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The Clinton New Era, 1901-01-25, Page 9Jima ' 25, 1901 TETE WANTON N141,1 ERA. Tailors' Bad Backs. The cramped up posi- tion in which at tailor Works. comes hard on his kidnaps and hard on his hack. Verrfew eseape backache, pain bribe eide end lirieerY tronblee a ono kind and andthee, •Oftentimes• the &et Werninge of kidney dimaise ern negletitedee think it will be all right' • . M a day or two -but iiok WillOYIrwlitt't get ,sttell Without help, • c• DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS t.re the beet friend of kidneys needing Assistance. Read the prooi *roma tailor weinbas tried them. e Mr. John Robertson, merohlint Durham. Ont., gives bis experienoe aa follows: "I had been ailing with my kideeys for More than a mar when I commenced taking Doan's Kidney Pills, which I got at Mo. Perla:sees drug, store, and am einderely glad that I did so. The wrong action of Mi. kidneys made me sick all over and bagged me much inconvenience and pain. That is now a thing of the past, because Doan's Leleey Pills cured me. I Pave had no troCele or inconvenience with iny kidneys or back since I took these remarkghle pills, end s -1 m iv be pore ‘hat I gladly recent - =Me. ahem to othet 'sufferers." — .4.4414.4.4.44 LAXA-LIVER PILLS 1heeleeteeleeetvessesitiedietteses-Therde- ie.6 puree.e.ip,., wee keit or s•eiven. They sc; :latest y • 1 t' s b ..no. 1v and bowels, i 1 1 •,nst pee eyspep.sle, sick beadeche sue le.ionsnesp. Pr.ce 25e. MATRON AND MAID. O Sarali Bernhardt is devoted to her Pam. ily, and fully half of the millions She has earned has gone to support her relatives. Mme. Patti, as she is still hest known. has a great silver bath fitted up •in'IIOL traveling car. The doors of the ear are opened by golden keys. Nadine Planner, better 'Icnolve in elm west as Miss Million, owns and manages a fine cattle ranch near Waal), Tex. •She was an Ohio schoolteacher, WM adopter by a wealthy Texan and inherited bis property. Miss Anne. Curtis Boutelle, who chris- tened tire new United States monitor No. • 8 at Bath the other day, is herself some. thing of a sailor and one of the best, yachtsWomen in New England. Her fa- ther, the congressman; is also fond a the In spite of ?Eats Helen Gould's circular sent out to discourage undeserving ap- peals for charity she •continues to dia.: pens.) aid to a constantly growing num- ber of persons and during the past few months has given to individuals alone eonsiderably over $5,000. Georgiahas within its borders. four 3criown real daughters, of the •.American Revolution, they being Mrs .• (Mina' T. Way, Mrs. Martha Penn Rodgers, Mrs, Oliver P. Berry and Mrs. Mary Bibb Hall, each the daughter • ot• a' 'Adler who fougbt in the Continental army dare ing the Revel ' L OW o eneral-Everin P. Dut- ton of Sycamore Ills., has offered the trustees of the gyeamore Public library a $25,000• building,' to be erected as a memorial to her husband. General Da- ter' lived in Syracuse for over half a century, and the action, of the' widow is in pursuance of a plan he had outlined before he died. - 0 • Mme. Rejane, /eke most great gen- fuses, has ber idiosyncrasies. No artist is said to be sci scrupulous as to the fit and absolute accuracy of the ,desIgna of her drones. Her mania fee luxurious dresses for herself and for her conipany Is said, in fact, to make her the despair of envious rivals and lesser lights of the stage whose purses will not enable them to keep pace with her in thiet re- gard. PERT PERSONALS.. Li Hung Chang is posing for a 'statue of "Innocence," to he placed in the Pal- ace of Truth' in Shanghai. The artist's -iettraess-hellar -11k-e-"TerreTlibaBostone Transcript, . Talk of making Andrew Carnegie dent of a golf club sounds like an effort to divert some of his surplus wealth from libraries into the avenues ,ot sport. -Washington Star. The doctors say that there is more nsrve nutriment