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The Clinton New Era, 1901-08-16, Page 3eretilleletevweeraereeeveasseeereieewiree Lots of peoi le have thin hair. Per- haps their parents had thin IR haps Per- • _aps emir children have thin hair. But this 'does not make. it necessary for themto have thin/ hair. One thing you may rely upon— makes the hair healthy and vigorous; makes it grow thick and long. It cures dan- druff also. • It always restores color to gray hair,— all the dark, rich color of early life. There is no longer need of your looking old be- fore your time. $1.00 a bottle. AU druggists. remedy for restoring color to the hair I believe Ayer's Hair -Vigor has no equal. I has always given me perfect satisfaction in every way." Mrs. I./J.8=MM, Aug. 18, Mk Rammondsport,N.Y. Writes the Doctor. He will send you a book on The Dan and Scalp free, upon request. If you do not Obtain all the benefits yins expected from the use, of the Wet' write the Doctor -about it. ' Address • , • De. J.C. AYER. - • LoweU, Masa . EARLY DAYS OF TELEPHONES. ' prof. .e. urethane nen Tells About Put. ting in FM First at lirantlord: The followingis from the pen of Prof. A. Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone: - • IIt is exactly 26 years since I put up my first telephone. ' At that time I was visiting at my father's house in Brantford, a small city in Ontario, Canada. We ob- taintd the permission of the Cana- dian Government to use a telegrapli line fox& miles ltiliee that extended .from Brantford to a neighboring vil- lage. We put up our apparatus in a - friend's house, kindly loaned for the - purpose, and as it was over half •ae mile from the telegraph line, we were obliged to lengthenethe wire.. - No additional telegraph wire was available, so what do you think we used? You would never -guess. We . could find nothing in the hardware stores but stovepipe wire, and . we had to buy up all the stovepipe wire in Brantford to make our line long enough. We did not trouble to put up poets, but tacked' the wire to the fence. The communication that took place over • this • first telephone wire • was not a conversation, but a monologue, as we had the transmitter only at one end, and the receiver at the oth- er. • In this way the first message was . sent over the telephone, and L have been told that Brantford calls itself the 'Telephone City" ever since. That' was in 1875. 'A short time afterwards Mr. Chas. Williams of Boston strung a tele- phone wire from his office io Boston • to his house in Cambridgeport, a dire. ' tance of two miles. This was the first telephone wire to be permanent- ly erected. Since theso small beginnings; what amazing progress has been made! - The next step in the improvement of the telephone will be wireless tele- phony. This is not an inventor's dream. It has already been done across short distances, In the immediate future it wilt be made practical for social and com- mercial' purposes. NU A CENTURY OLD, A Standard Remedy - 1/sod iniThouisands of Homes in Canada. Clings Diarrhosa, Dysentery, Cholera, Cholera Morbus; Cholera Info - turn) Cramps. Colic, Sea Sickness ittni all Sumnax ,‘Complaints. • Its prompt itt:ii111 prevent a great deal of unnecessary suffer- ing and often save life. Puget, *it 380e 1110 'LI Milburn Co. a Limited' TOrOntoi out. rite ream sepnratore The Manager of the Fulton Creamery Company, at Fulton, Kansas, is very enthusias.ic in favor of the farm sep- arator. He says that in seven months froill the time they began to put out the separator they had closed down the factory eeparator at the main plant, and two of the skimming -stations, and now they are running no power sep- arators at all, the work all being done by sixty-tlye band -separators on the farms. With a less number of patrons they have increased their output of butter fifty per cent, and made over one bundied and thirty thousand pounds