The Clinton New Era, 1902-04-04, Page 3•
ApsoLuTE 11
'werprewams
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
WW1! Dear Signature of.
e. A
ffee likeallualle Wrapper Below.
eat—eir.e•st
i�iak.asCA,
.--nurron hit.HEADACIfEs
tpno Fos siznoEssa
- F011.111LIOUSNEed
VED FOR TORPID unit'. •
1 Lr.FOOONSTIFATION:
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
.rolt INECOMPLE/tION
t
" ••&111,,d •
CURE 4ICE HEADACHE
entral
Meat Market
4
19F Haring parotased the butchering
business of F. H. Powell I am pre-
pared to furnish the people of Clin-
ton with all kinds of Fresh and
Cared Meats. Sausage, bologna
lard, butter and eggs always kept on
hand.
•-3 R . Fitzsimons tt Son.*
Telphone 76.
- Orders' deliyered
. to* ail
- Parts:of the town.
promptly
1 pset.B.-Yerscna having hogs for
shiment will oonfer a favor by
leavingl word at the shop.
. '
oesoempeoeseeseeee•e•e•e.
AFTER SHAVING,
XTRACT
COOLS, COMFORTS AND
HEALS THE SKIN, ENA-
BLING THE MOST TEN-
DER FACE TO ENJOY A
CLOSESHAVE WITHOUT •
UNPLEASANT RESULTS.
Avoid dangerous, meat
ing Witch Hazel preparatcons
represented to be "the same
as" Pond's Extract, which
easilysour and generally
Contain "wood alcohol," a
deadly poison.
41,1112MLT±Eettiz
J. P. TISDAI.L.
BANKER,
(MINION; QT.
Prieate inn& to loan: on mortgagee
best current ratee •
•
• A General Banking °mimes tranerctec
Tnterest allowed on deposite..
.Sale notes bought
G D. McTaggart
BANIKEit
ALBERT ST.,% ',CLINTON
A General Banking" Business
Mutable Beauty.
Pi XMAS ire nonnons beatetri
Nat i• there are in clothes end.
bills of taro,
Una Patrick Campbell is 'mid
to have sanexeill her audiencee
In the United Staten with her
extreme idtinnees. Never had the AM.
' dean attire peen such a sylph -like forin
or math long, thin arena Taro. °Wipe
• impressed me In a similar me.nner
When / ertve her in Lon 0
Aldine Bonner, The plaY warl "Bellies
and Me115g/14e," and. he wore a drees
O f stiff geld material that fell straight
from lier neck to her feet, and in Willett
She resembled nothing so mOqh. ati an
Ulnbrelle, in ite case. Frag11e/0\4ot the
Word. for her, Yet she is none Of 'those
ugly things that are Indifferently de.
Scribed as "octane or "bony," aim
is lithe as a willow wand, and, in oven
Ing dress, elteWs one of those ?idlest°,
White necks. •boneless and roomette
thous% it appears' not to have an eunce
ff t on it which are one of the great
beauties of Englighwornen. She Is one a.
of those ploturesque and Interesting
people that fat would oompletelY de-
stroy'. Now, with her eurvelesse bone -
lees figure, her cloudy, eeneitive, black
hair that comes nearly to her knees,
her email, thin face, ,lit by A pair of
midnight eyes, ;the is altogether thrili.
Ing and harmonious.
I Her type of beauty Is particularly 4111.
NERVOUSNESS.
imve n
MelaaOholy deepondeneY (mama by weak uitheitithy nerves, ere re/pelmet!, for inerel
eleknese end sugaring than ilia other dm%
ies
It you • menet draifrom early abuse, later excesses or exposure, the results are
the same. YOU cannot expeot !looney nerves while your vitality Is being wasted. Do not
k t
e 05 111000UU of your youthful folliex, you are not sate Rohl
cured- nature never excuses -no matter how young, old or innocent one may have been.
'
It you are tired In the morning, drowsy and sieep3r, feel as If you are overworked, pale In
the peek, deposit. In urine, Irritable and essay excited, no ambition, memory poor, hag-
gard expression, or other signeor weakness, can one roe me, as I guarantee MY hottest .
Method Treatment 4 Poeltive cure for these conditions, and you Par when toured. Read
tide Worn testimonlin, none used without permiggion. 05.000.00 rpr any T cannot show.
State or Michigan, County of Wayne as.