in corn than in' Whelit, andeJneeLeeter, contemplating the success ef Plumber Phillips, may be disposed to twee with them„ -New York World. It is authoritatively stated that Mist Helen Gould receives per week begging letters asking for an average of about $1,- 500,000. Has it never occurred to Miss Gould that she might gave herself the annoyance of a great many of these let- ters by getting married and *hue chang- ing her name? --Savannah (Ga.) NON. The creditors of Anna Gould's husband, Count de Castellane, have taken legal measures to grind the fair Anna down to an eXpenditure of $250,000 a year. Anna and her children raight, with atriet econo- my -keeping but one girl, tor inistande- pull through on a quarter of iniffillion a year. We've knoten it donee ' • The Lighter. ' Mistress-el:it:Meet, i hope you don't light the fire with kerosene? (lOok-xot a bit, mum! 01 wets it demi widlonvenie an olght8 11 whi a Meteliee• $ut1100. : the os'* ciit chines** nfteidatlit grain' of pepper. 'in plette of the grain of ,send instendflee ehe torment. The pain ledge eseard to the (*One affeeted. The whoIi belethe also* of that little irritaildglisertittle. ft la so When there is any derangement or dip. °talker the delioate womanly cegans., [The ;amity knit trivial but 'The Whole fettle it. The iftervoiel system 111 ail. ot4 ed. Them ars frettelneete irribbll- 11y sentlennessal and depeteition„jet The general health 'of woman demi s on b11hIocal, health ,et,ebti„,orgentepe4nlierlp fen:inhale 'Boracite the dietine:dlotleiAltnis, betting down painettildlatber afditithinittif evertliti, and the whole body fifth eele bete - lit, Dr. Pierce's' Favorite presoription andenpine, thiteteength of 'Wotan. It is free nein opitim, eatable Ind other ntrootiee,poisont ,w-biebjenier,Aakt alsiar Ober prearaiihne dor 3?dintit'i nis. Xt`glebe Week million atroag and oink WOMail Will, ) WASTE OF RAILWAYS , HOW OLD LOCOMOTIVES, CARS, RAILS • ETC., ARE oisPoseo mw moner is made by the reale of miseerded or Wornout material Some Thing* Which Are Not Worth the Trouble ot estrus. . • Inventors of all classes most truly illus. trate tbe truth of the old eaw that men rise on the stepping stones of theit 'dead selyes to higher things, These men are at'onee the delight nal the dread of great railroad systems. No sooner does one Magnificent loconlotIve place a railroad .at the trout ot ot Ad- N.:ince than a better engine comes along au'd proudly playa: it Into the 'waste pile. Admired mid advbrtieled today,tbe new locomotlee la sole tomorrow to a loggffig read and thereafter groans out its time on steep grades uuder iteide that make its round feet slip on .the rusty rails. What is true of the engine is tree of the rails, of the deo under the rails and • of the fastenings that hold them togethee. The statement of the purchasing agent ter the New York •Central makes this fact of railroad wastage most graphic. ,He said, "We receive over $1,000,000a yanr ter the waste material of our 3,000 miles of track." He got out bis book and after gob* over it carefully added, "Yes, we get an average of $100,000 a month." On this basis all the railroads of the United States would dispose of about $00,000,000 ofwastage every' Year. The theory and practice of economy therefore arrean important part of a raftroad man's education. "We could save more than we. do," pee, tinned the a.gent, "but often it would cost more than a dollar to save a dollar's worth Of material. • To one not familiar --witherailreadifftlt m giftelookellice pure waste to let tbe dollar's worth of mate- rial, be lost, but nothing is worth saying unless it will sell' for more that; it costs to save it. Ites on thine beery that we pee no attention to subs a pencils and to empty.ink bottles, short lamp- wicks and, trifles of that class, although I have heard that some systems do save them. "As we get, inost of our ink from one concern, we could perhaps get some re- bate by, returning the bottles, biat the saving would not justify. itself.