How many miles has it done?
I've made some comments below on how the car is 'driven'. Forgive me if they seem 'pointed' at you but I also fully realise it may all be down to the owner(s)/driver(s) before you.
Either way, it's intended to help.
New wiper? Do you mean new 'mechanism' or a new blade because of a torn/worn rubber? If the latter, it's normal wear and tear.
Clutch... can depend so much on how the clutch is used or the car is driven. By you and/or previous owners... Rapid/fast starts, foot resting on the clutch, riding the clutch, clutch pedal depressed while waiting to move off all destroy clutches very prematurely. Lots of gear changing (normal round town running) wears a clutch sooner than loads of motorway miles. Properly driven, a clutch on a petrol car should last 150,000 miles, easy. (Unlike many diesel car clutches with their dual-mass flywheel failures.)
Brakes... almost always depend on how the car is driven. Not much observation and/or anticipation leads to lots of unnecessary braking/pads wear. (Fast driving is not the same as hard driving...)
Exhaust... rear box or mid-section, too? If loads of short runs, never dries out properly inside and so corrodes through sooner. Though a 2004 'short-runs' car can be getting near first change of rear exhaust box, if not mid-section, too.
Cabin moisture... presume it doesn't have air con which is the best way of drying it out. Winter, wet soles of shoes transfers moisture to carpets/mats. Car warms up/heater on=steamed up windows. Presume ventilation controls are set to screen, not on recirculate, and/or you open front window(s) a crack...
Otherwise it could be a leaky heater matrix so you need to check if your coolant level is down/dropping, then feel the carpet under the heater matrix. (Not likely, but worth a check.)
Check your boot carpet (and thoroughly under the carpet, into the spare wheel well, too) for water/moisture as it could be you have a tiny rainwater leak into it. If so, get back to this Forum so people can point you in the right direction. (May not be a big deal.)
Good luck and all the best.