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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe New Era, 1882-03-30, Page 9Marob(),,- THE JEANNETTp. Melville's Report to the Secretary of the U. S. Navy. • SEARCHING FOR THE LOST PARTY. A Record of Manly Bravery and iterefee suffering. A Washington despatch says Melville, in an official report to the Secretary a the Navy dated January 6th, givee a description of his journ,eying from the time of bus separation from DeLong to his starting out on the present search.. He says: "-I started north on the evening of November the 5th to the relief of DeLong, having two natives and two dog teams with provisions for ten days. Reached Motrai at mid. night, November 9th. Next .morning found in a hut a waist belt made on the Jeannette. There were good indications; that one or two of DeLong'e party had alept in the hut. Nov. 10 -e -Provisions running short I started for -Upper Belun to renew them. Reached there at midnight of the llth; having stopped at a deserted hunting station, Oath • Ceuta, and having visited eight hilts on the route: NO i3igne that the Cath Couto wee visited by De - Long's party were visible. The natives of 13pper Belun brought me.DeLong's record, dated Oct. let. From the neighboring records dated Sept. 22nd and 26th, with a Winchester rifle, were brought: On Nov. 13th, with fresh dog teams and natives, I started for Bullock hut, in which record No. 2 and ,the Winchester rifle were found. Found both huts filled with anew. Nov. 14 -Followed the eaat bank of the Lena to the -coast; and the &mat -three miles to the east, and found a cache made by DeLong. Nov; .16 -Made ,a thorough searoh, 'gathered up everything, searched for the boat east and west five riffles each way, and one and a half miles off shore, and saw no signs of it. The ice was very much broken and shoved up in mases within 25 feet of the cache'. Melville gives a list of articles foundin the cache, includ- ing four log books, record in nevi alien and various iffiPlements. ov. 17 -Left Upper Bolen, visited the place at which DeLong's party crossed the Lena, arid traced the party to Sixtereaneck, from which . place I wished ' to searcla for the hut in which Erickson died, but the natives insisted on returning to Be- lun or Upper Bolan, because there was alack of feed and the dogs refused to work. Arrived there November 27th, nearly exhausted, with feet, hands, legs and face badly frostbitten, having been ten days in, a continuous storm remaining two nights and a day in one hole in a snowbank with- out shelter of any kind. From my know- ledge of the country and from the evidence of Noros Hinderman, I amconvinced that DeLong and his party' are 'somewhere to the westward of the Lena, and betw,een Sixtereoneck and Bulcour, which are separ- ated by 150 versts of 5 barren, desolate region, devoid of subsistence. To search that region a large force will be required with proper authority from the Russian authorities. 1 there- fore came to this place,' communicate with the United States, and immediately with the aid of the authorities commence to organize searching parties. Meantime the commandant of Beim is searching with • ail the force the small town .affords. The -Governor of this Province has sent a general order throughout the entire region from the Lena to liolymee to search for. both parties missing. I am completing arrange- ments, mad starter:Kittle._ in &- few Governor-General Tscherinieff is render- ing every assistancein his power. -Melville calls attention to the manly upright con- duct of Danenhower, who was deprived of the legitimate command through unfortu- nate circumstances, and also makes honorable mention of fireman Bartlett and seaman Leach. In the record deposited near Simontki Island, Lena Delta, "Soon after reaching land," De Long says, "we must now try, with Godes help to walk to a settlement evinola Lbelieve to be 95 Miles.distant. We . are all well, have four •days' proVisions, arms and ammuni- tion, and are carrying with us only the ship's book and papers, and blankets, tents and some medicines. Therefore our chance of getting through seems good." In the record d.ated September 22nd, 1881,. found in a hut on the Lena Delta, De Long says, after having travelled in a southerly direction twelve miles : "Last night we shot two reindeer, which gives us abundance of food for the present, and we have seen so many more that anxiety for the future is relieved. As soon as our three sick men - can walk we shall resume our march for the settlement on Lena River." Septem- ber 24th: " Our three lame men being now able to walk we are abbut to resume the journey with two days' ratione of deer meat, and two days' rations of pemmican and three lbs. of tea." Oet. 1st': " Fourteen of the officers and men of the 'Jeannette reached this hut on September 28th, and, having been forced to wait for the river to freeze over, are proceeding to cross to the west side this morning on the journey to reach a settlement on the LenaRiyer.