- Broken lamp chimneys, on the other hand, are another proposition.' Many of these are of flint glass,. and we save the pieces. It Is 4bn:teeing how many slim globes and. articleh of good glass are broken anong our thousands of • employees. •Every month we gather up the fragments and sell •the mass to the glass men for one• fourth of a cent a pound. -• . • "Every scrap of iron that fails by the wayside'every hit of iron bored out in drilling holes, every' broken bolt; old rail and. old .ffinge is :laved and sold when there is bulk enough. This Material amounts to Miedreds •451 thousands • a pounds monthly.. The iron waste is gathered easily and,. practically without cost. The borings aresviept up in the repair bouses and factorieli In the mere operation of keeping ,the places' in order. As for iron that drops from trains on the road, the •seetion- hands_ pick that up as they chance to: see it, toss itI on their haedeare and • let it accumulate at their section hoiese. When there is enough to make it worth while, a train eakes it to market.: ' . ifEmpty barrels, ,carboys, pleeee of, rope, scraps of gold leaf used for letter- ing, sections of 'rubber hose, rubber cloth and Such flatus htive.a market value that makes .them worth saving. The' chief . items of savingarein the heavy articles. We get about $25,000 a year for discard.' -edeties, -Theseetleseare .yellosy pine, and when cut into short blecks make a splendid tire. 'Some of the best, geeele ,this city use them hi their oici fashioned 'eplateg. Ve sell the ties for..a dime each,. and they' are cheap fuel .at that. We cannot Afford to haul them to market from the distant places on the line, and what the farmers and section men there do not want to take free we -burn up to get them out of the way. Thefts a ma- terial from the roadside are. so trifling as to be not Worth considering. ' O "Rang come next to ties in•value. The best and heaviest' rails inust be used on the main lines all. the time. Many rails are retired from the main line while still good for lighteeservice. . These are often placed on side tracks. Often a rail that is or so value to us at all is good enough for some road using lighter locomotives, or on some backwoods logging road, and .so it goes to nnother master, serving TAU finally worn out, when it finds its way to tbe melting pot, to begin life agate, per- haps as a rail, but more likely in some other form. • 'The greatelit lose In operationis in the locomotives and cars. There as so many new types ofeengines and cars that it is Impossible totellfairly, what they cost But for the purpose -of showing waste we evellreetrilfeser ate: ngeA neW7,11gliie cdsts from $12,000 to $15,000:land will lest about 15 years by being shifted from he main line to side lines and switches. In the end it is sold for about $2,090 or $4,000, recording to condition. It may be utterly unfit for our work and yet be of Value -to some mailer feed, or to some factory for shunting cars among ware- houses. Often, however. an engine ece tually wears out in our service, and then it goes directly into the Melting pot. On eery engine there will be certain perts that are not worn and the old machine Is carefully dismantled of all Valuable terial before it is sold as scrap. "Old ertrs are passed along the line id much the same way. A new passenger coach costs about 82,000 and after 25 years of service will bring about $800. A new freight ear will cat from $050 to $700, and will sell after 15 ot 20 years' service ter about sm. New ears are al- ways a the latest pattern. Whey are used at first on the best trans' and as they become antiquated ire retired to haribler service Until their Ana use with tis Is in edistrttetion trains. Malay We mil to milaller rdada in out of the way place', and many are bought by theat- rical Ceinpanies and ffirenses. When We deffide. to