The Clinton New Era, 1905-05-05, Page 3May 5th 1905.
55.515.45555.115.5.5WWW,
er§Pi
Ayer's Pills. Ayer's Pills:
Ayer's Pills. ICeeP 411Yin2
this over and- over again.
The best laxative. tot &Nat
Want your moustache or beard
a beautiful brown or rich black? Use4I Q. Q7UUT
BUCKINGHAM'S _DYE
esti astimogo.o.........zt
liimmanummmam!maliimmuippplo.
•
County Clippings
•
Henry Dumaet farmarlystethe Zur-
Mb tannerydied in Berlin last week, I
aged 08. years.
Mr. William Fritz, of Zurich, has
assumed the management of the Wen-
ner House, Grind Bend.
The annual shooting math of the
Huron rifle league will be held on the
Blyth ranges on Victoria day, May 24.
Mr. J. Preteer. Zurich, recently sold
his trotting stallion, t� Mr. Mallough,
,of G derich, for which he received a I
fancy figure.
Charles Washington. Goderich, has •I
sold his dray team to Albert Mitchell,
of Benrniller, who fiurposes geipg. west
in a few months. •
W, McCloy, Hensall, has receivedan
under-the;----Gravie-,-Lasads7
Department as Inspector over 4 town-
ships in New Ontario.
H. Cook contemplates moving the
Bronthron residence at Rodgerville to
Hensall, placing it on a lot and fitting
it up for a first-class dwelIir.. .
Mrs. S. E. Mulhollapd, Of Gra,ndin,
North Dakota, died on April 22nd.
Deceased was a daughter of Mr. end
Mrs. Wm. Netterfield, Wingham, and
was well known in this vicinity.
Toe Case, who has been ill.for some
time with tonsolitis, but hadsufficient-
ly recovered. to go around has been at-
tacked b inflamatoryrheumatisin and
is so ill that Mrs. W. Moir left for Tor-
ontcson Friday last.
A couple of weeks ago John Mooney,
of Morris, slipped on the top stair in
bis bsrn and fell to.the floor beneath,
breaking a couple of ribs and bruising
his shoulder. He was unconscious for
a time, but' is now able to be about. ,
The home of Mr. and Mrs Casper
Roehrig. 14th con, Hay, was the scene
of a happy event on Wednesday. after-
noon when their daughter, 'Miss Kate,
was united in the holy bonds of matri-
mony by Rev. E. Shuelke to Mr. Sam
Baker, a prosperous young' farmer of
near Dashwood.
The jury in the assize court, Toronto,
brought in a verdict of $303 for John
B. Grant in an action against the Wal -
key Bros., of Fordveich, for $2,C30.
Grant was operating a saw in defend-
ants' factory ;Oren the guard broke.
His hand struck the saw, and one of
the bones in his little finger was injured
' John B. Geiger died in Dakota last
week, aged 77 years. The deceased
was a resident of .fitty township many
years ago, living on the Bronson hue
two miles from Zurich. For four years
he was deputy -reeve of. the township,
and he was reeve for one year, being
popular and very highly- respected.
He moved to Dakota about seventeen
years ago.
On Tuesday, even i ug last •as some boys
were fishing for suckers in the river
west of Dungannon one of them spear-
ed in ten feet of water a large fish that
required the strength of two good men
to land. When brought to the village
he tipped the scales at 135 lb. He is
supposed to have come down the river
from the Kinloss lakes making his way
towards lake Huron, where he would
have more room to finish his growth.
This fish can still be seen by calling on
Dan McNevin or, Dick Sands.
On Good Friday Samuel Morris, of
the 10th:concession, Colborne, attained
the age of ninety years, and a number
of his relatives and friends in Colborne
observed the occasion by calling and
spending the afternoon with him. Mr.
ortie is -among -the early -pioneers -of_.
Colborne. He came to Canada in the
year 1831 and after living a few years
at Hamilton came to Canada and settled
on the place on which he has lived ever.
since. .Both the old gentleman and
his wife are enjoying a hearty old age
and bid fair to complete several years
yet of this life.
tal 3Ft.
Bears the The Kind You Have Always Boug!,I
Signature
of •&4e.e.
The Hamilton Powder Company's•
mixing mill and wheel building at
Windsor Mills were wrecked by a ter-
rific explosion of powder.
