The Clinton New Era, 1898-03-11, Page 6March 11, 1898
THE CLINTON NEW ERA,
Health in March, April, May!
Use the only Spring Remedyin` the World orld that has
Stood Every Test of Time.
Paine's Celery Compound Makes One Well
n March, April and May use Paine's
ery Compound!
And only Paine's Ornery Compound) For
is nature's remedy.
It is the only spring medicine that the
best physician. recommend.
Clergymen of all denominations speak
of the wonderful medicine with enthusi. sm.
Paine's Celery Compound has a record of
life-saving work that has never been eq-
ualled.
Paine's Celery Compound cures disease.
It makes people well. It has saved the
lives of thoueands of sufferers. It makes
the :weak strong.
It purifies the blood and en.iches the
nerves,
Every condition of winter life has been
detrimental to health, There has been a
steady decitne in nervous vigor. Now
that spring cronies the body is ready to
oast off unhealthy tissues if it is only given
a chance. This opportunity comes when
the excretory organs, kidneys, skin and
bowels are made to work actively and the
nerves are able to furnish sufficient energy,
to the digestive organs. '
IVo remedy in the world a000mplishes
these results like Paihe's Celery Compound
It nourishes, regulates and invigorates the
entire system from the brain to the minut-
est nerve filameut. It causes an increased
appetite and tones up the stomach to deal
with the increased food. Its nourishing
action is immediately manifest in a clear-
ing up of the muddy, unhealthy skin, an
increase in weight and more ref'•eshing
sleep.
First discovered alter laborious scientific
research by the ablest physician America
has produced, Prof. Edward E. Phelps, M.
D., L.L.D., of Dartmouth College, it is pre-
sctibed and publicly endorsed by the best
practitioners, in every pity of America. It
hire been so enthusiastically recommended
by grateful men and women in every walk
of lila that it is today in every sense the
most popular remedy tho world ever knew. 1
It has proven itself the greatest of all
spring medicines.
In Montreal, Toronto, Hamilton, Lon-
don, Quebec, Halifax, tit, John, Winnipeg
and other cities, the leading druggists have
found that ?he demand for Paine's Celery
I
Compound surpasses that of all other rem-
edies together !
Paine's Celery Compound, taken during
the early spring days, has even more ban
its usual remarkable efficacy in ne tug
people well. It makes short work a dis-
ease. It rapidly drives out neuralgia,
sleeplessness, dyspepsia and rheumatism
from the system. It removes that laeei-
tude and ' tired feeling," which always
b_tokens weakened nerves and poor blood,
Women working in close offices; sales-
women tired out and nervous from long
hours' standing epee their feet wasting on
impatieut, irritating customers ; over-
worked, worried and disheartened men
and women everywhere will be asteuietted
to find bow much happier lite becomes
when their nerves have been strengthened
and their blood put',tied by means of this
great remedy.
No other remedy has the hearty ap-
proval of a like body of educated men and
women and professional men, nor has
Li, re over been a remedy t hat was wel-
welco'l.en ,n so rnan,y int ellig- nt, prudent
homes where rare is taken to get only the i 1
the best in so vital a matter. In such
families all over the country Paine's Cel-
ery Compound is the first, last and only
remedy used.
Prof. Phelps had studied the nerves
in health and disease, when well nour-
ished'and when under -nourished, in men
and women and children years before
he looked for the remedy. Paine's Celery
Compound is the outcome of his en-
tire professional lite. It is the one remedy
that the world could not lose to -day at
any prioe.
Paine's Celery Compound induces the
body to take on solid flesh.
Physicians recognize Paine's Celery
Compound as the one scientific spring
remedy, and it is universally prescribed
by them wherever there is great need of a
vigorous and prompt restoring of health
and strength to the wornout system.