J. Beres betas duly sworn deposes an says, that some time age he watt treat.
ed by—for Nightly Emissiene, Seminal.Losses and Sexual Weakness and was
pronouneed ourea in 1893 -that he noticed a reourrence and on May 10, Mahe
Oonsuite Dr, Goldberg for the above troubleg, and Immediately commenced
treatment, he improved steadily and was tiecharged absolutely cured. Aug. 1, 1898
Subscribed and sworn to benne me the tith day or Aug. IPA J. HARRIS.
JOHN W. PDX, Notary Pubuo, Wayne Co., Miele
The Latest Method Treatment Cures
Varl000ele and Soicture, without gutting, stretching or loss of time; also Chronic,
Private, Nervous, ImPoteno_y, BMW, Liver, Bladder, Stomach, Female andheotal Troubles.
OONSUI.TATION PRIM. siyou cannot call write for blank forhomatreatment. Perfect
. systern or home treatmentforthose whooannot eau. BOOK FREE. Medicines for Canadian
patients shipped from Windsor; ail duty and transportation charges prepaid-everyhting,
confidential; no names on envelopes or packages; nothing sent Q. 0. D.
•DR. GOLDBERG 208 WOODWARD AVE.,
• Oor. Wlioox Streets -
The Oriiinal Mr, Squeers.
HE thoughtlessness of •writers in W omens
.
caricm,.. people for gre- .
tesque purposee in their novels A a
has been the cause of much ane
noyanee and suffering to sen-
sitive persons. Both 4:tierce:xis and
• teresting, as it is a good example of the Tlzaokeray sinned in this respect
through their perfectly evident por
traiture of persons whet could easily b
identiffed.
A writei In the "Literary Era," afte
citing the offences of ThackeraY, Dia
raell and °there, bringe up the notabi
case of ,the schoolmaster in "Nichola
• Niekleby," and says:
• The grossest Injury which Dieicens.
• ever inflicted on a fellow -being was his
too accurate portrait of an innooent
man in bis Squeers. That Yorkshire
schoohnaoters-were, aa- a rule, -cruel
• and wicked enough, it le true, But the
Particular -schoolmaster, who was re-
cognized and who recognizedhimself
as the original Squeers, seems to Ave
been an exception to the rule,
It will be remembered that Dickens
and his Illustrator traveled together to
the north of England for the purpose
of collecting material for "NicklebY,"
and especially for the Dotheboys epi-
sode. At Great Bridge they visited a
boarding -school known as Bowe a Aca-
demy The master, Williaan Shaw, re-
ceived the strangers with eome
hali-
teu-r, and did .not as much as Witt;
draw his eyes from the operation of
pen -making during the interview.
"Phiz" iiketelied him •• in the act
Boz" described the act; The personal The Revolution in English
peculiarities of William Shaw were re- , _
cognized in Squeer,s. Shaw became a Character,
butt of poptriar ridicule, lost 'his pupils, "-"-"""
type now in vogue in England. There
'was a time -vvilien Mrs. Langtry ' was
' the perfect British beauty, Then the
' ideal was broad -shouldered,
arnafl-
watsted, bright -haired, lAue-eyed. The
jersey Lily was as famous for her ootn-
1 plosion of lilies and roses as for. her
shoulders, that caked
of ivory, and -from which her throat
rose, proud and .round as a Greele ool-
man. All the World recognized her as
thatypiceAly handsome Engitieliworpan,
the flawless exaniple-ef 0.-tlass -that
had long been famous in many court -
tries for many generations, and that
seemed to Balza° so peerless that the
Phrase, "beautiful as an Englishwo-
man:* was the highest ertoomium he
had to give. This type, during the
Le.ngtry, regime, oyes' .eonstantly 're-
peated. AI good-looking English erre
, bore a sort of family resemblanceto
one another.' professional, beau-
ties were curiously alike -large, proud,
calm -eyed .creatures, smooth, reposeful,
•pink -and -White. •
But the Langtry type. has ceased.' to
exist as Car as fashionable Lendon is
• eoncerned. It is now tne era of the
long, lean 'woman, 'with a prodigious
Length of- limb, amass Of loosely -relied
hair, and a Rossetti throat, moving
listlessly in pale, Unbelted draperies.