of butter a month during the summer, an average •ot two thousand pounds for each separator. As for the high Oat of the machines, he says his patrons would not sell their separators tor three times their cost if they could not replace them, and that with ten cows a farmer more than saves the cost of the machine in a year. He sums up the ad.vantages of the system in this Wet: "First save trouble and expense in haulting or having haulted a lot of milk to the factory and back again, which, at tea cents a hundred peunds, amounting to two and one half cents a pound of butter -fat on four -per -cent milk. Second by having the warm sweet milk right frorn, the cow in ten or fifteen minutes after milking, and just the same every time, its feeding value, based on estimates of our pat reins, is increased fifty to sixty tier - cent over the old way of sterilized milk for, the creamery, Third,the far- mer, instead of having cwo loindred to three hundred pounds of milk and skim milk to care for, has only twenty to thirty pounds of cream, which is a great saving of sailor, even taking ince consideration the litber of separatitig by hand. Feu' tit, the farmer is never under the neceesil y of feeding or using whole milk for calves or household purposes, thereby .losing the creams "Our company veva the fat owe a, net pace tor cream right at his door, grid hires its own hauler, thus relieving eh,. farmer of all troub:e and anxiety Meow getting his product to the creernery. Iu hot, weather We gather the cream every other day, and in cold weather twice a week. The cream is •weighed and sampled right before the patron's eyes,and paid for by the Babcock teat, using an eighteen c,c, pipette. The patron is given a ticket punched with his number, date and number of pounds of cream he has meth time, and a duplicate is taken to the creconety by the hauler; "The hauler coming in contact with thepatron'eVery time be gets cream can instruct him in the care of it much better then when nallk is •delivered to the factory, The hauler sees how the patron cares for the cream, and if it is not right correct-, it. We are satiefied that we get a better article of butter train the cream gathered every two days than from milk delivered at the factory daily. The milk being eeparat. ed while warm from the Cow, ell the impurities are taken out, and the pat- ron has only a few pounds of cream to care for, which in hot weather is usu- , ally bung in the well. He has warm skim -milk to feed his calves and pigs, and haset juat •the same every feed. He saves every drop of milk. and runs it through his separator Sunday: AP well as other days, and loses nothing by milk souring. whichwas a big item the old way. A majority of the pat- rons eyeta find the skim -milk good enough for household purposes, which makes another saving." That is the substance of his letter as it was published in the last annual' re- port ot the board of agriculture, and much.of it we have given in his own words. • At the Nebraska Experimental Stat- ion they took from three cows, fresh May 15, June 5, and. July 8, 1899. and brought them up on skim-radlc, or separator -milk, making butter front the cream. In twenty-eight weexs they make nearly four hundred and ninty-two and one half pounds of but- ter Three other calves, dropped May 22nd, May 26th and June 16th, were allowed to run with the dams. On July Lt,. 1CO, the three having the whole .milk weighed an average of sev en hundred and ninty-eight pounds, and three on skirn-nillk seven hundred and nintv-two pounds, All were fed alike after weaning ; but with whole milk valued at one 'dollar a hundred weight, and skim -milk at fifteen cents a hundred, it had cost fifty dollars ane twenty-seven cents more to rake tlerse on the whole milk than it did those on slam milk, or sixteen dollars and eev- enteeeix cents each, not reckoning anything for the extra cost of labor in hand -feeding and butter making, The 'cost of growing a calf to eix month, old on skinernilk was estimated itt about nine dollars for food, but by their weight as yearlings it will be seen that they were liberally frd.