Paine's Celery Compound is the best
spring remedy because it is more than a
more spring remedy. It brings about a
healthy appetite, complete digestion, regu-
ar action of the bowels and the other ex•
cretory organs whenever taken, whether
in summer or winter; but as the greatest
of spring remedies it has extraordinary op-
portunities for inducing the body to throw
off morbid humors that poison it and
cause rheumatism, neuralgia, heart trouble
and a general low state of health, as in
spring the aystem is more pliable, and
crouse diseases, so securely lodged in the
system that they are with difficulty ousted,
become more tractable.
Thousands of men and women have
found from personal experience that
Paine's Celery U� mpouud makes people
well and keeps all froth sickness who take
it in th1 spring
Many a father and mother have noticed
the unuu.takeatde iwt,ruse.r.ertt in the
health of their children from taking Paine's
Celery :'nmpuuud in the spring. It is the
one scientifically ae ural- remedy fitted
by its composition to thoroughly purify
the blood and dispel that rxhausted feeling
and get rid of skin disen.+es, headaches and
fits of depression w'ltli tvInch children with
weak, nervous systems, as well as grown
• t
people, ate aflheter
The Lust For G' -old.
Manhood, honor, and all that is bes
in life, is seriously imperilled in Cant
da at the present time, said the West.
nninstet recently, by the inordinate lust
for wealt h which is being stimulated
by the spurt of recent years in mining.
The love of money is always strong.
Many men are ready for any risk or
sacrifice or endurance so long as there
is hope of great gain. But there are
ebbs and flows in the t ides, and just
now the flood is at its full.
Those who have to do directly with
commercial affairs know hew eager
the rush is, and how daring nen be-
come, con tomes the Westin ]nstcr
Not, a little bit of what is called com
mercial enterprise and up-to-date husi
ness is -ill -disguised robbery. The fall
and foolish maxim that competition is
the life of' trade, is working out its le-
gi•tiwa.te results. There is very little
business honor left, and the public are
beginning to learn that the new meth-
ods have their disadvantages. Mean-
while the young mar•,hood of the
country is being warped to the earthy,
and life is, being honeycombed by de -
dishonor. The bearing of this
• n business methods is not difficult
to read. Faith is as necessary in the
bank and store as the church. That
the danger is very real is manifest from
the warnings given in 'he name of
business by business men. This senti-
ment found expression recently in an
editor fa] in the e"ening Journal, Ott;t-
was which dealt. with a local instance.
The same week Toronto furnished an
equally pertinent text,. This is the
newspapers warning:
"The greatest danger of the time on
this continent is the idea that money
ot-er'top everything else — that a suc-
cessfnlornoney-maker is by the mere
fact of einccess, the right kind of a man
—that character, honesty, ability, mer-
it,all mean little without money. This
is the great threatening curse of a
commercial, peaceful and democratic
c ntinent. Rank and title have their
rue in the old-world as antidotes or
ecks to that sort of evil, but in this
s
ml.
her
e we
p musts
omes
and l he schools, the churches and the
press, to set up better ieleals than mon-
ey, or else honesty is going to have a
hard !fine everywhere to hold its own
against ineney—and if honesty goes to
the w,,il, every other decent sentiment
in Chu c,'rumnnity will follow."
MURDER TRIALS.
t Tho Cost of Some of the Famous New
t- York Cases.
It cost the taxpayers about $15,000 to
convict Carlyle Harris of the murder by
poison of his young wife, and for the do-
fense of that ingenious youth his mother
paid $15,000 more in special fees and re-
tainers. Five thousand dollars of this sunt
went to John A. Taylor, the junior coun-
sel. William Travers Jerome led fur the
defense, but the amount of his fee has
never yet been approximately estimated.
No official estimate of the cost of the
trial of Robert W. Buchanan for the poi -
Boning of the olcl woman whole he mar
has ever boon made public. The case or
NOtV 1d 1'UE TIME.
To purify your bloo I with Hood's Sarsap-
11!Ue, 1\lareh, April, May are the trying
inonths of the ',ear, At th;s season your
blood is loaned with impurities which have
accutnu•ltlted kilning the winter, and these
i ,Ipuritres corset bo immediately expelled.