The Mayor of Guelph has been sere
ed with an interim injunctionrestrainin-
the Council from passing the glue fac-
tory site by-law to a tnird reading. '
The Council will oppose the injunc-
tion.
A traveller returned from japan re-
ports that Christianity is making
rapid strides there. . It is now the dis-
position to encourage it, as symboliz-
ing the progress and enlightenment of
western nations, whose methods the
Japanese imitate in every way. It is
estimated that the Christians in the
country now number 150,000.
ABSOLUTE "
• SECURITY
Cenuine
Cart r's
Little Liver Pilisi
Must Bear Signature ot
Se Pee -swine wrapper newer.
Very nman and as easy
to take to sugar.
FOR !RAMC
FOR DIMNESS.
FOR BILIOUSNEM
FOR:TONNIt
FOR CONSTIPATION
"41V/Ilitf.41°11,
eftalloar44714147-444044'
CARTERS
TTLE
IY
.-7.7ashaselit,es.wssovh...e
A LINcol-N STonY. .‘
When Lew Wallace First Met the
Third Bate Lawyer.
The few uneventful years Lew Wal-
lace speat In Covington were distin-
guished by one lorportent event. It
was there that he ;sew Abraham
Lin-
eoln for the first time. The Indiana
bar lied even then some brilliant and
notable men =mg 101 members, and
a case of extraordinary interest had
called them together at the fait term
of the cirenit-court4irgelating the .eir-
eumstance General WaIladia1d "Dur-
ing the session we were In thehabit of
gathering at the old.tavern In the even-
ing after adjournment ° It .wash• bril-
liant conipanY, whose' talk was *ell
worth hearing. One eveniog there ep-.
'Verifiriraiffellirtif -Our' midSt a talc
ungainly man," timely of visage and
rather shabbily dressed. He did not
intrude himself, but sat on the out-
skirts of the company, neither 'proffer-
ing opinions nor taking sides M the
controversies that oceaslonally liecame
pretty warm. No one seemed to know
anything about him, and *when I asked
a friend wile he. was he replied° care-
lessly, 'Oh, that is some third rate law-
yer, a nian named Lincoln from some-
where in Illinois.' One evening, ' how-
-'-ever,-after-he -had been -thew -some --
ba" General Wallace. continued,
"something moved him to speak, and
then he began to talk. We all sat spell-.
bound. •
"I have never," General Wallace said,
"heard anything that approached It -
the logic, the 'wit- the .pertinent twee•
dote, that poured out in an nneeasing
stream. He talked thus for three setid
hours. Some one said) 'Whoever that
fellow Is, we shall hear from him
again some day.' It-wae my first meet-
ing with Ahrahein Llecoln,r
"and the prophecy that We should hear.
from him again, t must be admitted,
was abundantly verified." -Mary. H.
Krout jn Harper's_Weekly.
1, •
VIE CLINTON NEW ERA.
.•1,1••••••••••••
I/ W. Quinlan. Mayor ofPort Ilepe The Scott' act Vail defeated in Rept!.
gmiche county.
iEast Middlesex license commission-
ers eat off three licenses.
Mr. John Crawford of London, has
I been appointed Obief of Police o! Osh-
awa. ,.
Ale John Macdonald's onlyson, John
i Slexander, died at Winnipeg of dia-
betes. .,
•
A very heavy wiOdstorna prevailed
at Moose Jaw; causing mud), damage
to window glans,
.The Oshawa Canning Company's
factory wile injured .hy fire to the ex-
tent of 020,000 or $.e,t,00.
' A plot tolcill the Czar and his kins-
men has been discovered among the
troops of the imperial guard.
M, G. Howe's jewellery-stet...a-1st-Re-
gina was robbed of $2,a3o or $3,000
worth of diamonds and fine, watches.
Fred Peeling,' aged thirteen years,
was swept over a dam at Cartipbellfordi
*Mhorseand waggonaed xtrow,ned,
News Notes
••,••••••
for six terms, is dead.
GIANTS OF THE 'PAST. '
. .