--We have two days' provisione; but having been fortunate enough „thus far to get gameine ofir pressing needs, we have no fear for the' future." Noros, one of the last who saw De Long alive, writes from Yakutsk to Fan River, Masse stating that---hee-audeotheresineDies Long's boat had their feet frozen. • One man died after they got on shore. Noros says. "Wo travelled abouttwo weeks short of food; then the captain'. decided to send Hinderman and myselt'on ahead to look- out for assistance. We walked 120 miles without anything to eat: For elx• deys we bad not a monthful of food. We were most starved when found -bye, the natives. The captain, and tenemen, I fear, died from starvation and cold.sys' e • ONE, 1ClilANCE,IN A, *010 el A 04 D A San Frailleiseo` itieeerery Fromea Broker, week. [(From the Ban rre,ncisco cbroniclee • About fi.ve months ago the daily prese published a short item regarding -a teamster na,med. John Collery, who attempted to drive his team through a barn door, and. in BO ;doing had his bead forced down on his bteast until his neck was broken. .Police Surgeon Stambaugh made an examination of the injured i;nien and found That, the seventh *cervical , vertebra -was fractured, and that the spinal cord hadheen stretched nearly two inches. So serious Was the injury that the eeporters, after chronicling the incideeleennader the head al. fatal accidents, paid ax) further attention to the matter, and failed to inquire after Col- lery's-condition, considering him dead and buried. A Chronicle reporter was therefore exceedingly surprised yesterday Afternoon to meet the supposed corpse near the city prison looking remarkably well for a man with a broken neck. In a conversation which ensiled, Mr. Collery stated that he was almost as well as before the accident, a slight stiffness in his right side consti- tuting entire' "unhealthiness." After his removal to his home Collery states that he was laid flat on his back with it scrt of fence alga his neck and head, which kept hirninetrovable foiT-oier two monthee Both the bedy of the vertehree and the arching lunainee were discovered. to be broken, and the operation' of pinching the spinal cord where it had sagged between the ragged edges is described as one of the most difficult ever performed. For a month the patient lay on his back, com- pletely paralyzed in one-half of his body,. and with but little feeling in the other. If he moved in the slightestdegree during the, first fortnight he could .plainlye feel the jagged edges of the hone grate together and for hours after such an attempt heewass contenteto-lie-on his hard bed without attemptiag to move a neuselefor, fear that the spinal card Bli0111d be erhed and his existence ended, in a' twinkling. The. straightest position attainable was required, and to this end Dr. Stambaugh was,comPelled to refuse him a mattress, forcinghirn to. lie qn a wide plank. Col-, lery says that before his eight weeks of enforced quietness were ended he thought that board was made. of adamant. The most dangerous time he experienced,, he says, was one day when an attendant told him that a man whose neck could stand brealeing as his had was not born to be hanged: His desire to laugh .was irre- sistible, and the shaking up his merriment gave leim caused his fastenings to burst, and the fracture came near being ruptured afresh. During the first five weeks he did net move over a foot from his first posture. The paralysis has now .almost entirely disappeared, and Dr. Stambaugh yester- day promised him that he would be able to go to work within six months. The aver- age fatality in CilSeEi of clearly defined fracture of the spine is estima.ted' at 699 HE DEVASTATING FLOODS. Terrible $uffering§ in, the South and