Ho id's Serie peer1Ia is the One 1'rue Blood
Purifier. It >s the medicine which nae ac-
complish,:,! ray thousands of remarkable
cures ',full ,�I; u I diseases. It is what the
mi�lions tai:,' in the sl,litig to buildup
he filth and went off sickncs,.
ried _
cu- 1 - How to Print a Book.
lose How properly to plan or print a book is
t of not to be taught in an essay or oven in a
fees volume. As well try to give u formula for
and the painting of a picture or the writing of
ver a froom. It must be presupposed that the
the planner of a new book is familiar with
ave well printed books, that be has some
ase knowledge of the processes of printing
000 and that he will take counsel with experts.
pied seven full weeks, and at the c
e counsel on both sides figured the cos
the prosecution, including the heavy
of such experts as Loomis, Doremus
others at $20,000. As Buchanan paid o
the entire $25,000 which ho received by
j death of his wife in the vain effort to s
himself from the death penalty his c
could not have involved loss than $45,
in expenses.
The two trials of Dr. Meyer, the poison-
er, are said, on good authority, to have
cost the county $35,000. Just what he paid
Charles W. Brooke for bis defense bas
never been known. IIis resources were
probably exhausted by the first trial—cut
short by the insanity of a ;juror—for in the
second hearing counsel for the defense ap-
plied to the court for the statutory allow-
ance of $500.
Tho determination of the police and the
district attorney's office to convict Mrs.
Mary Alice Fleeting at any cost of the
murder of her mother involved the county
in a loss of $28,000, of ,which $5,000 Meta
to the jury and talosmen, $10,100 to the
experts, $2,500' to the attorneys and the
remainder in general expenses. Mrs. Flem-
ing estimates that her defense cost $22,000
of the $80,000 in the hands of the city
chamberlain.
Mrs. Florence Maybrick's trial at Liver-
pool in 1889 for the poisoning of her hus-
band
was the sensation tion of the year. Her
prosecution, including the salary of Jus-
tine Stephen ($25,000 a year), the retainers
and refreshers paid to John Addison, Q.
C., the leading counsel for tho prosecution,
and his two assistants, the employment of
such famous experts as Carter and Robert-
son, the expenses of witnesses and general
preparations of the case,reaohed in all about
$10,000
for ten
working days. Sir Charles
—now Lord—Russell, who led for the de-
fense, received $5,000 and a dally refresher
of 1250, Added to this were the fees for
junior counsel, for the solicitors for the
defeeese and expert testimony, Mrs. May -
brick calling very few lay witnesses. Alto -
ether her defense reached $15,000.—New
York Journah
it's Easy To Dye
!dome Dyeing With Diamond
Dye is Pleasant and 1Trofite g
able
Beautiful and Brilliant Colors that Will
Not Fade—Diamond Dyes Have Special
Colcrs for Cotton and Mixed Goods— T
Bow \Vise Women Economize in Hard
Time —A Ten -Cent Package of Dia- •
mond Dyes Often Saves Ten Dollars.
al
Iu thea° days of enforced economy it 1Y
should 1)0 a pleasure to any Woman to w
learn how she eau save the cost cif a new nen
gown for herself and a suit for She little w
one, or snake her husband's fudod clothing s]
look !lice new. Diamond Dyes, which are ha
prepared •-r specially for home use, will do gr
all this. 1 !ley aro so simple and easy to a
use that even u child can get, bright and by
beautiful e"lurs by following the directions it
on eanh package, m
There is no need of soiling the hands Yo
with Diamond Dyea; just lift and stir the
goods with temsticks while in the due
tam, and one will not get any stet/Icier
vote.
unloring dresses, coats, and all large
artioles,'to get a full and satisfactory color,
it is absolutely nscessary to have a special
.lye for cotton gaols and a different dy e
for woollen ;pods. This is done in Dia-
mond I). rooted 1',.f"re buying dyea one
shoal,: know whrtli-'r the atticle to be col-
ored re rolton or fru„!, rust Vet the proper
dye 1) , ouc h" v d oc !i i t ,; 0'.0 to cn': r
everything, for their use will result in hu
��.r•� -"oro.