How such a 'change • ur appearanee
'could lie effected is miraculous. Where
are the broad shoulders, the splendid'
neck, the muscular, aohly-molded - fig*
Urea of. ten years back? Women can
change the cutaif their .clothes at
but how can they change the cut of
'their anatomies? . And yet, they 'have .
done just this. thing. •Their •shoinders.
have beoome 'narrow and ,slightly slop-
ing, their' throats more slender,. their
elongated :to an extent that • suggests :
that bed, Upon which the, robber, Pro- i••
crustee, IMO to stretch hisvicalms tin- •
til their toes touched the foot -board. •
•'philosophical.observers say that the
change is due to thilniltepte of Burne -
Jones, Roseetti, and DulMaurier. Each-,
of these artiste created a type' ;which,
the nation eventually accepted as beau- 11
tiful,. and upert which 'all the women of ,
the nation modeled themselves. It 'was
some time- before the peciple.were edue •
tided .1 the *cult of the '"long
therehead, the . deep . hair and ,
, the :c jaw. But in the end it QQ11.-
'gm :in, and began to impress tee;
self .on the national face and form. I
was 'reading a novelthe other day 'in
which ,the extreme • thinness of the we -
men of fashion, in ,.London was re- ,
marked. • "They keep.so by will power,".'
a young, man replied. Arid this really
seeinrto be the -splutter of the problem.'
Will Power not only keeps them thin,
but has changed their tinny structures, .
hips smaller, and their arms and legs
Iments.
Women are COM&
ing to understand
that the Backaches,
Headaches, Tired,
Peelings and weak
Spells • from which
they suffer are •due
to wrong • action oI
the.kidnis.
DOA Pei
• Kidney Pills
are the most reliable remearfor any form
, of kidney complaint. They drive away
pains and aches, make women healthy and
happy --able to enjoy life to the fullest •
Mrs. O. H. Gillespie, 204 Britain Street,
Si. John, N.B., says:
"I had severe kidney trouble for which
I doctored with a number of the best
physicians) in St. John, but received little
relief. Hearing of, Doan's Kidney Pills, I -
began their use. Before taking them I
could not stoop to tie m51 shoed, and at
times suffered such torture that I amid not
turn Over in bed withe
utussistance. Doan'?
Eitimay Pills have rescued MO from this
terrible condition, and removed every pain
pd ache,"
and finally died ef broken heart. Yet T is: the 'opinion, of Mr: Bernard •
Shaw, •
there is abundant evidence to prove
as expressed uurw-
terisEa preface ,to a. late ,Volume
• • of his plays, . that the nature of
the English people has, within the yard
ten s znyeoadrgic:uaritidoenrrne. certEhcitabaiinnt;o_rislphiecau.-.
that he was a really 'excellent and
itind-hearted man,. who was made to
suffer for the misdeeds of .his neigh,*
r•
Three Operations. Failed
to Cure Itching Plies.
News Of ` a marvellous 'Cure Pile'
• Across the Coatinent-4eather and
Son Unite in Priabling Dr. CianneNs
Ointment.
Some cures effected by Dr. Chase's
fOintment seem like mirb.eles. Here is
a case where zioetors labored in vain
and operations failed to cure.
Mr. Donald McLeod, Tarbotvale; U.
s•. writes :-
" I • received the . 'salable box -of
Dr. Chase's Ointment. and it has done
the a considerable amount of 'good. I
am now enclosing payment fora large
burr of Dr.' Chase's Ointment which
You will please send, to my a,cidress.
-1 •have had itching pilee for four
years and did not knew of any medi-
cine that would relieve me Until last
tall, when I reeelved a letter from my
gen in Winnipeg, who maid that three
lactsra bunted him and operated for
Plies, but failed to cure him. He now
thanks God and Dr.• Chase's' Oint-
ment for a perfect Mire. He had piles
the shape •Of their heads, .the character -
of their -hair„.aptl. the length of their;
limbs. . •• • • •• ••• ' ' ' .
' • Burne -Jones and bu'Maurier arena- ; , spike returning. Yea are at liberty to
doithtedly responsible. for the:vogue ,of . use this letter Tor th--abenefit of ethers."..'