West. 711011SPIDS: OP PEOPLE 1101IELESS MD STARR% Whole Towns Under Water -,ep. • peals forAid. The follewing'graphic particulars regind- ing the terrible f1,00d$ in the United States are gleaned from latest telegrams From Yazoo City, Miss. --The flood is a foot higher than in 1867., The people are disregarding property, only caringto save human life. • The .court house is crowded: The steamers are removingpeople718 fast asremetheedY- lastcannight.TwA6lvgeini-luhnodurfeeec-IfuTle•oree refugees was swept' away. All V,vere drowned. , • A correspondent, deecribing how the -People live, Says the better class live in fairly good though cheap :houses, but the .,,poorer live Mealy in shanties, and although naost of the houses remain' whole and few have even been moved from their found - tions, yet the Water is over the floors in in -est inetances, ranging from six inches to six feet in depth- Where it is possible the inhabitants have made false floors, ,actoes which they wadg to their, beds; in Other cases they live on the roofs, bringing a bar- rowfull of earth from so.nee place in a. dug- out and with it making,a place Where fire ean be built. 'Many have been driven , entirely away fromtheir, homes, for in ,Plao& where the .water wife never ;before :IfhoWri to 'Conde into the, yardS it 18 now easilY possible to go in at the window in a skiff. Those--whe, are homeless live many of them, onrafts, many in the gin -houses, *leechare large -and strong, and in these, it 'is said, a sufficiency of cotton seed has been saved for this year's Planting provided the water subsides in time to allow of planting. Thus, living cm roofs and rafts and tu gin - hones, twenty thousand people have kept then:wolves-alive for six long weeks, until almeet'everythieg eatable that was saved has been devouredeanclitisea fact to -day thatmany of them are eating carcasses of drowned cattle, for not 4- per cent: onlie live stock ofthe country has been saved. At every landing the same sights are seen and stories a disaster told.- It gets so eom- Mien in a littlewhile:that the edge of the hOrrorreallY seems to be 'taken off by the Mere repetition of the details: "My God! • do you realize," eaid one man -when a cor- espondent said, -"It is the same story" - "do you realize what the story la? Do you realize that, thepeople here en -the river banks for hundreds of miles stood, on the roofs of their houses, where they had fled to -save theirliVes, and saw everything they had in the Weelcf swept off'to destruction by the cruel -Waters? Their cattle Were drowned...their little steres of food were destroyed, their household goods were 'swept limey,' and they eeyed, on these roofs for days or elser•on rafts: Hundreds and hundreds of them were :hungry' until some- body came along and rescued thane, and na ch y anniany a family, sir, was drowned. 'There is n� doubt of it. Yes, site it is the Salim old story, andatraWful. one it is."' The Arkansas River is a large stream, and because of the overflow of its banks is just nowa duplicate, on a smaller scale, of ehelMississippi. River itself. The Missis- eappi River, from Cairo to New Orleans, with its bends, is 1,000 miles longe and throughout its whole 'length is beyond its banks, and covers all the contiguous terri- story to an extent that, within the 300 Imules that markthe distance from MOM= phis to Vicksburg, there are over .40,000 square miles of • 'country Under water. Within this distance of less than. one-third oftheleegth of the river' between Cairo and ,its mouth, the area of • overflowed land is greater than the *hole area of the State of Illinois. . , GREENVILLE, Miss., March 20. -The Gov- ernment relief steamer is making all haste up the Yazoo River. There is great clietreise throughout the Yazoo- delta: Seven 'persons were .drowned when the levee broke at Prentiss. BENT-RA.01"ED WOMEN. A Remedy for rhysicall Defeete. A New York correspondent writes : I wee speaking' of bent -backed women. The pro - Portion of my sex with a slight curvature of the spieeeeee shoulder or hip higher than the other, or some other irregularity, is BO large that any dressmaker will tell you that few dreesee have two sides exactly alike in shape. On this basis of fact an enterprise ing woman has undertaken to beild up a business -,-,not by padding and pressing to force symmetry, but on the theory that gynan aetics will remedy the