-- American Cu I tivator. • •,1• Oto Setsr Postage Stamps, The 1. s.;,. of it new sot of postage stature; to raelece those which • bear the head of our late sovereign, Queen N. ictorie„, will shortly engage the attention of the postal •depart- ment. The government of the United Kingdom will probably get out its new issue before any steps are taken by the colonies, but there, as here, • there is probably 0 very taiga stock of stamps on hand, which it is well to use up before the nee/ dies are prepared. There is no precedent to go by in the matter, as at the ac - cote= of Queen Victoria there was no Ouch thing as a postage stamp, as we Understand the term, in Use There, are about fifteen stamps in use in Caratda, on which the head Of Queen Victoria, appears. When the --new-isstier-ie-being•-prepared practically certain that the present • eight -cent stamp, which was design- ed prineipelly for use in registering letters, will be replaced by oai at seven cents to correspond with the rate for registered letters since the reduction to two cents of the letter rata Colonel Otter," Career. Colonel William: Dillon Otter, 0.13., Was born near Olintetn, Ont., Decem- ber 13, 1843, and joined the militia in 1861. Ile served through the Fen- ian Raid of 1866, ineluding the bat- tle of Ridgeway; went to England as second in command of the Wimble- don teal in -18/8; succeeded to the 'command, othe Queen's Own Rides In 1874; was commandant of the Wimbledon tealli in 1888; was made commandant of the Sehoel of Infan- try, Toronto, December, 1588; com- manded the Dattleford colunm during the IstorthWest Rebellion of 1880, and was choemi to conanand the drat Orinadiari tontingent to South ilea in 'ootobor. 1890. rAtigtellewoe Tribute te Nuns. eee amid the fields of Ayr, A plowmen wee Is feed and fat; 431ngs 'hie desk So delta we know not it it le The leverOckei song we hear itt ktOt care to Ask. idk THE CLINTON NEW ERA, AT THE MODEL DAIRY WHY HE SQ1-0 HIS BLANKET. wava,•••Nmes Au Incident in the Life of Dr. Ernest GREAT CENTRE OF ATTRACTION AT Setou.Thempsoa THE PAN-AMERICAN Tt1, Edillend 13, Le Roy, inspector Canada Permanent & Western Gan- a a oitgage Callen etion, related an interesting incident in the life of Mr. Ernest Seton -Thompson, the fam- ous writer on anneal life, a day or two dem It aPPeare that some years • ago young Seton, as he was then called, spent his summer vacations in the woods, where he studied the charecteristies of animal life. This year he Was in the neighborhood of Coboconk, whore Mr. Le Roy was then keeping a store. One day a wild - looking, unkempt young man •came into the store and purchased sup - Plies, Ile said his name. was Seton and that he was hunting for bird skins. When he had been around the neighborhood about a month Mr. Le lioy asked him one day whore he • lodged. "Oh," replied the eccentric young fellow, "1 goasleep wherever happen to be when I am tired, e Just roll myself up in me, blanket." Mr. lee Roy remarked at the time tq Needs near that this young man would be heard from some day. Lat- er in the summer' young Seton week - ed into Mr. Le Royal store and told him that he was dead broke and that he wanted to go to Teronto. Mr. lee NoY offered to loamhim the amount of his fare, but Seton said, "No, I will sell you my rubber blanket • for $3." - Mr, Le Roy bought the blanket and it was such a good one that he still has it in his possession: Later • still, when Mr. Ernest Seton-Thopm- son• became famous as the result of his week it struck 'Mr. Le ltoy one • day that perhaps that young fellow Seton might, lee ehe now -famous ar- tist and author. He penned a . note to the author, sending it, to his Now York address, asking