Some That Were. Thirty or. Forty
Feet !Itielk, no. It Said.',,
The past w.as more prolific in tha-pro-.
duction of 'giants than the Present , In
1830 one of these glants;,whn was ex••
Whited at Rouen,- wait:ten:feet nigh,
'and the glanC.Galebra, brought -from
Arallia to Ronie in the time of Clau-'•
dius Caesar, was the' seine height.
Fennum, who lived in the time of En
gene II., was eleven and one half feet.
in height • •
The Chevalier Saes in his lourney• to
the peak -Tenerife found in one of the'.
caverns of that mountain the head of it
giant who had sixty teeth and who was •
not less than fifteen feet high. The
giant Paragus, 'slain by Orlahdo, the
nephew of Charlemagne,. according to
reports, was twenty-eight• feet high.
In 181,4 -near St. Gernad was. found
the tomb of tlfe giant Isolent, who. was
not less than thirty feet high. In 1590.
near Rouen was found a skelethe
whose head held a bushel of corn and
v'ellich was nineteen feet in height
The giant Bacrt was twenty-two feet
high.
_Tal.62$ nee'r_the castle_in Dauphine a
tomb was found thirty feet long, 41 -x -
teen feet wide and .eight feet high on
which were cut in graystene the words
"Kentolechus Reirfe' The skeleton was
found entire and measured twenty -flee .
and ene-fourth 'feet high,: ten feet
across the shoulders and five 'feet from
breastbone to the back. -
But Feerid-e- kr-nor the only-e-nuritry'
where- giant skeletons have been un-
earthed. Near Palau* Sicily, in
1516, was found the skeleton of a giant
thirty feet high and In. 1559 another
forty-four feet high. Near 'Magrino,
on the same island, In 1816, was found
the skeleton of a giant of thirty feet
whose head was the size of a hegsheed
and each Meth weighed five. otinces.
• A Bzid- Pince fo"neirSinTi.- ' -
In his book, "'Uganda and Ifs Peo-
ples," J. P. Cunningham tells of a tittl-
e& mariner of 'treating the sick among
a certain native African tribe: "When
a person fell ill the village prophet
was called in. He sold at once wheth-
er the sick person would •recover or
not. If he was dotimed to die he 'vies
allowed to fulfill the prophecy; if he
was to live there was no need of nied-
teal aid." Another strange custom is
explained in the words of the native
who when askea by the autliot why
• women were not allowed to eat the
flesh of goats ieplled, "There Is 110
why; it Is the custom." .
Downier Bewildered.
Duniley-I never saw a man like
Brixton to drift away from the, sUbject
under discussion. ,
Barrass-As, for instance?
Bumley-I just asked him what be
was doing the night I saw' him down
the road, and he evaded an answer by
remarking that he had known people
to get rich by attending to their Own
business. I have no doubt he Ines but
why should he mention it at that thno7
.ilne*Wrto ijOitezt
"Now," said Mr. Hazzard; wile was
instructing her in the mysteries of golf,
"pnl know what it 'te�'I Let me ex-
plain now the duties of the Vitiate.'
You see" -
"Of doinge," sheo interrupted, "the
caddleni what you put. the tea in.
know What a tot caddie is.'"
. 'no Family JIM
aT5a,o, eaid little Willie, "la a fathliY
jar one 0' them kind that's used for
preservin'?"
"Scarcely, my 'kin," replied pa, "at
least not for preserving the
The vivacity *hien moments rwith
year 1a not far t„tort tony..-nochoto•.•
cauld.
The. b043,_ ofnl. Waddicar, a young*.
Engliehrreamwakigund.iri the ciehtes
of the Old C. P. If. sttitleff"if
peg, • .
• The Moose Jaw curling elict skating
rink was burned Saturday,. lass *0501).
Curling stones w.oftli,$1,0',L) were de-
stroyed. • •
• Alex Willis and Mrs Covell have
been arrested, the former charged
with the murder of Miss Elizabeth
Lowry at Rodney, and the woman as
accessory to 1 he. murder.
•
Stratford Board- of Tradetcarried
motion to submit a by-la,ve granting
$30,a.) to the O. P. R. •upun conclitihn
of the railway entering:rthe----city--oe
the north side of Victoria Lake. ,
Tha thrust of a lance does' not hart
more than the abdominal pains follow-
ing the eating of improper feed. Quick
relief comes with the nee of Perry
Davis' Painkiller. Always keen it in
New South Wales goVErnment fol-
lowing Canada's exaMple, is arranging
for a aeries of addresses in English
agricultural districts pointing out the.
advantages of that colony as a fielrl
for ftemers 'tit small means.