fault if properly eniployed. She has opened a small private gymnasium, in which dight Indian :Clubs, dumb -bells, trapezes, ladqbrs and other appliances for exer,cise., Are provided. The candidate., for shaping is first carefully examined, in order to determine exactly her clePartures from truegrace and accuracy. Then the kind of exercise to develop the lacking spot is prescribed. If one hip is out of plumb, swinging fromthe trapeze by the legs, accompanied bY-STicway- ing from -side -to side, is recommended. If round Shoujders are the blemish, club. swinging and hanging by the hands from rings are the proper exercise. How much real improvement Can th us be accomplished I do not know, but I have no doubt it is considerable. The exercise is good; at least; and it would be wise for every girl or woman to swing a light pair of Indian clubs in her room on getting out of bed in the morning, before putting on any clothes to interfere with the free movement of the arEkia and shoulders. This Practice 15 5551' intoing-vogue a little, but nowhere near as faet as it ought to. - • A EL. ItIGI1U1' WIWI" THE CZA.R. •Elkobeleir ',Ionised "tit 141. Petersburg. Se.." Petersburg advices state that . on Wednesday night a reception NVRE3 given to Skobeleff at the rooms of the Russian Officers' Clkb. _The rooms were crowded, the audience representing leading Russian thought and influence. Skobeleff was received with tremendous cheering. Replying to . an address of welcome, Skobeleff said he meant every word he uttered in his speech to the students. He was prepared when he made the speech for the consequences that might follow.. He felt thathe was speaking for all Russia; He ,had had a conference with the Czar since hie -return, and the_whele matter die - cussed the •conference was the speech. The Czar endorsed the speech, every word nevere-hinted-any-word---shoulde have been left unsaid, The Czar -assured, him he had no desire tq have him either recall or explain a word of the speech. 'Skobeleff intimated that the Czar assured him that the only reason he did not care to approve of The speech was because of dependence upon Germany in certaiu rela- tions which he did not at present deem it wise to rupture. • Mayor Harrison, of Chicago, is, a thought- ful and considerate 'civic magistrate. He wrote as follows on the commitment of a, -welefan to the city prison : " The city physician reports that the peisotter is about to beeonee a mother. It may be a boy. The boy might be President of -the . United States. Must he be born in the Bridewell? Her name is Harrison -May Harrison. The boy might be Mayor. He must not be born ineethee Bridewell. Never ! Never LI Never !I!" The woman 'OVEIS released. The child is a girl. Thee.Emperor of Russia has in his Babies seventy gilded chariots for tise on state occasions, all of which were presented by foreign rulers. Col. Martinoff, the Czar's stable.master, has recently imported from Hanover and Mecklenburg fifty-nizie blooded horses for use at the approaching corona- tion ceremonies. Mrs. Frances Grant, resiaing ate,Rock Ferry, near Liverpool, England, , has placed the sum of 8O00,000 limas of trustees, directing that the -interest accru- ing therefrom he paid -to -the deserving poor, without regard to -class or creed. Mrs. JullaWS:rd Howe is said-to-have- lee,rned Gteek after she was 50 years old, trihuite to lite Great Liberal Leader.' • The Marquis of • Blandford recently con. ,cluded a speech by the following eulogiinn on Mr.- Gladstone I cannot turn from these refleetions without centering My gaze_ one England's great Prime Minister,, nor can I overlook the gigantic power he has so nobly exercised for the present And future. benefit of his. country.- What a contrast has hie life been to that,of that other great Man httely departed!