AN ACTOR TALKS.
ells What Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Pow-
der Did for Him and His Wife—Truly
a Friend to the 'Profession."
"I c,an but proclaim Dr,Agnew's Catarrh-
Powdera wonderful medicine, particular -
for singers and ;allelic speakers, or those
ho have a tendency to sore tliroat,hoaree-
ss, toneilitie and catarrh. Myself and
ifs are both subjects of catarrh and ton-
litis. We -had tried most everything, but
ve never found anythine to equal this
eat remedy. For quick action 11 redly is
Wender worker. I couldn't be without it
me and 1 am continually recommending;
to my brother profes.ior,als." :\I. Em-
eit Fostell, 207 Pant 101st Street, New
rk city. Sold by Watts& Co.
Here's a Runny Thing
I Tie a string about, a yard long to a
common door key. Then take the
string in the right hand and hold it so
• that the key will clear the flour' four
I or five inches. If you eau hold the
string steady enough iL will begin to
swiLet,ranotack th ripwont take your lrth in a st ehft hand
in his, and the motion of the key will
change to la circular motion. His third
• 'sett will place his hand on the shoul-
d)! I he secor'd person, the key will
1. ']'re it.nd explain it 1f you can.
BLOOD THAT IS Bo.).
ood that is bad makes the whole body
Blood that is good makes the whole �
healthy and vigorous. Burdock Blood
re make good, rich, ruddy blood. I
d B.B.B. as the beet medicine in the
d, to matte rich, red blood. It cured
after wo years suffering from rioh,thin
rezone A. GLEeson, Oentreton,Ont.
__ pet
Mr' VVut, Stephensen,rnt' Helloed 81eu
Landing, Ont,, Iee'ik !a il,r "f tt 1:i;,, 1
powder, !al')leil t'1ison un 7'nr'-.1 ty
Hight. in oris( Lite for (J1 u,o. Ali,•
rettliz d her erv','r ilun11' 11,,1el)•, "1111 nt 131
Dove look ('lil,'tle•.v 1111] 1,i, !memos t (!• eiek•
sults rue ant 'desire!. body
r. Bitten
Q?1--+ , C:' �' t 3 w e , regar
The race wort
!)mile
ti¢a�tteo ovary me
war pruprct blood
al to seek this counsel often leads to
serious consequences.
An author who insisted on being Ms
own publisher began an expensively illus-
trated quarto, before a page was put in
type, by ordering the full page illustra-
tions to be printed in an improper position
on the leaf. In disregard of another pro-
test from the typographic printer, he in-
sisted on faulty margins about the pages
of type. When the sheets were gathered by
the binder, the complete book showed too
much buck margin for the type and too lit-
tle for the illustrations. Tho binder had
to cut off the backs of the folded sections,
to reduce all the print to single leaves and
to resew- each loaf by an expensive and un -
workmanlike method. So treated, We
book barely passed acceptance. The' lost
time, wasted paper, Increased cost and bad
workntunship-could hive been avoided if
the author bud formed a plan and counsel-
ed with an expert.—Theodore L. De
Vinne in Outlook.
Her Method.
Uncle Bob—Yes, my wife allus b'lieved
in )yin a string to her finger to remember
things.
Uncle Bill—She has one on her finger
most of the time, I notice.
Uncle Bob—Yes, 'coptin when she has
solbethin
very pertikler y P !flet
ar to remember; then
she leaves off the string, an when it ain't
there she remembers why. --Odds and
'Ends.
Not Confession.
"Did he confess his love!'
"I don't think so. From what I know
of the affair I am inclined to think that
ehe drew it out of trim by cross examine-
tion."—Chicago Post.