'An -intelligent, -reliable people Who
are seeking an advantageous change,
or those who are idle and: want Work
will accomplish their purpose by writ-
ing Marshall 'eu• Co.., tea Importers,
London, Ont. ; outfit fureished.
Hermon Von IVIetzke,. teller in the
Merchant's Bank at' Lancaster, had a'.
desperate struggle with four. burglars
who broke into the. bank • He shot
'WREN DOCTORS FAILgii
•••••••*m••••,
Dr. Pink Pills &Ought
New Health and Strength.
•••• lo.•••• Vol
From The Post; Thorold, Ont.
Air, Reuben Lindsay, a fruit grower
at Ridgeville, On., is .one of law hest
known men in that section,
lived id the village 'or vicieity alt
.
his life All Air Lindsa 's neighbors
•Xxionttlitt about a year ago hiseon-
(Mien of health was very serious. To.
use his own-ivords he "began to go to
pieces -,was ail W
il wasting away." hen
reporlitr of the Thorold Post called
on Mr. Lindsay recently, be found bina
lugain enjoying the best of heal th..and
Irben • asked NVilat bad wrought his
eine, he replied very emphatically,
"Dr. V. illiams'• Pink ,• they did
for me what medic 11 treatment and
other medicines failed to do. • In the
apring'of 1003," continued Mr: Lindsay,
-41.-grew so weak that 1 ewiki hardly
move abont. My appetite completely
failed me• and I seemed to be wasting.
away to a mere shadow. I grew so
weak that I could not work, and cou d
.seareely look after my horses without
' eestin .••• I docitoreddwith two or three
good -p ymeeins,-bu t got nopeen) anen
tienefit„--In-faet he•-•,aee '4 t
'fiiti-S-14--What-tItYTty.
renble74.;•. We'
said livor tronble; niiother ,kidney
ease, but -whatever the trouble wastt
was rapidly using ine up. A neighbor
Who had used De.. 1S- Pink
, with benefit advised me to try them,
but I feltsomewhat skeptical. How-
ever. I was finally indimed te. try them.
, and before I had :finished . the .second
box 'I could note an ,Imprireement. I
continued Using, the pills., until I had
talteo some tWeive .boXeet whes.i was
- again enjoying"e0tmet
Il'havo • no hesitatior. in saysog that
believe; Dr, Williams' Pink,
Reineinhering My former Un-
hooef in these 'pills,. I .g lad) v .dive this
testimonial,. in -the hope that it may
induce eoine.other Offerer tti UT this.
greet, ..health-giving pied icine.7 • • •
• Other ailing people will speedily find.
'new health and• strength. through a
1.fitie 'Use of 1)i..1V. i II i - Pink file
Every .dose'senda.' new, tichr-red, blood
coursi lig • t rongh: the •veins...and that.
is lite reason these pills.cnre anaemia,
neuralgia, indigestion,. ,kkiney and
1 iv -
(1' troubles: .rbounatism, anc.1 all other
(Use ises having their, origin in .poor or
I watery !hod incliidiog the.
. iloi en ts .that' :make the. .1 v sot' Se
_Many gl'oseing girls•rincriVistiten ;of all
agee• tuiseValote. Seethat thefull
name, "De.. Williams' Pink Pilla,for
....Palo tel. on the wrapper,
, aronial .0e ch box: If in 'dinii.t, you can
get the pills by. -Mailla..t.) cone anon,
01 six boxes . for .$2 fin!, by. Ivisting the
• Dr. ,Wil I mins • Medicine Biock,
Ont.. •
tine; and the.dead body was ..•found at• • -• •
the railway station. kir. Von Metik.e.
was badly hurt in the fight.
. se,
ANIASTI1MA.TIO'S STORY. TOLD.