-theone ef lineal descendent of the 4.bsOltitist • school Of Metternich, the natural ally of an eligarelly; dthe eervile,worshipper,of amirte and 'grand.; •If he fserved bis country rto any purpose it, was ta hiinselV B15 as a contrast to what' Pnblic 'virtues, can. ethibit. in .a trifly: noble mind. 2 When -the history e Of; dile-. time-. -is:. ,Written, it Will not he the astute politician Who , now lies ' sleeping" in Hughenclen churchyard whose life. and 'character will be selected as a Model by which the Eng.' lish youth will he taught' to form' his cher- actor. It will not be this page ot our nineteenth century history, that our future statesmen will dwell upon, but rather the life,and ViritingB:antl:publie conduct of as typical an Englishman se is, to .be found throughout the four quarters of the globe; and whose future reward of poStliuttions lameaw_ill_be__toeliveagainnot_only4n-theL hearts but also in the chareeter of the individual Englishinan, as long as this race belealeits the civilized globe: , This, 'gentle- men, in few Words, is what '1 coneider to bp the treepictine. of :an Etiglieh'etetes- . man., ' 'Value the picture while, you have it With you andereasure it, minding the ,day when you 'riaaY e deprived of 'its earthly presentmentefor to man ean bequeath to posterity a brighter..heritage." - QIIEES 'VICTORIA'S visitto Menton° is hr second visit to Italy,The firf3t was paid three years ago in March, when she spent about three weeks at Arena and 13aveno, On the shores of Lake Maggiore, in company with the Princese Beatrece. -The Queen, whose youth was passed in great seclueion, reigned for eighteen years biffore She went out of het dominions. In 1855 she paid her firet foreign visit to Napoleon and Eugenie at the Tuileries with the Prince Consort. She and Prince Albert afterwards made private visits to his own early - home at Cobourg, and on On0„,O-C-CEP. sion the royal couple Jafsed a foetnight at a villa near Lucerne. Since the Queen's widowhood eholas been twice to Baden, once in 1,872 (when she passed - through Paris, fsiatibleing President niers by politely deelining his attentions), and again i /1876, when she travelled 'AB COU BB of Rosenau Under the escort of heli Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Lord Derby. All the Queen's little tours abroad have begun in the month of -March., She is nadf,e fortunate than Queen Anne, who by tho Ant of Settlement (repealed for the benefit of the Hanoverian Georges) was prohibited from leaving her realtne witheut the express' permission of Scotland. The -Qtmen's faveirite retreat is at Balmoral, ' Scotland, 10.14A.G1036.141141HCEIR4r114•Ak ° r• • • The TONVIA Olt Bethlehem, Pa., Sadly Afflicted Nvith Smallpox. Bethlehem, Pa., OesPatch eaYel The development of 200 cases of smallpox in. four days at South Bethlehem, with a popelation, of 4,000, while the disease is heurly4seireading, and nearly 100 houses/ under strict' quarantine, has created the most- intense ,excitement on both sides of the 'Lehigh River. The Bishop Thorp Seminary for young ladies has been ordered °Masa-, ',by the faculey, and the disease has been pronounced epidemic. All day the departing trains havebeen filled with • , students fleeing in alarm. Telegrams were being constantly received during the day from many • eeetions of the country ordering the Students to leave for home at once. Only a few cases of the dread disease were known to theauthorities on Sunday, but by Monday morning it was learned that some 60 cases existed. Indis- creet persona had burned a lot of bedding in a back.yarci at'the •rear of a:leading street, and the poisonous sinokewas wafted into many windows. In the cleanly seetion of the town the disease broke out with the greatest virulence, and the health authorities during the whole of Monday were kept busily at w6rk 'putting up yellow .flags of . warning at , the various houses. By Tuesday morning fully 100 casee were reported, and to -day the number revelled . 132. The public schools were not closed -until Monday. Prior to that rime people freely moved in the infected districts, citizens left their hoiriee where as high as five persons were down .with the disease, mid deliber- ately mingledwithall OfAinieS. Working - 'Men in .the mills 'did the same thing. Several doctor') and one, it is said, Under` the influence doctors, Very freely Went from houses where confluent smallpox existed, and, without changing their clothes, freely mixed with patients not afflicted, and veith other families. ,In this mariner the plague gained a terrible headway. ' Important to Traveller. Special inducements are offered yo_ii•-bY-- the Burlington route. It will par,4611 to read theiradvertisenaent to be -found else- where in this iseue. Tim British Illedfcal ,rournal says the revelations rciad,e-yfrom time to time by medical officelfgof health describe so much ignoranceeand .neglect, and.' stech fatal !sourceiii of disease, that itis not surprising the't "milk epidemics ” .are So numerous. I Dr. Goldie has be.en investigating the proba- bility Of the spread of a certahe epidemic which has jtist been visiting Leeds through the medium of tbe -milk supply.