There Is littliu,se tying to cure piles
:
.thitielanguid...and...ligeoraia .aylph„ „ILI lieleSS-1-.Yeti" "" Itee.:' -Dr.,'-Cha'ae'tiT'011if-' -
'wee.' 'Odcar. Wilde - who . Oratessed . to . moot. It is certain' " to -afford' 'quick. ,
,hav,e made the dispeirery that; .instead ' relief rid lti t ry" ti 4 •
. n 0 etre ebox, . at an dealero' or ,
. In the worst form, nd suffered terriblY.;
-He. is noW working • hard every daY,
end does not • feel any 'symptoms ..of.
NOTES DISCOUNTED
o Notes ,issued. Interest allowed on
•deposits. .
THE MOLSONS RINK
Incorporated by Act Parliament _1855.
CAPITAL , $2,500,003 •
RESTATED . $2, 150,000-
HEAD OFFICE, MONTREAL
•Wm. MoLsoe MacrneasoN, ;Presiden
JAMIts Emma, Gen. Manager.
:Notes dieconnted,collectione made; Isatfte
leaned, sterling and American exchange
bought and sold. Intermit allowed on
deposits Same Bens -Interest allowed
• on genie of $1 and up. Money advanced to
farmers on their own notes, with One or
aura endorsers, No mortgage regaired.
'"°' 111.0, Brewer, Manager.
Clinton.
4. SIT TOUCHES Tie SPOT
.•
*MD'S
SYSTEURENOVATOR
0 P
Weak and Impure Blood,
elver & Kidney Diseases,
Tamale Complaints Etc.
All Druggists, or write d tot
MeLE015,
a • u ma e thor ugh cure.
Edinan-
• eon Bates '8s Co., Toronto.
.
•of -Art imitating Nature, Nature init-
iates ' Art. Ohe of the proofs of hie
theorifeatathe way the girls Of :Eng-
land -Were growing like- the girls- 'of
Burne4ones, who had really • more or
Jess invented a. new. type Of -beauty,
Never until Burne4onea painted "The
Golden Stairs" 'arid. "Venus's Mirror,"
did one see in 'England those pale,
dreamy faces, with the thick, cloudy
hair growing low on thlTaTv-arrrow,
the innocent gray eyes, set very far
• apart, the 'square, slightlY prominent
jaw, the long heck; upon 'which the
head drooped lapguldly. Nature had"
assimilated a new idea, and was :repro-
ducing it.
I -Tow can there be any question that
fashiens, ,in beauty alter feature and
figure? !The ideal of .the eerily Vibter-
ian era is as extinct as the dodo." Those
howls, whose faces adorned the TJ-Coka
of Beauty our grandmothers delighted
in, are gone into the limbo of the un-
known , with their tiny, Cupid's -ho*
mouths, their Wide -opened, 'blee ayes,
their drooping, eilky ringlets, and their
charripagne,bottle Shoulders. They
were the ideal Of their day -the ideal
Buiwer had before his mental vigion
when he wrote "MY Novel" and "The
Caxtons;"' that ,Thackeray :saw 'when
he. created Rosie Mackengie and Ame.'
iia; that Dickens tried to make ue une
derstand and love In Agnes Wieldield
and Bella Wiffei% They look to Me now
"insipid as the queen upon a card,"
Anecdotal.
•I • : f. • '
In an -after-dinner speech at the Lon.
. don Savage Club recently on theAsurity
. • of the English tongue, Winston Cahtireh-
_All remarked': "P. have written five •
• . books, the same nurnuer iiti Moses -but
i will not preers the oomparieon."' ,
Charles IL once granted an audience
.., to the courtly Quaker, William Penn,
'who, as was his' ozzetom, entered the
- royal presence with his hat on. The MI- .
• morons sovereign quietly laid aside his
oven Which oceagioned Penn's enquiry
• "Friend Charlie, Why dosttliihronietra"
thy hat?" "It is the custom" he re-
plied, "In this place -foe one person only
• deed If 'True. • ,
'To you know Why our Chinese Woe
Men have email feet?' asked Charlie
York. ."It is so that they will stay at
home. -We don't like our wives vs gad
about the streets, We don't dike etrange
men to !dare at them. For though
these men may say nothing unpleasant,
yet they are apt to look our wOmen
deep in the eye% told a China:VA holde
that In an interdhange of stich looka
there gemething.liarrattli 'Ilhere-
forethe tiny, Maltried feet. which Will
not admit •01 walking withotit fatigue
and pain. At flest, thousands of years
ego, women knew why their feet Were
mainted and they were angry. Then
they forgot the reatgon of the qustont
and they regarded it aft a fashion they,
had themselves created, So they look
upon It nOtv, arid the smeller their feet
the prouder they are. We, their hug.
bands, chuckle and say nothings For
We are wirier than you European and
(Medal, ,Axnerican Melt!!