Sleepless nights.; stiffocatine• sensa-
tiers difficult to even breathe "Jean
sctrcelY describe all 1 'suffered from
astliniet" writes Mrs,. E. P. Cavanaugh,
of Colborne. "Spasms. of coughing
wOuld come on that . imide ine weak. •
Nothing di(1 me any good'until.I used
The fragrant, healing Catarreicione. I
am delighted to.retoinend this remedy
which cared inc of chronic asthmv af-
ter-scores,of good physicians had given
me up.. Catarrhozone is . better for
•asthma, gives quicker reit, f than'ai y
remedy 1 know of. • MY cure is a per-
fect one." Try Catarrhozone, it never
fails to citre asthina. Complete .,.,Hi
31.00
$1.00 ; trial size 25c. •
•
THE PECULIAR LOON
This Bird Rao a Bide Albont an Tough
• •
as That of an os.
The loon differs from other birde In a
number at N-7-vitYs. I. have reason to
think ' that many people are unaware,
of some at least. of these peeutiarities.
The loop: has a hide' as tooltricra of;"
and its' feathers .cannot be plucked
'without first 'scalding the bird as yen.
would a hog. This ineident will give
some ideit:of the toughness of the hide:
About thirty-five years ago, when I
Was living. in Ailcbigan, a loon was
shot, at with a shotgun industriouslY
all summer •Withotit .apParently doing
iwith a riflinist to convince the people druggists. •
A POTATO SAitAD.
• • that a loon could be shot and killed. ; • -.----
H , •
e had Many times been Shot at vilth . Rev. George Bishop, pastor of the Styi/Siaky
Ei11. RIMAI
,The -Way a iPerreer Oise Was @Weld?. It rine by the same people who had rst Methodist. Church.:London, who
I,
Amam000moroon0000rosnefile4101
. • .
„
A DEEP SEA GLUTTON.
In Purity •Undoubtedly
(bility the Best Tea
.
Thu MarW
ine isard 011)% Wane* * In Relia
Sold Anywhere
In Taste
Fish Twice Ito Own Moro
. "That one animal can devour another
°twice its oWn size at a single swallow'
; Is a statement that May Seem ad In-
' credible' as any fish story ever Invent-
ed," Writes Di: Sanderson hristition.
vertheless-+s--true-nfleertain nob -
es. So far as known such fishes are
habitants of the deep 'iteMS, where -utter'
darkness perpetually prevails, with an
unvarying temperature almost as cold
as lee and a pressure ranging, accord-
ing to depth, from a quarter to three or
four tons upon every square inch of
their body surface.. The deeP sea is'
'commonly regarded as commencing
where the rays of sunlight cease to
penetrate, which is estimated to be less
than 1,200 feet belew the surface, had
may extend -to -twenty -times that dis-
tance or even much more, down to the
bottom of the ocean. Fishes have been
dredged from below 12,000 feet. ,
"A deep sth
ea fish, e Chlasmodus ni-.
ger, six and flee -eighth's of an inch
• longhas been found •fo have swal-
lowed another,fish ten:tinti a half inch.
- • "Ient.•
- is stretched as -thin as gold- beater's
skin,: It has shade &eked teeth, whieh
cross each other from opposite sides of
the mouth and usually point backward.
According 'to Gunther, the fish • after
having seized its victim with Its 'cepa-
.
clous and very movable jaws partly
presses it -down as a snake would do
. and partly draws itself over it. The
prey Is received tnto..en esophagus an4.
zifembraries of 'which are
as extensible as an India 'rubber pouch,
The stomach when empty is contracted
and. folded up and Pfejecte but little
below the abdomee:
• "When a deep sea. fish is ,Irought to
the surface; how gradnally and careful
soever, its bones are often like eo muco
touchwood and its muscles -like rotten
pulp, while its eyes are burst from •Its
sockets and its viscera are often blown
. out of the body cavity by the expan-
sion of the air bladder. It .frequently
happens that deep sealishes are found
fioathig -helplessly on the surface of
the email with large _prey In.. their
stomachs:- Their appearance under •
. ,
thesecircumetances is accounted for
by the efforts of their struggling vic-
tims to escape from- their 'jaws, caus-
ing -them to ascend beyond the horizon-
&
tal,zone winthey Usually. inhehit
'• "Deep sea fishes are conimonly black
or dark broWn. But, -althoughit is
claimed, that light is . essential to :the
formation of colors; smile deep fJoa•
fishes are scarlet ,in parts or uniforrn
• red or rosy. Others are silvery white,
While, •accerding .to Alcoek, the nee- •
.copelus is 'one dazzling sheen 4 pur-
ple, and sliver and burnished gold,
amid which Is A sparkling conetellation
'of luminous organs'" •
; •
•
POSSIBLYYOURwirE
_•
• Dosen't look so young and pretty as
• •she used to. If her cheeks are hollow
,and:pale,lf she is tired and nervous,
she needs Ferrozone, which is noted
for restoring the bloom of heal th to
sickly -girls and woinen. Complexion.