- He has come to the Conclusion that the way in Pahieh some of the milli suppliesiile`Stbred Iifl ditty houses, where.all the ninal opera. tions of a whole household are being carried out, With, in many oases, gallons of milk standing in open' vessels, is simply a ready method of spreading, typhoid or other in- feetious diseasee. , • First a Congh carried me And then a coffin they carried me off in l• This will not be your epitaph if you take your cough And Da. R..v.Pierce'S n Golden Medical BiScovery " in time. 11 is epecific for weak lunge spitting of blood, night - Sweats and the early stages of consuMption. By all druggists. Throat, Bronchial and Lung Diseases „ , a specialtY:°;' Send two stamps for large treatise • giving • self -treatment. Address. WOrld's "Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N.Y. The surtirelliorse railds of Nevriork City, whose collapse many people ,predicted as a consequence of the building of the elevated steana roads, actually carried 19,000,000 more passengers than the 'latter last Year. An increase of acconernOdations develops travel. , • The liver may well be called the scan& goat of ignorance, since most of the ills that flesh is- heir to have been atteibuted to liver complaint. Torpidity of this organ, with headaches,' biliousnees, Constipation and irritation of the kidneys end bladder are only results of that protean disease, dyspepsia, and D. WHEELER'S Compound. Efixir of Phosphates and Calisaya will cure the most obdurate of that class of affections by invigorating the digestive apparatus: Skobeleff took part by invitation in the christening of the Grand Duchess Helene, infant daughter of the Grand Duke Vladi- mir, the Ozar's brother. The 'ceremony took place.at Isarskoe-Selo Palace on, Sun - At the Meeting of the St. john'Presby: tery 'Rev. Principal McKnight, of Halifax, was nominated fir Moderator of the.next General Assembly, and Rev. Kenneth McLellan, of Prince Edward Island, few Moderatoreof the Synod. Lord Byron, in reference to a beautiful lady, wrote to a fricegul: "Lady — has been dangerously ill, but now elle is danger- ously well again." °Ainerica,n belles, when attacked by any of the ills that flesh is heir to may be kept killing and. avoid -being killed by taking Dr. R. V. Pierce's" Favorite Prescription," vehicle banishes feminine weaknesses and restores the bloom of health. By all druggists. Mr. John Reade, well known as a poet and litterateur of eminent ability, has been nominated by the Governor-General 58 000 of. the twenty members of the Royal „ Society of Canada. Von -Moltke laughs at the idea of invad- ng England by way of a tunnel under the , English Channel. I have five different plane for invading England, but I have not been able to, discover one for getting out The Grey Nuns of St. BenifaCe ma -k- ing arrangements for the erection of a new convent at St. Boniface. 4W1e ", JOHNSTON'S-w SARSAPARILLA CIXIIIAINT, 'ind`f&.'Purifqfnir the 1114ed. It has been in use for 20 years, and has Proved to be the best preparation in the market:ferSIOIE HEADACHE. PAITIN PLAINT,' PIMPLES'''.'ON'' THE PACE; DYSPEPSIA, PILES, end all Dieenses that ariseTrorn a Disordered Lever green Impure Wood: ' Thousands of our%liest people take it and give it toLbeir chil- dron Physicians prescribe it daily. Tlieso who use it once, recommend it,to cabmen It is made from Yellow Dock. Hondii.,, ras SarsaparIllo,_Wild Cherry, BtIllingia, Dandellen, SaeWras, Wintergreen, and other •well-known valuable Roots and' tierhs,,,--It la strictly vegetable, and can- not, hint the most delicate constitution. Itis one of the bed medicines in use for 'Begnatthig the Dowels. . • ' It is sold by all responsible druggists at one dollar for, a quart bottle, or Six bottles for five dollars: ' -Those-who ettnnot obtain a bottle of this medicine from their druggist may send us one dollar, and we edll send it. .W 0$1413TOIT lOtt,fatitlflos, •'Antuntelinoatt,, ' Owr.. WATTS St CD, Agente, Clinton. ORAIPs SPECIVIC ITIEDICINE TRADE MA RK ;Bile GureemaetdEyn.....g- THADE MARK. ai sat unfailing curs for seminal weak nes, Sperros.tor- reah, Impotency and all MBOMOU that follow as a sequence