No lInd In Ours.
„
Wells,. Richardson de Oo's "Improved
But et Color" is the only absolutely pare
batter color in the world.- There lend . e,
trace of mud Or other offensive impuritiee
in it. The last drop IR Maker as the first.
it is the only color need by the world's best
battermakers. Once you used a common
color, your reputatieramtattermaker is
lowered. Th01)0141,8 Sold by all Suit ohm
&Alga
il.1.10•1•14
a
Men and WOMen rePretient fls
• appointingazente
$18) 00 lt Week some ttotrat
Bona Fide Salarsz,fauraglaPfO
crease of salary, ideal employmeht, neteibria
liant I Mee, hestplansi, ohl established house,
aga,0LB Y-GaltitETSON CO., Ltd, Brantford,
...eel a.
to remain dovered."
. .
• Eben Jones, the crabbed Millionaire
lumberman -of Minnesota, hired all his .
mill -hands himself. One day a Swede I
applied to the -irritable old man, and
'Weetired a place on the saw. As he
was leaving said: "Mester. Tones, in
dees yob you gee me doaller and Italief
a day., Besides dat, do you eat me or
do I eat myselef?" "Oh, eat raufselft"
• replied the old man. • "I have dyspepe
Mar, Boo setett igetttek eaytnen.
• Lit, went into an oyster saloon in the
• Skutt End of London one day and or-
dered a dozen natives, *when another
Men entered and gave a shnilar order,
enquiring anxiously of the proprietor if ,t
the oysteee Were fresh. "Fresh!" echoed 0
tie bivalve Merchant, "Pretrial Why"
• .--ledicating Mr. May with a wave of 0
his hand -"the ,rat oyster that gentle- c
Man took up Mt hie lint" •
• •tricality"--is his "own d fer
Shaw believes tO' have been. steadily'
• inionnting 'in force among the Eriglish,
umally solid and stolid; .and this -ha
aseribee to the proaoUnced romantleisin
• of taste developed among themlay th
• literature, the bOoks and' playa, Qf tla
past • five Yea*. a taste which. ha
minded thern to :lose their trim sense o
Lhe realities, .with all; the steadying ef-
teeth thereof. . , • •
. It _will- not he disputed. thet the spe-
" eta! style ;of literature id vogue ' diming
• a' period leaves its impress upon it,
nOr win it be gstilisaid that the de-
mands and tastes Of the 'period in turn
-determine •the essential -nature of itta
literary'. suPply.:We are hearing it :Mid
on a.11 sides new that popular edueatiOn
account§ for the love of the •novel Of
aclyentute. Popular. educatipn creates
an ealarged reading piiblie, bat •one
• Vybich does' net wish to have the Mali-
ties of life laid before it; in-
deed; in. many eases, reeds, or gbes to
the play, ju§t ter escape reality: %If one
accept : this, explanation of . certain
Present phenomepa it is pnly going. a
step farther to find• in all 'democrat',
cally organized, popularlY edUcated so-
cieties an inherent -Menhaden toward
rornanticisni. .As • no. countries have'
itarberl.,.the...intidern .eXperimeat. se. fat
es the. EInglish-sPeaking et:entries; w;
'ought not to be surprised tO . see
strcing "bent toteard the rombitic attt
tude showing itself, in many directions
in en English .01. ,Arrierican public; tie.
romantic eatitude -here meaning am.
attitude: betraying absence Of a rut'
pereeption of trie realities, or clisha
•
clination tolocik at them. •
- Out af•Sli this waseem to dressy thret
Prepositions: that 'democracy., appeav
to zolpppee -a certain sort of popplaa_
educatioa, Mat' without tha.t educatim.
there:would ,be, no .derneeracy, and Yet
that that education is caleulatedto de, •
stroy the; dense of the realities. Noa
hoty,•is thiari The very Plea made fo:
the education which, more arid more
Is prevailing 'agaiest. the classical edu-
cation; is just this -that it •-cultive,tes,
tritYltu'a iientp Obit 'OP real- things. it
IS "practleal" education for that pre- .
else reason,: say its advocates.' Whr.