pa g car Into the scrap Pile ire sell to one' man the privilege of riei" ping out the wood, to another the pipes, and SO on, until each class of material ie dlettibuted ' to the trade from which it Came Origleally." • -- GRANT'S CIGARS, 4 Ln Bow tee General came to Be ss , Great P snooker. : "My father,' said General Frederiek O. Grant, "tried to smoke while at West _ Po nt, but only because It was tiaet net " the' regulations: and then be didn't sue- eeed very well at it. He really got the ireleataties 9 ' ,A. young walla' was maids' some pm'. chases in A stationer's shop in Germany, proprietor suddealy.stek* "AO When &mat the wedding take plaie?" "The wedding? Why, you don't thine.. The. fair eistdater,bitished And hesitated. "Ale, 'frattleie, When retie ladle* be 100 ghetto of piper and Only BS esveleptie Mane that* Is something hi the- wiad." CASTOR1A Per Infant* mutehilitren. habit tram sleeking light cigars and Mg- . . erettes during the Mexican war, but it wasiet a need habit. When he left the army and lived in.the country, •he smok- ed a pipe -not ineesseeptlYe I don't think O that he was very fond of tobacco then, and really there was always a populer misconception of the amount of his :amok. ing. "But he went on as a light smoker, a caua1 smoker, until the dayeed the fall of Fort Donelsen. Then; the gunboats' har- ing been Wot•sted somewhat and Admiral Foote having been wounded, he seat nehore for my either to come and sea him, leather went a boardeand the admi- ral, ao is customary, bud hie cigars paw ed. My father took one and. was smok, Mg it when he went ashore. There he was met by a staff officer, who told him that there Was a sortie and the right wing had been etruck and smashed in. Then my teener started for the scene of operations. He let his cigar go out; tat - :wally but bold it between hle fingers. ' rode hither and yen, giving orders and directions, still with tbsteigar stump in his hand, The result oruis exertions was that Doeelson fell lifter he sent his message of eincooditional ' surrender' nail 'I propose to wove immediately upon your works.' With the message was sent all over the coin:try that Grant was smoking througbout tie, bottle. when he only carried this et p 1111111 Foote's • fl ag- ship. But the cigers liegnn to come in fronreill over the Celine Ile had 11,000 cigars on hand in a very Short ti:. He -Wire ifwaY-Tlit-Trcouid. but' he was go surrounded with chews that he got to smoking them regularly. But he .riever staked as mathas hn seemed to smoke. O He w,ould light a eigar-after breakfast and lee it go out, and thee light it. again, and,then let it go out and light it: sh.that the' one cigar would • last initil lunch - able." -/ft eCI tare's 51 e gee ue. These pills euro ell diseases and dis- orders arising from aveak heart, worn out 1101708 or watery blood, such as Palpita- tion, Skip Beats, Throbbing, Smothering, Dizziness, Weak or Faint Spells, Anaemia, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Brain Fag, General Debility rand Lack of Vitality. They are a erne heart tonic, nerve.food and blood enricher, building up and renewing all the wool out end, warner tissues of the body and restoring perfect health. Prim 50e. a box, or 3 for $1.25, at all druggists. Aceerdisija Lo the license report for On- tario, just issued, tbe number of tavern and wholesale licenses issued forth° license yea; 1893 1900 wee 3,009, a decrease 61 31 as comp .red with the previous year, and 114 tem than two years ago, in spite of the inorease in population. In Toronto there are 150-tasern and 50 shop limners. while in 1874 the city had .3C9 tavern en t 184 shop licensees, with less than half hi pop- ulation. 1" My Stomach gave. out en- tirety and I suffered untold agonies." This was the experience .of Mr. D. G. Whiddeie Postmaster, East Wentworth, N'S., aftek three attacks of La Grippe. Doctors arid doses gave him no permanent relief, but Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple Tablets had the permanent virtue that won him back to perfect health -pleasant and harmless but powerful end quick. es cente.