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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1907-05-23, Page 4•rt 111 234.41 1907 " The Clinton, News.Record (LONDON) India Pale Ale Preindieed and Winn:onions vendora may SUagest others, but Con;pare it *NY way you will---pusity, freedom from acidity. palatableness-Labatt's Ale is surpass- ed by notife, equalled by few -at, about ludf the price of best imnorted brands. W. F. Laxtea, a veteran western : newspaper man, is damgerously ill in Winnipeg of para1ys6.. . THIS TONIC BUILDS "P. Many medieines stimulate, lirealr down, leave you worse than ever. Ferrozone s iffereitt-Lt'a a blood- ': former, a nerve-streng hener, a body - bander. Pale anaemic: girls are given color and vigor. The tired end sleep- less are strengthened and restored. "Better than all tonics I found Per- rozone" writes Mrs.. EL F. Castietoa -of Woodetocl?. "I was completely run down, eheeks were blenehedaliPs white and had every sign of anaemia. Ferrozone added to my weight, gave me strength, ambition and good health." Nothing better, try Fer- rezone yourself, 50e per box at all dealers. Mr. Lansing Lewis, the Teeb,surer of the Ang:can • Synod of Montreal, has resigned, as a peotest against what - he considers en illegitimate diversion of funds. • Cures Spavins The wbrld wide success of IfendaWsSpavin Care has been won beca ate this remedy can—and does -cure Bog and Bone Spavin, Curb, Splint, Ringbone, Bony Growths, Swellings and Lameness. Mnsvban, ONT., May ?e "I used KendaWs-Spavin Cure - on a. Bog Spavin which cured it . completely.' ' G. MASON. Price V-6 for t. Accept no substitute. The great book—Treatise on the Horse" -free from dealers or 34 Or. II. J. KENDALL CO., Enasbarg Falls, %moat, U.S.A. A serious revolt threatens among, -the wine -growers of southern; France.• A laborer has been arreSted a..t Ber-' fin far making a face at the ..Emper-: , THE CAUSE OF SORE FEET.. Examine them carefully and yoe'll. .probably find' 'cern& Whether hard,' :••.selt or bleeding, apply PWtitagn'S Extractor. It's. •painless, Ws. sure, 'and above all, mid( to act. Insist on, • only "Putnam's. ' • • The Socialists gains in the Aust- rian elections are not so great aa an- tioi pated.. , RemIting instances of cannibalism . are reported tfrom the German West _African cOlonied. H, FOR h CLEAR COMPLEXION!! A clear complexion is the. outward. 'evidence of inward 'cleanliness. In bad health the face becomes- a sign7 hoard, telling of disease within: If, .•yellow, is not properly secreted; if pallid, the kidneys are faulty skin is murky and dark circle S be- eneath tho eyes look for conStipation.; 'Whatever bite rause, no remedy cOsii- . pares with Dr. Hasnilton's Pilis which are mild, safe,' purifying and -vitalizing in their action. • They give ;a marvelous rosy tint to the cliae,ks, brighten the-eiies and establish health that defies age and * disease. Sold .everywhere in 250 boxes. Il. aira 1 IT 1earr ,,LANT . 'PEAS , - Field Peas have sold high for several years, -75 and 77 cents a bushel last year. This year's export demand will I be keen,-pront there for shrewd farmers. .PPP I Two profits n a pea.erop,-the peas I. and the vines,• -'.rich cow -fodder, valuable greed manure, high in nitro- gen. Now that the pea.bug has quit I busines4 in Canada, peas PAY and Pay BIG. 1 PPP Easy crop to handle,-quioktrowing, -does well even on 'tired' land, -and IaSUREMARKETatprofitablepricei• for all yeti can raise. Plant 1110aB early,- April and early May is best. 1 S 0 W I some ssoon giell 2 11111021111S61119111111,111=o 61010111111.wire HATCHING A REVOLUTION. General Toledo to Lead Expedition • Against • Cabrera. *Mexico City, May 13. -It htte been learned that Gen. Salvador Toledo, who assisted Gen. Barrillas in the last Guatemalan revolution, and who is designated as the leader of the coming