then; dekathe writer of "The Point of
View" in,"Seribner's -Magazine," should
this same generation manifest so much
iking for.the romantic, fiction, the 'no
mantle:plays, which .are a means of
getting aWaY froth the real Condition§
of existence? . . proceeds to answer
tins questioq.as follo,we: "It may very:
Prebahly be that this Iiking:Is a Mete
of the moment,. without ulterior &in-;
?mations ,or deeper significances. • And,
ndeed. it seems to have been toe Much
everlooked by some writers who, have
no have for the novel of adyenturea:.
that it is by no means the fftst time in,
the world that romance: has bean in
high. fayor. It is none the lese trite
hat this subject doea suggest another
• far greater Moment, which is the
miestion What the "popular" education
Ught. to be, and Whether the' deino-
re,tiO Mate of tnoderh man really
needs exactly that , form of it -Which) is
now so insisted upon as essential to its
Maintenanee and well-being. To per-
eiVe the realities in the high sense, '
and in that Igense be Willing to abide
by them, is never, At any•thne, therpere
ioh of More than the fele. But general
dinette% goes ferward, very -Properly. -
n the Resumption- that all may be
Made in Moine degree tO know the life
Which they belong, tie realize it Hee
alizatiOn tomes, hoWetrer, only hi part
hrough the developinent of Practical
61016110y. It comes &Ise through •the
Unfolding of the aPirittial nature, the
grOwth of morel Vision, the dreathe of
he imagination,-th none Of Which Is
the tlasslear tducation"a ittranger,"
•
•
'
•
•
A Pretty Broad Blot.
••••••••Per vale
AX anecdote Is told. of One of the
smaller SoUt11 Arnericart republice
* Which illustrates the niethode
which are adopted 'when it Comes to a
question 01 malting war. The "navy"
of the particular power referred to con -
elate of a single, old-fashioned. .side -
wheel steamer, arnabd with QUO gun. 111
time of peace She is engaged in hauling'
freight up and down the river which
runs close to the capital. At the out-
break of one of the periodlealawars, not
fo very long ago, the President of the
republic took charge of the steamier
and started up stream. on a recruiting
expedition, leaving his senior general
In charge of the 'military preparations at
the capital. A couple of days later the
steamer returned, and some seventy
miserable -looking natives, eaoh firmly
bound with a strong rope, were
marched off and turned over to the
general, With a note from the Presi-
eent, which read: "Dear General -I
send you herewith seventy volunteers.
Please return the ropes at onoe."
Anecslotal.
On one occasion Governor "Dick"
Oglesby of Illinois went down to Joliet
to inspect the S e prieon, and in one
of the cells he fosta4 a very ugly man.
How , dtd You get in here?" asked
Oglesby,, "Abduelthen," was the reply;
tried to run off with a girl, and they
cancht me," "I'll pardon you as sons
as I get back to Springfield," said the
governor; "I don't see how you could
• expect to get a wife in any other way,"
When be was plain Professor Thomp-
son, Lord. Xelyin invented the entrrerr
galvanometer and siphon recorder,
-which made submarine telegraphy
tonnmereially praoterable. It is re-
lated that one day when he was en-
gaged on his deep-sea soundings work,
he was diecovered by a Visitor expert -
meriting with a long coil. of wire.
"What is that for?" enquired the visi-
tor, pointing to the :wire. "Maidng
sounds," replied the professor. "Ah,"
said the guest, jocularly, "what kind
of note does it give off?" "The deep
C ' of course oame the answer, -like a
shot :accompanied bf the well-knowa
twinkiS 40 the professor's eye.
Not ,many years ago Mere was a vet.
eran teacher in an Ontario high school
• Who often ;made his classes wince un-
der the lash or his bitter sarcasm and
ready; Wit. One day a little halt -
starved yellow our strayed into the
aohoi and the boys thought they saw
a chance to expreee their feelings to,
Ward "Fasey " WhO wai temporarily
absent front the room. •ThiMghterrea
MO/Mere' was picked up, fitted , With a
Oak 0 SPectaeles and tied yelping on
the teaeher's chair. "Fumy" entered •
the room, walked'to the desk, dalinlY
' 8 --,Ntext a
ir
PAGE METAL GATES zeLolorja
to use wooden ones. Light, azid yet strobe -eiriatia'sa
porta aeers mute on the end wane he swinge annual
13trole without causine_thera to ,sag. They are need
AIPPW*U04, will bud • lifetime. Will At/teal; nor get
'truer are MVP/led with latches which allow them to Imo
ed either war and areself acting. The only good metal
that is low enough in price for general farm ptupesee We also make Farm awl,
Fence. Poultry Netting, Nails and Stapler'. Thai's°. Wire Fence Coetimited, WalIc,tIlI, Sat.