-160 So, 14. 11. Alive y, druggist, Clinton. O SEA -SICKNESS, NAUSEA, O And melodies of this type yield quickly to the most magical p.,wer of Nerviline,and if you suffer perioditiaily from any of these :roubles just keep Nerviline at band. A Jew alreps.otaweetened. wsterewillegivesales most indent relief and in the course of. half an boa the cure is completed, Your tnoney backlit you do not find it so. •Tbe jury in the oase of Eumey Clarisse of 0t'ava, cherged with manslaughter, due agreed. O Prom all ti over Cancle come letters tell. ng tie of the great benefits derived from he nee'of the D, L. Menthol Pluton in •asee of neuralgia, rheumatism, lame !amok, to. Davie dc Lewrence, Ltd., manufao- ciente BMr Kennedy the hynraulie e reports that the new auxiliary ma hin- ery ordered for the Ottawa water- works 6 unsuitable for thea pp ese, Crbtme, Coughs and glolde are all quickly dared by Pyty Below. It lindens the Cough altaost instantly, and cures readily the most Obetinate collie. Manufactured by the 'Proprietors of Perry -Davis Part. At O ' all right, if you are too fat; and all wrong, if too thin already. Fat, enough for your habit, is healthy; a little more, or less, is no great harm. TOO fat, consult a doctor; too thin, persistently thin, no matter whit cause, ke ScotesoEmulsion of Cod Liver Oil. There are many causes of get- ting too thin; they all come under these two heads: over- work and under -digestion. Stop over -Work, if you can; , but, whether you Cin or not, take Scott's Emulsion ofCod. Liver Oil, to balance yourself with your work. You can't live on it -true -but, by --iti—you can. There's a limit, however; • you'll r‘edy for.it. — Scott stEmulsion of Cod -Liver Oil is the readiest cure. for "can't eat," unless it comes of your doing no work -you can't long be well and strong, without some sort of gtivity.. The genuine has this picture on it, take no -other. II you have not trled it, send for free sample, itg_a- greeable taste will surprise you. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto. •tt; O SPEAKING OF LUCK. A sporting; Man Oeelaree That Jt bite Only ill *teal Life. 0 . "The eld saying that 'the odds are egaiest the guesser' is firmly believed in by nearby all gamblers,"ald .a turfman who prides ffiruself upon having reduced betting to a mathematical formula "The axiom is a good deal deeper than most people suppose, Taken literally in O gaines of chance, it is falee; applied to human natuie, it is true. "Suppme, for example, that two men pitch pennies. O The chances for heads and tale are per- fectly even, And it .ean 'Make no diger- mice which of the playere does the guess- ing. Where the gueseer appetite to have greatly the worst of it is in such a game is taro or roulette. The 'effort m ton: - east each tuna is • apt to unsettle his nerves. He gets irritated and demoral- ized, makes Ireatess • bra, protegee bad luelsetandeivitieli-up broke. In fact, the ebief advantege,of a ,'systent' fste gains tiling is that It saves nerve force. ' The O bets are placed according ,to rule, and the player and the game are on theO same cold, meehanical basis, . In playing the races the odds are seemingly 'against the guessers,' for the reason that they art infilienced be all North -of hints, lips and peenwititleits; 'mostly wrong:It isn't really a ease of guessing, but a case of misplaeed nonfidencee' s "Do' you believe in luck?" asked one of the listenere to the foregoing. "That depends upon whether you meth theOretically or practically." replied the scielitific turfman. "Luck is something -that doesn't wrist . except in real life, The late Professor Proctor once delivered a lecture incrile m . delphia on the 'Mathematics of ance' and • proved conclusively there was no suck thing