hira if he Was not the man who had sold him the rubber blanket. A few daysego Mr. Le Roy received the following reply, from the brilliant author, who Was then stopping, at the auditorium, Chicago: My dear sire --Yes, .1 aril the • . =an who sold you the rubber ela.nket - 1885. I am yours very siecerely, Er- nest Setien-Thoinpsen. • ' ----T-he author's totem follows the sig- nature - a, bear's footpriet., . Canada Is Well Reiresented in Five Herd. • of Cows Each, Contatning steins, Jerseys, Ayrshire', alterations, and Erench •Canadians -All the Cows Are Vn,der a Sl x Months" Test. • (Special by Mahe Crithe) The Canadian portion of theModel Dairy is under the supervision of Ur. E. W. Elderkin Amherst, Nova Scotia, President • of the Maritime Stock Breeders' Association, Which embraces New Brunswick, Prince Edward's Island and Nova Scotia, assisted by his son, D. W. G. Elder - kin, a student of Guelph Agricultur- al College, Ontario, Later on live stock will be eent to • the Pen -American by private indi- viduals, Mr. E. W. Elderkin is ex- pected to leave Buffalo soon. Ile is going to Canada, to inspect all the live stock • eefore they are sent over. • The Model. Dairy bean is situated near .the East Amherst gate, and is a centre of attraction to those in- terested in •agriculture, and a mat- ter of curiosity to city people. Tier° It is proposed to care for and feed the cows, and prepare their product for the market in as nearly an Jame way as is pi eeible. In the bare axe` to be found the herds of five cows each. Canada,is represented by five •herds, viz.: Holsteins, • Jerseys, Ayr - shires, Short Horns and French-Can- •adians. The remaining herds, viz.: Guernseys, Red -Polled, Polled Jere seys, Dutch Belted, and Brown Swiss are owned by Americans. The Cana- dian cows, with their owners, are as follows: 1, Kirsty Wallace of' Auchenbiain- Robert Reford. Ste. Anne de Belle- vue. 2. Betsy lst of Fairfield Haim - Robert Reford, Ste. Anne de Belle- vue. • 3. Lady Flora of Orchardton-W, W. Ogilvie, Lachine Rapids, Que. 4. Alice 2nd of Lessnessock - W. W. Ogilvie, Lachine Rapids, Que. • 5. Pearl • of .Woodside eliabblece Hess, Howick, Que. •a e. Luna Flors -- Long Point Asy-• Lime Long Pointe .0.1.1ce . . 2. Rouen -College L'A.ssomPtioll, Long rola, Que. • 8.. Luno -Joseph Dugan, St. Jacques, Que. • ..4. • Denise Champion° Areus Denis, St. Herbert, Que. • 5. -Lp. Bouchette - J., B. Ousy, Chicoutimi, Que. • •- 1. Gypsy of Sprucogrove -t• Cana:. dian Government. '. • , ' 2. Primrose Park's Pride - W. E. H Massey Toronto, Ont. •' 3. Queen May of Greenwood E. H. Maesey, Toronto, Ont. 4.• Maple Avenue's Rexina Neil, Lucan, Ont. • 5. Mossy of Burley - Canadian Government. ' ' •1. Meg 0. A.• College, ' Guelph,' Ont Inka •Mercedee, Dekol - Matt. Richardson, Caledonia, Ont. . 3. Hulda Heyne's Aggie .-:Matt. Richardson, Caledonia; Ont. • 4. Beauty of Norval - M. McClure, Norval, Ont. • 5. Tidy Abbekerk - H. Bollert, Cassel, Ont. . 1. Rose 3rd -W. CI, Pettit and son, Freeman, Ont. . 2. 14th Princess of Thule -A. W. Smith, 'Maple .Lodge, One. , • 3. 'Daisy D. -G. R. tfliner, Siparta, 4. Miss flolly-Canadien Govern- ment. 5. Queen Bess --Canadian Govern- • ment. • The cows are under a six months'test, lasting from the 1st of May. to the let of November. There are four prizes to be competed for: 1.st, for the herd showing the greatest net profit, butter fat alone considered, as determined by the Babcock, test; god -For the herd • showing the greatest net profit, butter fat alone considered, asp determined by the churns; 3rd-1eor •the herd showing the greatest bet profit in total solids;, 41.11-Vor the herd showing the great- est net profit in total solids and in loss and. gain in live weight, • Each •herd is in charge of a, competent herdsman,who makes it bis business to study and put into practice the most profitable methods of handling and feeding each