ew Sprint, Goods
Dress Goods
Prints . e •
M4811n s
Gingbatus
Laces and 'Embroideries
of all kids
• R. Coa.ts az Son
ruRNITuRE
BROADFOOT,. BOX & 06.
The client, inorease in our trade is good pr oif of the faot that oar goods are right alai
our prioes lower than those of other dealers in the trade.
. We. manafaoture furniture on a large scale and 09,11 afferd to Bell ;sheep.' If yea bar
•
•
•
from us; we save for you the profit, which, in other oases, hat to be added 111 .
the retail dealer. •
. Thie week we have passed into stook some of bur new dengue. Spam will not perm*
, up to quote prices, but come end me for yourself what maps we have to offer,
•
m
Reember-we are determined that our prioes shal.lbeyothuenedar:teidniythet th:4beesft r.unero
' UNDERTAKING.
In this department Mg etook le oilm- let°,a •
in the taitnity. Our mesa Etre as eacati the lowest. i
• B.ROA.DFOOT, 130X & 00 J.
. W. Chidley .
Manager
then. turning to them said pleasa.ntly:
surveyed the work of his pupils, and -
Direotorlarneeilitendoefil' 9'3118 att"ded bYla:111121 at a'. W.
cP214117?°' (Pau"!
•
"In•iny absence, I see.yOu have WO a •
business- meeting and eleeted one of
your number obairman.'.'
First...class Wa•gons:
and; Buggies
I am handling the celebrated heoLaughlin make cif buggies and other makee
Of first-olase Ontario firms. Also of my own manufacture 'minding top hag-
gled, mikadoes, eta. of all the latest and inoclern7istyles. Repairing of kinds
promptly attended to. • -
JOHN LESLIE, Huron Street. Olin.tott
. .
Thies ems eine all diseases. and db.
orders arising from vveak heart, Wont out.
torsos or notary bleodp 'inch as Palpita.
Von Skip BeMs, Threbbing, -Smothering,
Digit:testi, Wolter Plabit SPene*Anaernia •
lgereoneuess„ leepiessness, rain Fag:
Gineral Debility Lack of Vitality. •
They are a hos heart tonle,. nerve fried
lad blood Selefeher, building, up end
,ranevilur in the .out and wp.steci.
'lingua If ;reattoring lierfedi
'health; Price 60o. *be; fot tibleiks •
in all drnggists. ' •
uggieS ,Wagonsi
Do jron want high grade illuggits or Wagons?
We have the; finest stock to select from. All tnelatest styles in -the new-
est colors. ficr prices are as low as Cab be found for •first.class material
and workmanship.. Before you buy call and see us. .
Geo.. .LaVIEI, Isaac Street,- Clinton,,
.• . .
Lord Coleridge, Ciller justice of Eng.
• tend,' Was driving:toward.hii conk on• :
mornin,g ire his broUghain„ When an OX.
cadent • happened .te it Gresvenot
Square. Fearing •h'e wou-rd be belated,
he sialled a 'cab' from the street rank,
and bade the Jehu drive -hint ad eapld-
ty se •poisible; to the courts of •justioe.
w ere e. • ey '''-"WITET1
London cabby, and don't knew' Where
the law courts are at old Temple Bar'?"
"Ohi the law courts, is It? But you
7 -said court:4 of justice."
"John," said, a Scotch minister to one.
• of his .congregationr"I• hope you hold
family ' worship regulerlY."
exit -John, "Ite the time :o' year ot."
"But what do you raean„ John?" "Ye -
ken, sir; we cazina. see dit the 'winter' . .
aichts." "But . John; can't you buy ,
oandles?" "Weel, I Ooold," ffeptied Jet* -
"but in that "case I'm fearint. the cost ..
would owergang the profit:" .