of Self- B•fore Taking mera°2', , Abuse; as loss of asusnitiuvder;a4miAL- TG-t&fts, Pala In the Back, Dimness of Vision, Prim:Watts Old Ago, and many other diremees that lead te Insanity or Consuroption and a premature grove particulars in our pamphlet, which we deers to send free by mail to every one. , The Specific Medicine is sold by all druggists at 81 per package, or Six package for $6 or will be eerie fres by mail on receipt ortherieffsney seithGaTellalifi" «MAW MEDICINE- Crt, TORONTO Ont., Canada MCOIEDM (FEOM BRAZIL.) The New Compound, its' won- derful affinity to the ,Digestive Apparatus and the Liver, increas- ing the dissolving juices, reliev- ing -almost instantly the dreadful results o.f Dyspepsia, Indigestion, "and the TORPID LIVER, makes Zopesa an every day necessity in 'vary house. It acts gently and speediIv in Biliousness. Costiveness, Head- ache, Sick Headache, Distress af- ter Eating,Wind on the Otomach, Heartburn, Pains in the Side and Back, Want of Appetite. Want ol Sizergy, Low Spirits, Foul Stom- ach. It invigorates tIze Liver, car. ries off all surplus bile, regulates the Bowels, and gives tone to the whCoditetristoenut and take it to You' Druggist and get a 10 cent Sample, Ora. large Pottle, for 76 cents, aid Reibirourneigiabar ii.botit it.. . • ' I , Alieuralgiu,•Sciatica,,tai4cigof • Birekaehe; ",-;Creness . :Che;t, Gout, QUitisy,;Ore ins's" :and Sprains, . and •,` Scalds, G.06errai •- Teetii.';' Ear' ie; Feet and Ears,-cr.• •1.1 'othor , Pains.- and • • • • Igo Preparation on :earth U11111.16. ST. SIX41138 OIL MI, a safe, sure, simple and' cheap External • Remedy. A trial entails ,hut the comparatively trifling outlay of 00 Centa,:tind evCry one sefferior ' with pain can have,,cheap and positive' proof id /•,:. Directions in Eleven liangnitacc. • . 001,D BY ALL DRUGGI8 IF.: AND D7; • • 7;I:gEDIO.INE, VOGELER...A7. • •,• grotrootounx otite wuropt lCEYT°iDg'1fLE' GfSe fiIIAsns en good rEe ee T1t m trat iat Of interest. II. RALE, cur4cn, , Aleieie or reeeins n HURON FOR SALE 33 the canada company, may .be seen at the °tee he,underiiipaini. FL •••1.13, Ciinton. . DH. DOWIlLEIY, 11 13 '. V, Et. B. 0.. ENGLAND, , DaH. SurFson,&e Offloo and residence next Molson's Bank,market square Clinton. ' D11 en 0An.P2taLr?Olst°tNee't—, 0°1irrntoinC;E01;p4IsitelltE.,4,1%1>lik:RNEliCtlb. 0inge4. Entrance by side date. - JAfi=e1.°E,',4 s'aVyTilc'e'P,--P2gE Office, in BEAVER BLoCE, 'ALBERT ST., centon. ' O1-015/TG, M. B., (GRADUATE OF TORONTO University,) Physician, Surgeon, bto., residence at Mr.911anning's, three doors east of' the Temperance Hall„Londeshoro, Ont. , • DB: REETE.--- OFFICE, ALBERT STREET-- iturnediately north ot Dickson's book store. Resi- dence, opposite the Temperance Hall, Huron Street ' Clio ton. Office hours from 8 a.m. to 6p.m. I{ 4111114011 LIGENSES IqD 'CERTIFICATES Apply at the 'Smith BloClr,or'attherdidence of the iiiiihseriber, near the London, Huron,- 4 Bruce Rai1iva.Y; J'ANIES SODTT, ',Bauer 01 Marriage Licenees..,9Bilten 1t1RS. WHITT, TEACIlElt OF AIII81C. P.BPILS -OA. attended at their own residerice,ifneeessary.. Be- aidence at lira. Watteraon's„ Re.itehbury St,' , Cliiiton. Rice's new meehodeauglitifetesikee. • • • • TAR. STANB-URY, GRADVATE OP' THE METil -ILISAL Department of Victoriarniversity, Tbronfo,for taer/y., of the Hospitals and Diebeinieries;.New York Coroner for the County of Huron, Ba RW. WILLIAMS, B. A., M. B.,' GRADIIA.TE OF Toronto Utliversityi member of tlue0ohlegeolPby Adana and Surgeons, Ont. OiimicE 8c RESIDENCE the house formerly occupied by Dr:Reeve, Albert street ' R. IIANNINO," ATTOliNEY-AT.I;AW, Sotr- Odziveyanceri die, Beaver Block, Clinton,. Ont. ". Alibusinesa lapel/aptly attended th. Ithurs;-,,a aina..ingp.m. • i ' D11. WORTHINGTON, 'PriY$IcLAN, 8leadEoet Aceoneheur Lio'entiate of the CollegoCiPhysician- and Surgeons.cf Lower C anada , and ProvnwialLicen, tia t e-aneICorenorfor the County o f Htiron: ""OftIceand: thsidearai-The building f oratell's ,•ocoupied by • Mi. Thiritires-', Enron street. ' • , Jo/x.10,1871. V. R.OAIITWR1GUT,SIJR65�N»ENTI1. 'Graduate- of the Eoyal College of Dental _Sur-geons-of-Ontario,-ha,a•openedlroonis in' - the "Victoria Block, Albert Street, Clinton, ,where he Wiliconatiintly: be in attendance., and•prepared to per - for& 'every Operation conuectod-witie Dentistry: Teeth eittaatefe,-er filled,with gold, gmalgain, or oiherfilling material.' ' „Artificial. teeth:int/arta/1 ifieza ' ozie to a . , MONEY TO. LEND RIVATE AND COMPANY FUNDS, at . lowest rates and on terms to suit borrowers. Fees' low. • • • A. 11, MANNING,' Solicitor and Conveyancer D'eVIAT' 'KEEFER, E. D.'S., , r) io istri s'r. 