as luck. Afterward he took a diee box and attempted to demonstrate the Met to Mine skeptical sports sand - went broke in eight" minutes .by the watch, There la •absolutely no reason why people should hgve streaks of good or bad luck, I• can denniiistrate to you on paper that the thing is impossible,. and you cien demonstrate -to me by ocular evidence ilea it happens every day: So there you are. 0 0 • 9t's2 tunny fact, by the WO; that the two. principal 'systems' at lfoute Carlo are based on diametrically opposite the- ories of luck: 'One hi called the 'maturity :of thaneee To illustrate: 'Suppose red turas up three times in succession. Ac. cording to the :System, the chance of it appearing again is greatly diminished and grows less with -each, repetition.. Conse- quently tbe player bets on *black. The other is the esystem 001 runs.' Its votaries hold that a color which hail onee.'repeat- ed' is apt to keep on, av least five or six times in aneeessios. Each brand of cranks proves its case by the daily record kept year in and year out at the Cashes, 'You pays your money, and von takes your ehotoor.' "0 • , • Eater a cold drive's thespeonfal Of Pain. Siler Mixed with sa glaselothot seater and sugar will be found a better ad:indent than ' wh skey. A.yoid .substitutes, -•there's ,but one Pain -Killer, Perry Davis'. 25o. and 50o. . • • , : 64,e'. and $1.00; alt druggists. ` PUBLIC. VICE. The 'cure for Public vice le in the hit. ot box. -Chicago Journal. - Vice is sheltered by police Protection in almost all American cities, largely _be- cause this protection is paid for. -Lew iston Journal. "0 .0 • e O tempte-are-still-out-Mang to purify New, York and to reach the north pule, with about 'equal chances of etleOess.- Baltimore Americen. erate .division. The young widow goo0. after went to Paris. It was just about 'this time that Napoleon III euminoned _young Jerome Bonaparte of Baltimore. abLacogoerporetion laborers at. Bingsten b u nen man. name ;T. qvantp . • "1/' 3:1°4- 1 TTVIVET AilitUff017011- • CoNsiluiPTIoN ad • o are Linea xemeasue, seezrrelvo ear BLOOD, , coffin& EMUS . 01 APPETIT& Ole beadles or this amass are pious saaniteal. • . ety the aid of The D. & L. Emulsion, 1 halm gotten rid of a hackingcough which had troubled me for over a year, and have gained consider- ably la Weight. • • T. H. WINGHAM, C.B., MentreaL at aila. et aSi per. Bottle Davis is rAwaniwn co., :Althea, YONTREAL. • ' 1 osinihung Reiorte In Ewiteerland. One need not *aye' to Monte Carlo or other gambling insoles to be relieved of any superfluous etish, for there are dozens of places in Sffitzeriand 0 known by the name of kureasis where a "customer" will be accomnodated. Although the, play Is limited ly the law, higher stikes. are winked at, and one's losses -for one O invariably, loses with an 8 to I thence* against at the reSe horse game --may easi- ly run into four figures during the even- ing. Some seniational facts have come entreeriberthemturstrat neva, which is dle of the best of Its kind in Switzerland.' The proprietor lately informed a cortispondent that he cOuld not possibly farad to run his theatet and side shows and engage well known ar-. fisted at a hugesalary unless he could recoup himself *om the takings og the gaining tables.,-4ondon Mall. Mr. MeeAtent,to Opinion. O "Is a married Mari a free agent?" ine gaited the cynic. "Wells" =Weed Mr. Meekton "It is impossible for Oman to give an opinion • on ouch a matte except on personal In- formation. Judghg from the way he gets out and aolicitertork and makes collec- tions and tarns Fe profits into headquar- ters, I Should y there was no doubt about he being, ri agent. As to hie be- ing a free agent I shouldn t feel like ex- pressing my viers without consulting Ileariettac"--W hington Star. 20th Century Bargaio, Sale of 'Stoves' 1 during inonth of January We couunence the new century with a .0,41t Bargain Sale Wood Cooking Stoves, Wood