Winning race horses aro generally bays,
chestnuts or browns, and for every 100
bays among them there aro 50 chestnuts
and 80 browns. There is no record of an
important rape being won by a piebald.
Lynfield, a town not a great ways from
Boston and frequently reached by train,
bus no dootor, no lawyer, no policeman, no
fireman.
If your children are well
but not robust, they need
Scott's Emulsion of Cod-
liver Oil
We are constantly in re-
ceipt of reports from par-
ents who give their children
the emulsion every fall for a
month or two. It keeps them
well and strong all winter.
It prevents their- taking cold.
Your doctor will confirm
this. I
The oil combined with .
the hypophosphites is a splen-
did food tonic.
If a woman walked a Royal Ileminiseense •
bare-footed on the
sharp edge of a
sword, she would The following good story of Queen
not undergo one- Victoria is 1 iinely:
.A number of eears ego, Chas. Knight,
0 photographer at Newport, Isle of
W ight,se'cured a likeness ss Filch shows
1 Her Majesty, not merely- smiling but
broadly laughing.
'"How /lei it temper} that such a like-
temper} ness was obtained : Itt 1 his way. The
Queen was visit fug at Newport, The
mayor of 1 he city was present ing in a
verl,ose end fulsome speech a magnifi-
cent. bouquet. fie had ('atefully com-
mitted the speech to mieriv,ry, but in
Iris rtnxie'ty to make n.l'avur•ahleiurpres-
sion, with hitt emu t ly manner's, his
ponip and spiendor• 01' royal velvet and
fur • 1iintnrea rube, medal.., corked hat
and cable chains of geld, he 'lost his
tenth of the agony
daily borne by thou-
sands
ltou-
sands of women
without complaint.
They stiffer greater
misery and pain
than could be in-
flicted by all the pro-
fessional torturers
!!!'that the world ever
knew. Day and
night they suffer
from headaches,
dragging down and
burning sensations;.
pains in the sides and
bark, hot
and cold
flushes,
nervo
and fret
se
sations and physical lassitude and meat
despondency. The whole body is tortur
with pain and the entire nervous system
racked. If they consult the average o
scure physician, he will attribute their ba
feelings to stomach, liver, kidney, heart
nervous trouble. If, by accident, he hi
upon the right cause, he will insist ups
the disgusting examinations and local trea
meet so embarrassing to a sensitive, mo
est woman.
The real trouble is weakness or disease
of the delicate and important
us place.
n- After c:ou,e etaturucrir g and stutter-
n- ing he suddenly ehnnted 'I've forgot-
ten the fst,' and stied
cd er] gazing at, the
is Queen iikt• a to. upid rc•ituufhoy un visit-
'- or''s day. Then Her ivieje' l v laughed
0 outright, and 1 he flue, et ed ,utrl heart -
o. broken rimeec dropped the bouquet
tsn and lied. ~‘'hit,• I he Queen wits laugh -
tug }Knight, the pt.utt.grapher, took
t- the picture "
d -
„e cni
bear the burdens of maternity. There
is r
necessity for examinations or local trey
went. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescriptio
cures all disorders of this nature in the
privacy of the house. It acts directly on
the sensitive organs concerned, making
them strong and well. It allays indamnma-
tion, and
tones and Sbttildsrup the sner es. pItnstops
exhausting drains. It banishes the discern -
forts of the expectant months, and makes
baby's cooling easy and almost painless,
It restores the beauty and vivacity lost
through long months or years of pain and
suffering. Thousands of woolen have tes-
tified to its marvelous merits. At all mc'd-
rcine stores. Avoid substitutes.
To cover customs and mailing owe, send
31 one -cent stamps for paper•covered copy,
or 5o for cloth -bound copy, of Dr. Pierce's
Common Sense Medical Adviser. Address,
Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
PILE '1'ERIt01{d SWEP"% A%VAY.