individual eow un- der his charge. Feeding is done three times a day. • All feed is weigh- ed to each cow, and charged against her' at a fixed price, the prices are got by averaging the pricer; pre- vailing theoughout, the United Stales and • Canada • during the last five years. The cows are milked •three • times a day -at 5 ea m. 12.30 noon, a•nd 8 p. nt. All mai is weighed and accurate records kept, Front. each milking is taken samples for both the lactometer and Babcock tester. The' lactoreeter • readings are made each day, but the Babcock tester is only used 0110 a week, on the com- posite samples of twenty-one milk- ing% The amount of butter is es- timated on the basis of 35e fat. For the purpose of ease in hail& ling and economy. only, one 'day's milk is used each week, to find the actual amount of butter made by each herd; the total amount of butter meet basis of what is produced in the one *day. At preoeut the Guernseys are leading, with the Ayrshires second, -11irrthYri third. *VA lisistabuy fourth. The three leading Catiaditte herds are fast gaining on the Guernseys, and Canadians may look for these three herds to be loading at the close of the six months' tett, Llente•COL Evans. Lieut. -Col. T. D. B. Event, 0. B., Is a native of Ottawa, where he Was born Mar& 22,1860. Ile for sex- eral years Was in command of the CaValry School at Winnipeg, and was 'given command of the Yukon military contingent when it left Ot- tawa in March, 11308. He went to South Africitt a second in cominand of the Canadian Mounted Defies, af- terwards known as the Royal Can- sAtan Dragoons. • NEttvitinin A KING OF PAIN. Nerviline isa ocrnbination ot the most patent pain oaring imbetericee known to medical science. It repreeentet the latest dieeoveriee in the healing art - ao °omen - bated that One drop of Nerviline is °guano painontbduing power to five drops of any other. For neuraigia,rheurnatism,eramps, pain in the biteksits mitten la rapid and der- tain, Sere to onto. Your money ha* if you do not Audit so. thuggists sell it, • ... • Graveyard of the ocean to Be Made Green' With Trees. The • „trees recently' pleated on Sable Island onsisted of 81,600 • .in all, andfilled eighteen large cases. • These trees were selected by Dr. Saenders when in Europe 'last year, from a large tree nursery in Nor- mandy. Before making the selection. he visited 'tee sea shores of Brit- tany, and carefullY studied the re- sults of tree planting there, which 'wee'begun sixty years, ago me the drifting sands of the sea coast. The trees purehasecti for experimental test on Sable Island included a large number of thbse which bead succeed- ed so well in France, to Which .'were added a number .of other , 'sorts which from Comedian experience • were thought to be likely tie prove use- ful for this purpose. Of the ' pecimens chosen, 68,000 were I vergreees, cone • sistirig • of pines, spruces and juni- tiara and the remaining 13,000 -were made up of different hardy deciduous sort'.•• • As soon as the forest trees .• were unpacked and healed ;In, sites were . selected for •the planeing, teed this tvork was begun, One of the • . sites • chosen was apparently a pere. sand. partly • covered with • sand -binding gees% This Wasthetop of a promina ent cliff, where the trees would he • partly protected from the 'winds, and readily seen, from many differeet points, At this place Several thous- and -trees were planted. Three other eites .for tree planting were selected near the house of the superintendent, the plenting 'ofall of which was completed before Dr. Stanidere' party Jeff.. -A large garden belonging to the . central station was partly filled with over 2,000 specimens, among which are included a number of earietiee of small fruits sent from the Central Experimental Farm at Ottawa. • lifsapit-Ge oo rat Dartnell, H.C.18. MajoreGenpral Dartnell, who has received a K. 0, 13. for his services in