'rein the office of Trottr Sc.CaeSar, leading dentists ,TToronto. Second- I.Ionor •Graduate 'Royal College . • ' Dental Surgeona. • OFFICE, BEAVER BLOCK, CLINTON, OVER. E,OWLES: S015',$ JEWELLERY §ToRE. • , IMllitoba Northwest Laod °ice JOHNSTON, l'ISDALL & GAL BANKERS, '13.A:TTENBUII.Y. ST., dLINTOist T_ ii,ANSACT:4 GENEBAL BANRING1317SINESs. Mop OF a dy,ane eA, on Mortgages, &ad Notes Of hand: Etrafte issued payable at par, at all the oftleep of the , yeethant's , Dank of Canada. New Itork extdiihaga Wglit and sold.; PROIWTT IT1ENT1oN vAin To Col, LMOTTORSthrenghent Canada' and the United States. • ,• • . SAL'E' NOTES BOUGHT 'at oloe rates, And' radney aditaneed'te farmer] on their own notes, for shylaingtk qs time -to snit the' borrower. All• Marketable:seen/4. tIestatight and sold. - , BANKERS IN Nlant voacr. AdENTS oF THE MERCHANT'S BASH oP CANADA,, . , • 111 TEllEST ALIOTVE.0 ON 'DEPOSITS, A. JOHNSTON, 12. TISD.A_Lli, T) Staiathroy. , ,*: Clintoiiii,.„-;"". 1: PENTLAND TISDALLit- aUager. • 111112 Ti19,:--NEILANS, AGENT; IIARCO:VIE, ONT. ;Farmer% wishing td insure will find this Cone pany one of tho best ,and cheapest to, insure in, and will be waited on tit their hoes ;if informa- tion be sent to the Agents' °face. 43t • , • , S. -'111017iTi_..B. esc BEAVER ' . • • . - • • ‘. Etave on hand a. choice assortment of 'CLOCKS, WATCHES, JFWELLERY„and PLATED 'WARE; • of all kinds. " • ' • „ I:10;h WatchpoiIc.) AmTwoRK KOPBITTEfl " '(A Medicine, not a Drink,) CONTAINS ...1110F8,,,DUCiI174 ALAIN/DRAKE, 'DANDELION:, . •Awb 771ZT,/:7RET ANT., BIt0r.311:1)5CULQ1TAL5. TIER OF Att.., OXIIBE BITTERS, ]E3C '4C All Diseases of tlieStoniach, Bowels, Bldon, LiVer, Xidneyil, and UrinaryOrgans, ber Voutineas, Sieeplesenessand.espocially ' Peinale.Complainte. • $ 61 000 :111 COLD. . . will Iso paid for, it Calla they will ,not ceretiir help, or ter anything linpure OiiniurbasiT • , feund in therm? '' • , . , . ASk your druggist for Rop...13f6ters and try them before you sleep. Tnice »� Uthor. 0.1. in rLfl absolute anti irresistible cure for Drunkenetisc use at 000211 tot/hobo and narcotics. pagnimissin BEND Eon Cuicitraan, Ali nInve told by druggIne.„ . • , • Hop hittars,Mfg. Co., ltocho,def, Ni 1, al'prento, Oat HE undersigned b as Made inrangernents With 'seve- ral leading Real Estate Agents in Mankoba to Teti 011 oftiee here for the sale and purchase of real estate in Manitoba and thiblorthwekt,Teiritoriers:. •„Maps andall info/malign willbo received, about let January. Land sold, and bought with little expense,and all inforniation given. ' A. H. MANNING, Solicitor, idtc., Clinton. . . MONEYLEND. MONEY TO LEND, ON REAL ESTATE, AT LOWEST RATES. Apply to C. 111DOUT, Clinton. 0,11fEllt 10 LOAN on the, Straight Loan Sys' pem. Loans of large, sums negotiated at special • rates. -Interest at loW rates. , JAMES SCOTT, Barrister, • 'Ihi3t1 or -at Clinton • PRIVATE FUNDS to lend at low rates of interest, on easy ternaE. Caroreyaneing charges moderate. 'OFFICE , BEAVER .BLOCII 'CLINTOk. • • • " 46 ' r TakOoLiffs ORTG AG ES, , NOTES, AND, OTHER'. Pod, Securities Purchased. CONVEYANCING. W. Clinton , Nov. 9,1881.. 47 E MOLSO N Ino.porjY At of I'arliateent,1855. 2,000,000. eacl, OfAce, Montreal. nt. ••`, Y.,•Ef. R. 140LSON;-.... – ,F.VOLFERSTAN THOMAS, General Manager. ad, 'discounted )Cottections made Drafts 118 ••1464 1,801aergliiint9anadndsoldn aocriNtcft: pert :es: T:ge current .rLa ote us. aFrim, azimer. I INTEREST ALLOWED Clinton. all Descriptions of Property, AT LOWEST RATES. 0. RID0ITT, Casten. In YOU ARE TRAVELLING 0 BAST IWBST 0° BUY YOUR TI KETT} F11031.. --- Jas, Thompson, Town Agent C.T,R. .J3IDDLEOOMBE, Watch and Clock Maier JEWELLER, dfc., wonli reapootfuily,announobto hies ClItIOT0505 and,the • • ginerilly, that he, heti senioved into hie, former . heading, on • , AIABAT STRilET, 'OPPOSITE• TUE •MAIIEET; Wiere he win Itcep on hand a BEd 011orfinent•of *Qlocks, Wttclsts, Jewellery, ici Selveribar • of till Whieli- he Win cell at, r'eason'able.rates. Iteefereed every description proMptly'atteladod to. , • --2:-BILIDLE0OgI3E,,A143iaT ,STInin • cc's. 5,1878.--