Dr.Agucw'e Oint',,ontBomar; !11 the head
1O as a reliever, healer, and sure cure for
in Piles
n I hall forms. One s,!rliea,io❑ wrl]
give comfort in it few mine, ,, and three
to six daisepintc•atrun accord,ng to direc-
tions will cure chronic cases It reltetes all
itching and burmoig chin di-e•aees iu a day.
35 cents. ,Sold by Watts & Co.
Canada and the Motherland
The Canadian Gazette of London,
England,
speaks in terms of the high-
est commendation of the preferenIiitl
tariff established by the Dominion
Government with Great Britain. Our
old world contemporary believes that
the good example set by the Laurier
Government will sooner or later insure
similar action cn the part of other
portions of the empire. "At any rate,"
concludes this representative English
journal, "the Dominion will have done
all that lies in her power to do for Lhe
promotion of inter -imperial trade.
Possibly this new imperialism does not
take exactly the form which the ear-
nest English free trader would desire.
Tint, as Lord Ferrer has admitted,Can-
ada, in working out her own fiscal
policy, is hound to take into account
her own national conditions and cir-
cumstances. At the bidding of Sir
Wilfrid Laurier and hiscolleagues, she
has achieved much for the cause of
imperial unity, and has done all that,
was immediately practicable to lessen
the tariff barriers which have hither-
to hampered the course of trade with
the empire. Nowhere, we may be
sure, will the outcome of this policy be
more keenly scrutinized than by Can-
ada's neighbor, for whore it has a sig-
nificance which never politician or
business man can ignore."
"A MAN'S A MAN FOR A' THAT"
Even if he has corns on both feet. But he
is a stronger, happier and wiser man if he
noes Pntnam's Painless Corn Extractor
and gets rid of theuneightly corns, painless-
ly and at once.
Peter Horne, negro, was hanged at
' Columbus in the presence of SC00 peo-
ple, mostly negroes, for the murder of
Anthony Brown. instead of evincing
an interest in the religions services
which were held in the jail for his ben-
efit, Horne spent the forenoon laugh-
ing and joking with his fellow -prison-
ers. The execution took place in an
open field,
5d. and $1.00, all druggists. "a
SCOTT & lOW) R, Chemists, Toronto,et ar silo
atut'a
•
Rev, A. Cannan, D.I),, General
Scornfulernle'r)t of the :Methodist
church in Canada. will take the hast
Canadian I.'acitic steamer it) April fur
Japan, to investigate the ccnelition of
the
1111 _
'S'
ro, Lu i ,
1 week rk
there.
Me
result of a resolutio,i byR e s as
the Japan
Conf'ere'nce pas -ed last year, asking for
a
depot !WI fr'ocn the Horne I3oard,
who %% mild then he in a poeitlon to
make a per s, ' i repot 1 111 1 he General
Conference 1 ,e upon the v,tr iuus dif-
ferences which have attmute •1 so much
public atlmit ion within the hast. three
! '9
vears
The
General nl
13u•
,ltdtt ske
General Supeririteude'rit t0 acceptthe
commission, which, alter due reflection,
he consent ed to du.
"THOUGHT MY HEAD
WOULD BURST."
A Fredericton Lady's Terrible
Suffering.
Mos. GEO. DOnriaT7 tells the following
remarkable story of relief from suffering
and restoration to health, which should
clear away all doubts as to the efficacy
Milburn'° Heart and Nerve Pills from the
minds of the most skeptical: •
" For several yearn I have been a con-
stant sufferer from nervous headache, and
the pain was so intense that sometimes I
was almost crazy. I really thought that
my head would burst. I consulted a num-
ber
phoindIiey
but withuteffect.notcdMlrn remedies,
they semedHeart and ll
to suit erve my case, I got a, box and
began their use. Before taking them I waa
very weak and debilitated, and would genie -
times wake out of my sleep with a dis-
tressed, smothering feeling, and I was fre-
quently seized with agonizing pains in the
.region of the heart, and often could scarcely
muster u up the
le
for life.In this ewretched condition ditionrnMiiI-
burn's Heart and Nerve Pills came to the
regime, I state,
and th t Iam viggo vigorous and strong, and all this
improvement is due tp this wonderful
remedy.