South Africa, was born in Lon- don, Ont., 1838., • He is the edil of the late Dra Geo. Russell • Dartnell, Deputy Inseector-General of Army Hospitals and formerly surgeon of • the lst Royals. GenerarDartnell en- tered the army as ensign in the 86th Regiment in 1855 • and was sub- sequently Adjutant of the force, serv- ing with it in the Central India force. during the mutiny. lee ,was present .at the storm and capture of Chun - dame, and led the only successful at- tack on the fortress of Jhansi, sae severely wounded and mentioued in despatcheS, and received a brevet majority, Subsequently ho eerved in the Bhootan expedition as A. D. C. to Major-General 'ramble General Dartnell retired from the army in 1864, and in 1874 became Major commanding the Natal Volunteers and Mounted Police forces, a post - tion he has held ever since. In 1879 he led the left flanking force of Lord Calehnford's column from lean.' ahlvena. in the Zulu svar, and is men. tioned by neine in Mr. Rider Hag- gard's novel, •”The Witch's Head." n-11381e-heieeteeived the -decoration -- of a C. M. de General Dartnell has mast reeently been in cominand of a column operating in the 'astern Transvaal under General French, his services having • been ”loaned" to the Imperial authorities by the Na- tal GoVernMent. Teo Frog visitation. Early in the thirties there crime also a visitation of frogs in Canada,. The frogs earne down ,tvith showers, falling from, a clear aky. They de- scended in thburiands. Bet this was not all. The eontirtual raining, with the bilk:eh:4r run and 'decaying frogs gave `us West Xndia °Hulett% in this Province. The air was poisoned With decaying matter, and their pes- tilence stalked through the land. Almoit every hem° WWI visited by the cholera, and the victims Were membered by hundreds, . WARTS Alibi tibiSICIIITLY TWA iirtherfeetedieno one is clamoring for a felv more warts -make them fashion- able and a remedy to grow warts would quickly he made a Anemia Oilmen. Yes, atnienett Corn and Wart Extreetor re- move8 them, works qatoldy and without pain- any druggist will toll you more about this remedy, , . NIW8 MMES. The infant child of Arthur Reseutleal obfroOkte. tawa, was drowned near Pem- William Phillips, of Erin committed suicide by tying,a rope to a' beam and jumping ott a load ot bay. The infant daughter of O. Bovar, of Rictimond Hill, fell into a pad of hot water and was fatally scalded. Robbers dug a tunnel and stole $1340,000 worth of gold bullion from the Selby smelter at Vallejo, Cal. It is rumored that President Shaeleheeesee Of the C. P. R,, wilt be Knighted during the Royal visit, The women of Ottawa will present an otter cape in a hox of Canadian maple of Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Uornwall. The tfiergue Syndicate is negotiating for an extension of the Manitoulin & North Shore Railway throuvii Bruce and Huron counties to Kincardine. A -report from Port Arthur says three men were killed and seven in- jured by an explosion on the Canadian Northern construction, near Sturgeon Falls. JameeFlaherty knocked his brother - in 'law, William Blair, dowo with a etopeand then shot him dead., accord. ,Qinogiebtoec.adespatch leorn Morm's Flat, Wrn, Olasneur, of Janesville, was aerested, charged on the information of his wife with attempting • to burn their house, in which a family of young children were sleeping. An explosion occurred on the -C. l'• R. track.oear Smith's Falls under a passing enigma The eughte was dam- aged but no one was hurt. . It is thought to have been an attempt to wreck an express train. The -little son of Wm, Neaeof North- wood, Ont., on Sunday wandered over the te. le R. Railway and, after playing around for a whilesfell asleep near the track. Ile was struck by the cow -catcher of re alaftsingatrainaante was probably Teetedly hurt. Detectives, who were searching the woods near•Doachester for a supposed. lunatic, Archie Brown, male a curious discovery, They carne across a hut, situated In the heart of a swamp and inhetbited by twelve persons of both 'sexes. These people appeared to have no regular means of support and the officers view them with suspicion. Miss Mabel Donley, at lerniciOn, Ont.; etepped off the westbound train at Rat Portage, Tuesday, and was met at the platform by Mr .Arthur Symmons, a Winn`peg. They hurried to the ladies' waiting -room, where Rey. J. .H. 