tireatin Moves, Seteat nand Coal -and Wood Stoves, This, is a 4ianee t� teetite stove at a bargain, as we wish to make x'o4i for othet good* co Ana see no. It uiII pay to buy even it nob needed Onll itnother Seeina t priori and sale Stovall will be Marked in plain figaree, both t PHA showing the, reduction invi Remember these *lees ')11.1t.be for month I, ,January only sli rare) Ette 00441110Vitie 1,44441o/0i Attiiki Etit Visite UMW* And hinting, , CLINTON' The athlete of the NeW 'York- hospitahl • heve issued OnotiOea0atating that their O Me:Widens' are already oVer-orowded with ,petients suffering with is grippe and min- uet at present accommodate additional •eafterers. • ' *In guarentse that ifiese Plasters will' relieve -.. . , pain sticker than any other. Put ep only In 114;7.71`FIA 1 . 25c..tigf box. iiid sLoo ii Li t 1 tiv,ii. ; verd :db. The Utter . • 1 • -', • . . allows Tee to cut the "-.4 .....: • - 1.1aster any IPA, uk-L . . • Every family r fe' s h o iii d , have one: iIFft ready fee an . As emere j. gency. . DAVIS 611.0RENCE CO., O LIMITED, MONTREAL Bei -fire of imitations. • ,• ' The Enquirer stays a Budateeth firm has a plan which, if all it is claimed. will revolutionize railway nettle( by oapplying electricity cheaply to large mew lines. O All kinde of CoUghtt• and Cola, Bron - objets Whooping Coughs, Pains in the Chest, Wheezing, /Warmness, Sore Throat and Asthma, yield•to to the Lung -healing properties of Dr. WOod's Norway Pine Syrup. Price 25o, Johann Faber, founder, of the Faber lead pencil faotory, is dead. SICK WITH WOBMS. ' O Dire J. D. Mayo, South Stuliely, P. Q., wrote the follovving. "(Me 0f my child - ran -took sick with worma and after tryingeeverythinge without goltjgg relief we procured' Dr. Low's Worm Syrup which acted promptly and effectually." O Mr. Thomas Cote, a well-known jour- nalist, has been appointed joint census commissioner for the French districts of the Dominion. O itching, Burning, creepinz crowing Skin Diseases relieved in a few minutesby Dr. Agnew's Ointment. be Ageew's Ointment relieves instantly, and mires Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Eczeina, Ulcers, Blotches, and all Eruptions of the Skin. It is soothieg and quieting and acts like magic in al Baby Humors, Irritation of the Scalp or Rashes during teething time. 35 emits, a box.--rse Sold by J. E. Hovey; druggist, Clinton. r. 'Metres handasineWstee with' pdliebedillckeleate,orninrented hands, keyless wind, ;anion go, hour, minute and secend ' Lererbibvfmentforeelle ingenly2dozdahltygold and silver fi nished Horseshoe Pins et 10c. each., Menem s advertise. • ment and well ' ,end Mel:torso. shoes. Bell themrn m ,retuoney and your Watch will be sent gthcalctutityz..fkiep 1,1:: 1:n lo. • What is ••11•4•4•••••••••••••• :5;•; • essesN'S eSseseee.e.‘e,e::. \ ‘ ss•—•••••:f.,\,..• castor* i or Wants and Children. Castor* is a ,harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Norphine nor other Narcotic substance. It Is ?lepton Its gitaritaiee is thirty Tears' use by IFfilligns of Mothers Cakitoria destroys Worms. and aflays reVerish., ness.- Castorla, cures Diarrhcea and Wind Coltc. , Castoria - relieves Weething Troubles, cures Constipation and FlittniTey. 04storla esliqtailatfi the rood, regulates the'Fitomaai and Bowels of Infante and Children, giving dieftliqq: ;44 naeurtel sleep. Castoria is he Children's, • Panacea -be Mother's Friend. . ,Cautona. "Cauterise Ls an excellent medicine for children:. motheis have repeatedly told sae of its good erect upon their chiterene" ''DR. O. C. Os0000, LoWelli Mass, THE -FAC–SIMILE • _Gastori% "Coustoisi is so well adapted to childreit that X recommend ir as superior to any pea- scription known to me." "iLA,Azcunit, M. D. Rrod.tirts, . . SIGNATURE OF APPEARS ON . EVERY WRAPPER. 