Lord Kelvin ones paid 'a visit e....
friend to . some well-known electrical
works, They • were - escorted .oyer the
Workshops by the -'s,malor foreman, a
min of- mech inteingence -arid an en-
thusiastic , electrician, '• Entirele unit -
Ware cif his visitor's Identity, he rale-
u$ely ,explainedathe detalle of the plant •'
and maeldnery;and lectured him in his*
role of • layman quite • proiessitieally.
Lord Melvin's friend was on the point •
of interrupting several times, but an
,atnused signal fram the great .maister
of electricity kept him silent. When
the tour of inspectioh Was complete,
•Lord ICelvin quietly turnedto the fore-
man and asked: •"What, then, is, elec-
tricity?" This was a poser for. the,
man, who, somewhat shaniefated, con-
fessed that he could not say. "Well, .
• well," said Lord kelvin gently, molted is
the only thing albeut eleotricity *Mob
Yoli and I don't khow." „
rzyxr 099a TO NSW Ea & OPVICH • ""a
An. Irishman Who was ethartTed Oilth
Stealing a watch from a fellow-eitizen,
etoutlY denied: the impeachment in c
. court, and brotight a counter szocutta-
•.tiou 'against hie accuser for assanit arid
!battery commttted with a frying -pan. t
"Why did you allow the prosecutor, e
:who ie O. timelier Man than yourself, to h
assault you withotift resistance?" asked
' the judge; "had. you notching itt your t
• hand to defend .37111rself with?" *Tee
dad, yOUr honot, staid at, "I had his t
• watch, but What Wats that against a e
fryhig-pail?" .
The "Scotsman" tells of• a Dublin ,
, Man who insisted that a Scotch friend
phould Stay at his how* instead of a '
'betel, and kept him there tor a month,
playing the- hoot in detail, even to . ,
treating hint to all places of amuse -
Mont, paying all -the tab fares and the
Vat, When the Visitoe was returning"
to Dunedin, the Iriehniart save hixnt
detWil to the steamer, and they went to,'
. other to (have a last cigar, "Now.,,,
look here," said the man trent Duriedid,
vu has nee mair 0' this, Here ye've
been keepin' me et your hoose or a
on, and on May 16, 1901, was 91,82010.,
The interest allowed 40 grating:11X;
Loon reduced from 7 to 4 tor cont. Al
Month; an' payin, or a' the mange,-
tillentae and Oahe arid no on -4 tefl yait
I'll Stan' neat ttunr fr it! We'll just has
tOSs for this °heel..
• TO 'glint that overcoineth" shall go
the profits naturally belonging to hirli*
Who neglects and fails.
* poor family in Poston overlooked
it credit of $40 in a sayings bank in
3.880, and the matter was forgotten Un-
til UV, When the accumulated amount
was s482.131. It VMS allowed to remain
AS 'EXPERIENCED DRUGGIEllb.
WE GUARANTEE A.00IIItACY
AND PERFECT SATISFACTION
In %hie ago of worry, hustle and bud.
neett oorapetition, Arid oars: and ettentiOti
lathe filling Of yoar dootorga preserip.
lone is absolutely necessary for the safety
and welfare of your family. We guar-
antee abottraoy and perfect Satisfaction to
all. our customers. Oar tenet depart.;
went is always replete with the lateet
preparations and neveltiela
Painini CELERY COMMONO,
gas eared thousands when everything else
has failed, It has tuner *failed to give
eiek people happy results. It has never
failed to giy• wok people happy results, •
Ltm es roe nte6471tenin;giareasteThe live -cent packet is enough for sot
>ie food for The nerves -it nia°kets oiok
e 'N.i
peOpie well. W 0611 supplordinary y yea with nary occasion. The family bottle:jai:tit
the pure and; genuitieLpaine's Celery
dents, contains a supply for a year. .
a D 00MBPI, Drumlin, Clinton, Ott,
*dimpoieumbiwig., mot
a
V'
' 44-
T I had nervous indigestion and a general derange-
ment of the entire system. It had been a con-
tinual torture for 12- years, My blood' became
very poor and at times my toe and finger nails
would be diseased. After eating I would sit in
a chair:and put my feet. on something to keep
them from swelling, and at times would take
off my shoes for the miseryT had. Whenever I
• experience anything to remind me of past aches
cannot be too elated to tell what Itipans
Tabules have done for me. I still cake one now
and then, because I know how. bad I have been.
They were just what 1 needed.
AT Ditlf6GISTS
4
l)
deer,*
1