.quiekly becom2s re•ririts rise, and
strength increases dal Health and
vigor will som. return to your wife or
datighter if Ferrozone is taken,
•
• hi ii h .111 the fall I killed him tb b t t mad and c sts 59 ei at
Brack, nixed Sold only in lead packets 25e, 30c, 40-0, &Oa
or Green 60e, by all Grocers.
• -Highest award St. Louis 1904
00000 t000000bd000000o-oao
P00006000000000047a0-000 000 0
KIIOWS we have alwisys a fresh, and large as-
sorted stock of Groceries and Provisions, Anything
in the line of Crockery, Glassware, Chinaware etc.
can be procured at this store.
eryorie==
WANTED—Good Butterind Eggs.
000000 • 00000 000
00000 • 00000000 • 000001,.
5 05•05.
le • la le lb • • • It • • el • le • • 111 • • • • On • • • 1111 te *
: iclicit- Buacties. -.- • .: ,
is- ••• • •
Our Spetialty . . .
. - ., •
.• • They. are -made orthe best ot material, -and take no second a. ' '
. ,
• place immorkmanshiprhey. are the Lightest grade,. and Iii- giv -........,
e tending purehasers shouldsee my stock hetore purchasing. ••
• . • •
• -
LAVIS • iff CLINTON 0
w . 9 • . - -
•••••••fp.pite•••••••••••mr 0•••••••••••••••10:,0000. P
,Clinton Bash,, Door An
Blind Factory.'
This *tory ie the largest inr,the (senility, and has the very, lateit iinOroved Inv
ohinery, capable of dozng work on the, shortest notice: . We .0afrt•• :an • "extensive,
and tellable stook au.1 prepared piens, and eye estimates for tied . build all
olass-
es ofbeillinge on sh irt wide°, and on the olosest,prioes. ' All vierk i siievivi-
ed in a meshanical *ay and satisfaetIon guaranteed. • We sell all 'kind of in
„
• ' • • zerior and:extenor'material. • •
Luiiiher, Latli Shinz, Lime, Sash; Doors. R1111(13-, Etc.
Agent for the celebrated n?, '1.71Y BILL' soaorm DEISM manataabufee •
at Waterloo. Cal i• Lind prams and estimates befoze placing joar orders
S. S. PROPRIETOR,
.:Gene.reti Einilder and ::iiin1rattOr .
Iii.LANI
LADIES, MISSE..5 dna. CHILDREN'S
. .
. Tossed Together. . . _ used the photgun; and they -ban become has nob been in
. gOod-health for • sane,
time, le to undergo an operation at ALSO' :11ATTV 814 I RT W.A.I ST
A potato salad, to be a success, convinced thathe dived. so quicklY that Victeria Hospital, whieb, though not
shOold he is. it were, the. inspirailen he dodged the shot In that way. I. had of a critical nature. will prevent Jahn '
-4---nre-nr:sreent,---shovvIng-no-signe-of•----,seen-them--shoot- at-111111-a-number,of_frorn_nesuuling-bilpit.wors14--kr-.
premeditation. 'To marinade the pota- time, and I could see the splash of s nne time., - : •
toes in stock or. French dressing and bullet or Shot in the • water before the
serve With a carefully Prepared ma- . loon dived. •I ridiculed the idea, of the ' A BLOATED STOAIAOH " ..
yonnaise robs it �f 'its enaracter, and - dodging, and that led to . any -Shooting ' Distention and ti ttrts fre;n1 indigestion
MdividualitY, if a salad possesses: such • him to support my contention. •When I • are mired quickly by Nerviline: When
,- ---A , . long:-trip-awheel----- stuck-le-the:Amide-et the'-hide'-and-so•„perteedy..harthless.