'Mor- gan, with witnesses, was wetting, and soon the couple were rnade man and wife. Mr and Mrs Symmons did not waste any tine over a wedding break- fast, but boarded the westbound train Inc their future berme in Winnipeg. . In the dairy tests thatarebeing car- ried on at the Pan-American,Canadien breed cattle are uniformly successful: The statements of last week's tests sent to the department ofagricultural show that in the competition of butter Canadian Jerseys led, ..bowing a profit for the week of $8.78 a head. Ayrshireswere third,'-' with a profit of 58.08. In the tests of the value of totals of eoltds. Holsteins were first with a profit ef 50.85.- The South African war has put a copsiclerable amount of Money into the hands of Canada's farmers. The ord• els so. far received mean an expendi- ture of about $1,803.000. During dee) the Department of Agriculture, which carries out all the War Office ordeFs.- shipped about 25,00 tons of hay to Sleuth Africa. Since the beginning of We present year 48,000 tons have been xpoited, and & further quantity of ahout 20,003 tons Will be exported dur- ing August; and September. This will make 93,000. or& 5100 REWARD, 1000. The readers of this paper will be pleased I earn that there is at limit one dreaded digitise that science had been able .to Cure in all he stager; and that is Catarrah. Hall's (Werth Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional . disease, repuires a constitutional treatment. Hall's 'Catarrh Cure irt taken internally, acting directly tipon the blood and mucous sur- faces of the system, thereby destro.ying the foundation of the diseases, and ming the patient strength by building ep the con- stitution and assisting nature in doing ite work. The proprietors haveaso- um& faith in ite curative powers, that they offer OneHandred Dollars for any case that it, fails to cure. Senator list of testimonials. Address, F. 3. °nem de Co., Toledo, o. sold by druggiete, 75o Hall's Faintly Pills are the beast, • • • You May .Need • For Cuts Burns - Bruises Cramps • Diarrhoea. - All Bowel Complairts riTisha43:8701 nilii13:00alinedipertAleIkNre-KmedIt LER. • I'muts DAM'. •• • • Tie° tzes, 260. and 60c, Strong Points ABOUT Bi 1. Its Purity. 2. Its Thousands ot Cures. 8. US Economy. le. a dose. 33.33.336 Regulates. the Stomach, Liver and &Web, unlocks the Sectetions, Piddle' the Blood and removes all the bripuritles from a common Pimple to the worst Sereitilbas Sore, end 0,11=31111111 DTSPIIPINA, BILIOUSNLISS,' CONSTIPATION, SALT ItIlIttIM, SCSOPULA, BOARTSURN, SOUR STOMACH, DIZZINIISS, DROPS?, RHEUMATISit, SKIN DISBASRS. August 1G th, 1901 Ceylon. and Indi NATURAL LE AF GREEN TEA Is Free from Any Particle of Coloring matter ; is Dainty Invigorating ; is the only tea that suits fastidious pllates au& is wholesome for the most delicate digestions. IT IS ALSO A BRITISH PRODUCT — Otel 010:y71108a:re sAticei 'au 1.11 k 1 itteolloliticilreaelVtgl; 6111. • reed. Free Samples s.ent. Address "tisk- ad a," • eoron tr. •WEJSU'131Ril•T P.A.I1Ri. LONDOX, Sept. 5th. to 14th, 1901 •• ENTRIFEI CLOSE SEPT. 4e11 A home exposition of genuine merit- New exhibits and leadingattractione-Looklutria performing Elephants -The Three Grieve and **Tom Tom, the baby elephant, and many other specialties of a high ilrder-Grand Fireworks Display, including repeeeentae tion of "Fall of China" and eTalung of Pekia" Special traine over all lines eaoh even- ing, after fireworks. For prize lists, programmes, eto ,apply to • et , LT. -COL. W. PC GARTBRORE, President • J. A, NELLES, Seoketary Good Biscuit • The Best amend and sway • the Be • No changes, no uncertainties, Every Biscuit light, moist, delioione. If you mutt this oertaint on Baking Day, use Hovey's, Raking Powder, 25c pelt lb Paris Green, best grade, 2cper lb. J. E. HOVEY, Dispensing Chemist, Clinton. 