HUB GROCERY
NEW FRUITS NOW IN STOCK
ARGUIMBAU'S Select Layers, I ( vest
RAISINS Fine off Stalk I CURRANTS'( traS, ' . as a
Off Stalk
( Recleaned.
California Prunes, beet Eleme Fig° in mats and layers, in ten pound boxes,
Lemon, Citron and Orange peels. Having bought at the lowest prioes this see.
son we will give you close prioes.
+134 -EO SWALL4114C,Vir, _ Clinton
Clinton Sash,DoorBllnd Facto
S. S. COOPER - rues nma,
General Builder and Contractor.
This factory is the largest in the county, and has the very latest improved ma-
chinery, oapabie of doing work on the shortest notice. We carry an extensive
and reliable stook and prepared plans, and give estimates for and build all class-
es of buildings on short notice and on the oloseet prioes All work is eupervis.
ed in a mechanical way and satisfaction guaranteed. We sell all kinds of in-
terior and exterior material.
Shingles, Lime, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Etc
Agent for the Celebrated GRAYBILL SCHOOL DESK, mannfaotured
at Waterloo. Call and get prices and estimates before placing your orders •
1s" New Dried Fruits 1897
RAISINS—Malaga, Valencia, Sultans. CURRANTS—Filiatrae, Fine Vostizzas
California Prunes and Elime Figs.
CROSSE & BLACKWELL PEELS, Lemon, Orange and Citron.
NUTS—Filberts, S. S. Almonds and Walnuts. Ccoking Figs for So a pound
NICE, OLD RAISINS for 5,3 a pound. Headquarters for
Teas, Sugars, Crockery, Glassware and Lamps.
J. W. IRWIN, - - - - Clinton
FURNITURE
BROADFOOT, BOX & CO..
The steady Increase in our trade is good proof of She fact that ouro0
our prices lower thau those of other dealers in the trade. g ds are right and
We manufacture furniture on a large scale and can afford to sell cheap. If you buy -
from us, we save for you the profit, which, in other oases, has too be added in forthe retail dealer.
This week we have passed into stook some of our new designs. Space will not
us to quote prices, but come and see for yourself what snaps we have t permiC
off
Remember.; we are determined that our prices shall be the loweet in the trade.er.
UNDERTAKING.
In this department our stock is complete, and we have undoubtedly the best funeral,
outfit in the county. Our prices are as low as the lowest.
BROADFOOT,BOX g' & CO. J. w• ChidteY
P S—Night and Sunday calls attended to byMane
Director) restdenoe, calling at J. W. Chidley's, (Funeral
A Double
SAVING OF
COAL
By using the %EASEL Donator Asa Sreeeo, patented U. S. and
Canada, The only satisfactory sifter on the market. Two sif-
ters in one, of different size meshers. Separates small from
large cinders. No labor, no dust, no waste.
On receipt of $2.50 we will deliver 1 double ash sifter to any part,
of Canada and pay express charges ourselves.
Write for descriptive circular and references. Wholesale and
retail. Agents wantedeverywhere, County, township and state
rights for sale. Apply to
Patentee and Manufacturer,
P. R. KR.ASEL
2529 St.
Catherine St. Montreal, P. Q,
CLO'i'FING
CLOTHING!
How about thatasuit you want made to order? Call in and
see our tweeds before you buy.
$10 buys a nice suit.
12 buys a better one.
13.50' gets you more style.
14 leads you to higher grades.
15, splendid value.
16, elegant styles, beautiful cloth.
ROBT. COATS &
SON
JUTTERS AND 3LEIG
We Keep in Stock and make to order
Cutters and Sleighs of all kinds.
F, RUMBALL, - - OLINT0N;,.