attribiites. The hest, salad the .writer 'Skinned the bird I • found and counted you get an attack of stomach trouble
over tasted Was tossed together by a over a hundred No. 6 'shot, all Of them take a stiff dose of Nerviline, which is
clever- woman.
but---mzirvellou
. PI
brought home two hzingry wome1l. i doing him,.. no permanent harm. It it squish in cfroctinill r a Tasting cure
WAS once taken iwith stomach trot a
Among other eatables yielded up b3.r remarkable that he was never hit In hie" writes •E iwa,ed Rowell . ' or
Hochest,er. , ••••1 was in: great pain' and
distress but half a teaspoonful of Ner-
vyine fixed me up ina few neinutes. I
' cam recommendNerviline forsick heed -
ache and cramps andconsider it en in- •
Iy-aoliTsbellef. Plifluceserel.d ""m' ci• clY‘ Try it.
the refrigerator were two hard .bolled . the eye nor sustained a: broken wing.
eggs *and some cold boiled potatoes, 1 ' A:nether thing peculiar to the loon is
cooked in their .jackets, asthey should ' that after the chicks are hatched, if the
be for a properly, constructed salad.. • mother wishes to move far, she will
t They, were ,peeled. and thinly slicedMake a shallow Mee and come up ori-
. ,'
Into a welting cup were mit a little .•: der her babies and swim off with them
milii 'Vinegar and a utorsel of chopped on her hack. The pereon that eueceeds
ohion: After a few, moments'. simmet,. in photographing her under ;such condi:.
Ing the latter Was strained out intv a
tions may Well plains the pennant. On-
iidd d t th
-g or Us •I untof utt
er e o- e....--Ironectutvd.r.ow,4
Vinegar to meltThe egg whites were
• young, although for over twenty years .•
'chopped and .mixed through the pota- I 11 d Itt the t 02 Miebigan where
then there.was the best &Mice imagi-
nable to watch loons. Now the timber
has been cut oft around, most of the
lakes, and Mich favorable conditions
for observation ne longer exist .
Although I have only once seen a
loon shoulder, her babies, ,I have Reen
her, swimming with them On her back
many: times.. Once one Owinn within
twenty feet of the and never suspected
My presence. '
One of their' calls when sitting onthe
water for volume beats that et .any
Other bird or beast that 1 know of, I -
have heard, them in the night when
they were more than five miles distant,
for they only make that kind of call.
from thaWater, and there was 110 lake
in that direction. short thatclistance.
Wo say that the loon IS a very interest -
Ing bird Is as Mild as r• can etpress It.
i-Porest and Stream. •
toes and the yolks Were crumbled in
to a bowl. When the butter had melt -
OU it was added to the yolks and
etirted until a yellow .cream resulted,
Whieb was peered over the potatoes,
previoubly dtitsted with pepper and salt,
fen' deft tosses with a salad fork,
it re/Winkling ot chopped chives, and
therestilt was - perfection.... Table
„
Ma Crackers
That TOOK.
Canada
By Storm.
A year ago, MOONEY'S
PERFECTION CREAM
SODAS. were a theory. To-
day they are the most de.
lightful cracker facts in Can.
'oda. Last July, .the first
Mooney's Sodas went out to
o tempt `the aPPetite" Or -tho
Canadian ' people. Now,
many tons a day are baked to
se.tisfy, the demand.
There's AO resisting the
fresh, crisp, creatny delicious-
I/ ' 'less of these perfect soda
i
. crackers.
. "
HOOltneeft/
Perfection
Cream Sodas
At your Cretet'a "
•
Diarvelonos Strength of Bird&
Birde cart eat and digest freer ten to.
thirty times ae ranch foonin proportion
"io 'their size as men can. If a man'
Could eat am Much In ProPortiontd'hie.
-faiRasit nsartaPi'"is able to consered
'''''•U Weiffen ed ierwhore sheep fiii din,
. ner, a couple of dozen chickens for '
breakfast and six turkeys for his even
Ing ;meal. A tree sparrow heel been
known to eat /00 grass seed e in a day.
' Relative to the bird'e site, these Seeds
Were as big as an ordinary lunch bas-
1
ket would be to a full grown 1131111, ,
An Uninvited Guest.