4, sioximuppususupe.u.y.x.wmumumo,,.“ort'rlrfraleilretint*****Arir******A44/ iven A tooth brush with every 25c 'bottle • of too.li powder,tooth soap or tootri wash we sell. Use Combe's Baking Powder and you will be. using the best obtainable 25e per pound. H. B. COMBE, •Clieniisi tt Druggist G D. McTaggart BAirs48 ALBERT ST, CLINTON 11 General. Banking Business • transacted. • • NOTES DISCOUNTED, Drafts iesuedInterest alllovved on deposits. • i Wholesale and; retail piano and organ distributing °metre. • • EH& grade new:pianos. Five used pianos at deoided bar- . gains. Buy the .wouderful Gramophone .• . for a pleasing entertainer. We are headquarters for.it. Bargains to teachers and stu- • deals In_ Sheet • Masio„.25o i 75e pieces for 10o-wholeeale.• Inetrnmente of,all kind e sold. MUSIC Emporium O. HOARE., fpu NTON IS •YOUR PAIR THIN? All hair was meant to be •firm, hea4 and abundant; • thin, loosened growths are unnatural, caused by a disease of the scalp, which eall only result in baldness. • In the white flakes found •' he clothes) combs, brushes, and. in the hair itself, "nature gives plain warning when the disease has gained a foothold Watch cs.e.4 vlowetry *tyro If you *ant upeo-date jewelry you oan always be sure of getting the very and meat correet thing here. Whatever you buy yoa can feel sure that ite all right. Or if you. have anything that needit to be altered, re- paired or reset, bring it to tie, ,Eyeq *examined free. THEMoLsONS BANK Incorporated by Aot of Parliament,1885 . CAPITAL 7.— $2,500,000 • REST.FUND' - $2;020,000 HEAD OFFICE, MONTREAL. • Wx, MOtliell MACPHERSON, President JAMES Beware, Gen. Manag Notes discounted, collection made,-*reirs issued, steeling And Amerioan et:lenge beught and sold. Interests allowed on. deposits. Same BANE -Interests allowed on sums of $1 and up. Money advanced to - lumen on their own note, with one or more endorsers, No mortgage required. ' H, 0, BREWER, Manager, Minton., J. P. TINDALL. • Dandruff Cure — by curing • the disease causes the dandruff to totally disappear, the hair to cease -falling, and pre- vents inevitable baldness. 'Price, $1.00 per bottle, at all druggists or by Mail. Accept no substitutes. A4 IL DIMMER CO., Limited Toronto, Caned& ' White fish are more plentiful in the Georgian Hay this year than they have been for 15 years, Edward Branecoinbe, the loading tenor of Weetroinster Abbey choir, has arranged to bring out to Canada a party often eifigers, of whom six are adults and three are boys, to give a series of concerts in the principal cities. of Canada. The party will leaye Eng- land on August. 15th, .0 IBANKElt, ' OLINToN, ONT,, Privite funde to loan , on mortgages air west current rates A General Banking Badmen traneeoted • Interest allowed on deposit'. Sale' notes bought A STEPLADDER GIVEN AWAY To every pile:thane id sine Ole. • otour 'Pare Cream Baking Powder we Will give, witheat any eitia charge, a stroag durable flyetfoot„Stepledder. Three 15e bars or Soap tor 2/$0• 35C Brown* go at 20a. O. OLSON'. Next door to Dr. Grinn'a privete hospital, Good Butter and gage 'wanted. Central btteiness Of F. EL Powell e ant pre. Having purobised the butchering • Meat Market pared to fatal& the people of Olin, sou with all kinds' of Fresh and Oared Meets. Sating°, bologna lard, butter and egg' always kept on hand. R. Fitzsimons it Sono Tlephorie 70. Orders delivered prompoy to Mt parts of thelbwri, • „ N.B.--Pereons bating: hogs for nipment Will oonfor k, toot 'hy slog word at the 'shop&