4.NTAuri coNili.ANY, 77 140 RAY wrPirrr. NC* Yoltit CITY. • • •• • . •• I SharpleS Creain Separator makes • . • money for others—why 'lit tor - . You, Met Farmer; with four or more cows, are thinkietthat you 'might to *Ave..: one but you so the price le too high, and while you are ifelleking about it the dollen that Would:pay for it are going te the Olga and oalvea,in the AIM 'mulk, The dime;In your hind is held so clolusto your eye that you fail to see the' della just beyond it. e, • One otHulletieribuist trogreaffiVe and. tip -to -date fart:hem who, had a Shanties Cream Separator On trial and which be has since patchneede fetid •tome .that dering'the week.th'eytterelesting the Separadi they Made seven pounds more .than they did •Cler the old process in the week,previouse This Was in teeetteneoin dairy; wherethe 'butter ;infidels it firiitolahe Mticile and Belle rapidly On the London market at 20o a lb. ThOtep fore the net gain inhird cash by the use nt- the Separator for one Week was egge Millar initty Besides this there was a saving of time and Itiber,Mtd a' • • ellethFr %IOW of bitirWraiik teaetheesigteanditalves;•• • • ; O Do you know of any legitimate business that will bring 'Yea a return of $UB weekly on an investment of 390. . • -CaII 05 no or write for particulars. We will pleased to let You have a free trial of the machine.. W. L. OUIMETTE, Londesboro. • • • s !'•; s • `r r' First-classers ' I am handling the PileLAlUGHIN OELEBRA.TED 017/TERS .whiolz are admitted qct be the 'best' Made in the market Alme Cutters of my' own ffianatiottain, which arellp to lisjowill be pleased"to 'thew in- • tending parchment my Mock at any 'time,' and prioes are se lbw. as lowest. • 3014.2N LESLIE. Mixon Street, Clinton FrOits, Teas, Sugars, and Chinawart . • CHRiSTMASINI0 HOLIDAY TRADE :Raisins Selected Valeneia.Sultazia.Deliesa,Clusters-andslinperialCabenstee-Cureese•- sraiitftelftie-FiTiatitie-siir-Vatres oleaned. A. full and snorted stook, ARest and be Candied Lemon,Orange and Citron Peels, Almond. Walnut and Filbert Nuts, Layer and . Cooking Figs, Dam, Prunes, Orenges, Lei:nom-and barrels:of Candies, all at very low- est prices. 0• 6 lbs.of Figs tor 25c lfis Cleaned Currants 25c Best Raisins 10c, special price in box lots • Cranberries 0 10c a quart. • Headquartersfor sugars and 'Tees; we have the best 25o Tea in town,0 'extra good japan 20o a pound, Agents for Itern,Lale, Appleton, Monsoon and Blue Ribbon Teas. We are showing largest and nicest line of Dinrer, Tea and Toilet Seta,' Fanor China, Glassware and Lamps in town: ExMnIne goods and prices before you Iffiy. 3. W. IRWIN. • Clinton After a night with "the boys" there ie no better remedy to clear the bead and aecIi thi steins& than Kilburn's Sterling litelditehe Powders. Price 10o. and 25o; at all dealers, 0 00 Samuel Lewis, the notorious' money lender and Router Of London, Eng., who has been oalled the "greeted and meanest of modern Shylooke, ' is dead. ffsk tt1 The Great Serpent or aS 'Dleseses.-Kidney disame may well be called the "boa constrictor" disease, mum - peeling and unrehuiting,it gets tithelegetill 'Its coils and gradually till:din; till IifeIm oresbedfakbut, the greet la 40ericad Kidnap Cdte t eft NM edatipower Over the monster, and no muter how Annly eameslaid, it will release. heel magma -458 Seld by 3, B., Hever, drilitillet, OlintOnos Out of 40,000 vomit entering Chineee Irt,11.!vreVAMcitrilen,Wktio.h• 0 for en Cry • tA. irstclass eutters • ia andSiellinS • • • We have a large assortment of firstelass Outten to choose from and intending buyers will find our stook apts. date. Prices are low for 11101 -grade goods. Also a number of Ontario and Manitoba Bobs. Geo. Lavis, General Implement Dealer. Clinton ; 1" e Exeter • • 10 AT NO EXTRA. COST All kinds of Sonallgield Seed . as irintoth'y, Red and Alsike Clovers. IleadqUarters for Turnip,' Nongold, Oarre Seek Fre* Croeeries aftd Canned Goods. • Our specie* ,i*Teis. Try onr Igo Tea. Othettiarietiee etrielly teCoheali. Higheseenterket price Nadia cash for eggs. 4rta ..EXITJX.11 p "