• tittle Nellie had been taught neer
to put her finger into her boWl Of
bread and milk, but always to use her
spoon; like a little lady, •
when she *Jolted her grandpa one'
summer sho Was allowed to eat her.
, lunch out on the stone stop, oneday
a Wee little pig tame .up and rudely,
Dilated his little pink no into her
bowl of bread and milk. •
1 "Oh, oh!" screamed tho baby. "Be
It lady; take a Won, Dig; take tt '11003114,4
4, eerait
- - NOW ON DISPLAY'
_ • _
HAT8
Although returns received by the
Department of -Agriculture itt Ayinni-
peig are necessarily tar "from coinPle47-
at 'present,. it was learned to -day that,
all the indications are Most favorable
to the outlook, the'agricultural •devel-.
opinent Manitobabeingmore than
usually setisfactory this•year.
•Many Women Suffer
Untold Agony From 1
Kidney Trouble,
r very often they think it la from so.;
Called "female disease." There is less
female trouble than they think. 'grottiest
ittiffer from backache, • sleeplessitessc
deriousuess, driggine,
down feeling in the loini. SO do -men.
end theydo not hare le female trouble.
Why, then, blame all your, trouble te
female disease? With healthy kidney4,
few women will ever have "female died
adult." The iddneya are 80 closely con.
seated with all the internal °tails, theft
ivheu the kidneys go wrong, everythins
goia *Ail& Much distress; would ,Ihe
saved If women Would only take
DOAN'S KIDNEY. PILLS
at stated Intervals.
Miss Nellie Clerk, 1,embeth, Ont., tag
tet her cure in the follolIng
suffered for about two years with Wilsey
trouble. I ached all over, aPeelull#
the small of my back; not being able IS
sleep well, no appetite, menstruatitia
Irregular,
liervOlig Irritabillty,:and bd.+
dust deposit In *hie, were semi' of *it
iymptoras. T took Dote. slaty Pitlk
The pain In my back gradually left --
m' ippetito returned, 1 sleep well end
MA effectually cored. / can woo
tecotettitod Votia's Kidney Pine to of
tatter* from kidney trouble."
PACO 40 onto per box, or it WA*
floolore, or Debi *WOW 111404011i
•
Londesboro Emporium
. March 131.81 1005.
woormoommoononomo.o....
BOY WANTED at, once at tht
New Era Office.
COAL COAL/COAL
Before plac'ng your or
ders for your season'r
supply of Coal, pt. ou
-prices,- .The --ver-y-laest.
goods carried in ,stock
and 'sold at the lowest
,possible. price.
IWOrders may be left at
Davis & Rowland's
Hardware. Store, or
with .
ISTMNSON
At Electric Light Plant
olowwwww.amemplowmormwommommiews
S -P RING -
Spring is. once more at:.
hand, and with it
; Pure
1 -Maple Syrup
from the land of my With'
t the County of Leeds.
•
Fresh Fruits
1 We have arrivitur 'daffy the 1
follOwing fruits :-Bananas, Or.
itinges, Lemons and Pineapples, ,
IGood Groceries . 1
: brow is the best time to buy i
iyour preserving Sugar. It is not
neeessitry to Mention the quality
-lie you know we always, keep 1
i the hest of everything.
i •••
•••• .4 • ••••••••
••
w .014E%
The Hub Grocery,
'AD
NO INCRE,ASE -IN -PRICE
We desire to announce that
we are selling Melt at the old'
price—NO INCREASE.
Customers will have, as usual,
prompt and satisfactory at-
tention.
.FITtSIIVIONS ot SON..
)o..it NQ
This is one of the most modern
of mottoes, and a good one.
You've been thinking. of
giving us an Order for
Gioceries,
Do it Now;
We want to get. that
order. We're anxious to
show you how depend-
able: the_quality is, and
how moderate the prices •
are. We ant to Intro,
duce yoti
Grocery
Satisfaction,
This week ,we have
passed into stock about
half-a;.ton of TEA. Prices
ranging from 25a to 75c
perlb. 'The quality in-
vites inspection, Iii jus-
tic,e t6 yourself you ought
to.test our Teas,
limAAAAN
A. D. Beaton
Hu eon, St., Clinton
'Phone- 11 t
Pitittr-lit you stet 11 a Beatone
, (400I).