ce
Don't
Shovel
1. Ashes
Not one make of furnace lt twenty is supplied with an
• WithOut an ash.pa.a the ashes tnust be shovelled int0
it pail or Softie other receptacle for removal—means dust
in the eyes, ruine,gpclothes, extra -work ; a dirty disagreeable
job—the meanest part of furnace 'tending.
The Sunshine Purnace litt's an ash -pan Which catches
all the ashes, and slides in and out .ensily, tIas tare handles
for -carrying. No sh,ovelling, sweeping or dirt.
This is only one of a dozen good featUres possessed
by the Sunshine Furnace, none of which are found on
any other ftirnaoe. ,
„iv
a
London, Toronto', Montre0, Winnipeg, Itaneottiter* St,`John,
. •
Mrs. Rohl. Willis of' Whitliy 'and
'1 11)5. Seach of Nettrionellle ere vis -
It. their brother, Rub t Scatter,
iarerii, who is very poorly. • '
. •
• 'ibis week builders' 'are busy at ills
„te1argement• el ' •J. t4 pear
Et has bt•nn split! and• fittsfeet adds('
to it. : . . •
, .
• :Miss 'iMa,ud• Jackson hat passed her
) am i on ' at the Toronto ,•('Onser't
Vatoty of • -*Magic „te haenicay ' rind rta
• dimeeis With
in taking the
fefistir Casitplan
an:Lead
visiting itt ibis
week retureed-
a ear of ,heavy
1 wet • Mr,
t 'Mrs.
honors. Fh.4. seceeetted
highest malice of -Pro -l's puI)ils.
•
of Winnipeg, who itas
loCality foe. over a
oh Friday.' .1Ie tooa
• dratignt horses from
McLeod Isa nephew
•••ttli Liue„
and was a hinter Morrisite, beteg
• , Morris 'Tovinship • .
sic -am Rribb,.lo.st 'a In? heavy draft
refine .11*On. in flannes,1 ILIl. „ •
hapman o Listowel was a'
vielt ill: at James f/avis';:5111
••. Mrs. Wm. Robb, (it h Line, is awAy
On a • visit 'to -her Pareets t Tettau-
• A holiday visitor ill the person of •• •
'11:1-s. Oen. L'aslick sTeeswat e r was
,:nclifig a few days with her eisier,
Mks. J. D Shi,rtie.• • .••
•*i-trg. Williams of Toronto and Mrs."
lafrai. of Barrie, datighters of: James:: '
and Mrs. .Davis; .5th Wes,. are`;hais •
• ilaa ingsunder the :parental TOOL ' •
, Pohl Somerville, 5111 blue,. had a
lar -e barn raising -oa Tuesday of. last .
Week. •• ' .• " .
•
•
Mrs'. Bruce and gre.• De, n of Oa--;
fois.1 Co., mother a,nd sister to Mrs.
Jrmes' Eaanve 'Morris, Mill' leaiasy .• •.. •
visitors with the 'taller during •-np the '•
borft on the past week '
• • • : 1 • .: '" • - • • . • • • '' •
, .0.!.!,r.gaehine •.
.
. . • .
,
Irr7"!'17"!*12r'Iv•.: •'
. .
•
. .
• Writes Where 14/1 •
The: Woild
. . • •
•
•
4.1 ek.‘ . '
• eg fj, • t t• "4' myt
7.. AA .1 itt ‘te
744 •11.4
41111,
•
-attL
Writing in Sight
tut•*•••••••••*•••••,0•••
It will . pay .you to exambe this machijio
before puShasing elsewhere. Write for
atalog ue.
•
Sole Dealer
MI, H. Newsome, Toronto,
CLINTON I w
AND 1 BROS Astern Ontario Branch Office 465 Richmond St
tv. SOLE AGENTS, 01 Londoni, 8yroti C. Sinninotm lifitnager
40k4