revolution against the Cab- • rera Government of Guatemala, is now en route to New Orleans, and ,will come to Mexico within a week or ten days. Every • Guatemalan revolutionary junta in Central America and in the United States and Memo is now ac- tively at work on plans for the new revolution against President Cabrera, 'and it is believed that aetual fighting in Guatemala will begin within thirty days. • Gen. Toledo is said to have com- pleted arrangements for the invasion of Guatemala from the Honduran bor- der before leaving Meshia, Nicara- gua, where he has been stationed for some time past. •Further arrange- ments will be made in New Orleans, and from that place he will proceed to Mexico to confer •with the Gaeta mien exiles in this city. It is X1QW almost cettain that he will lead the new movement against , Guatemala. It is elate asserted that upon his arrival here the provisional Government, which has been contem- plated fon eome time, will. be oegarn ized, -With Gen. Toledo as provisional 'President. . • According to the refugees, a •verit- ,able reign of terror nnw exists in Guatemala. It is stated that more 'than 10,000 of the wealthy and busi- ness classes have left Guatemala .since the alleged attempts on Presi- -dent Ciabrera s hfe 'awe weeks ago Every vessel leaving San Jose for Mexican ports is crowded by the flee- ting people. • .. • The stories Of the atrocities prac- ticed in tire overcrowded prisons are revolting in the extreme. Cabrerae it was leafned, has now 20,000 troops on the Mexican border and 11,000. more on the Honduran frontier. — • The situation in, this city is un- changed. •Ofacialdom •regards • the Guatemala affair as a closed incident as far as Mexico is concerned •• .POSTED AT LLOYDS AS LOST. No Hope For Safety of Moncton •Ves. • sel, Island City. - Moneton, N. B., May 13.-W. H. Edgett, of this city, who some months ago feared thejoss of his three -masted 400-tott vessel, Island City, has aband- oned all hope of tidings of her or her crew, and has posted her at Lloyds as lost.. • The Island City left Chatham, N. B., November 28th last,with a cargo of laths for New York. She was last reported passing through the Straits of Canso. Since then nothing has been heard of her or her crew of eight men, of which Howard Priddle of St. John was captain. The cargo was owned by Mr. Edgett and insured, but the ves- sel was not. ' . • It is a strange coincidence that this itt'the second fatality in, the Priddle family within two years, Captain Priddle's brother Was •master of the ichooner Wanderian, when that ves- sel was wrecked off Cape Cod a year ago last February, with the loss of all hands, including the captain's wife and two children. • JEALOUSY PROMPTS CRIME. . Woman Shoots "Her Little Son and ' Then: Suicides. - . . . Pittsburg, Pa., May 13. -Because eihe.lme* that her husband was pay ing-attention-te -another woman, who lived but a few squares • from their home, Mrs. Carrie -Sigsworth shot and killed'her 18 -months -old son and then shot and killed'herself, at their home, 807 Jackson' street, Allegheny. At first it was supposedthat the deed had been committed on account of Mrs. Sigsworth's ill-he,alth,' but Sigeworth.adraitted to StiperinteallOnt of Police Glennthat jealousy had been the caulie of the awful -crime. e -Ine-n. letter whiCh -she-left .to her husband Mrs. Sigswarth did not ina! braid him; but asked him for ap- pearance sake not to bring "that' oth- er woman p, i a the house until I am.. ene, cold," a not to give her her furs and di onds. The Sigsworths are said to Me from prominent families in ndon and the parents' of both have been telegraphed for. . In '-'1411arrbw Confines. • • The Indian reserves in the vicinity Of Edmonton are to be enclosed with wire fences as it result of the progress of civilization; and the greater num- ber of residents in the neighborhood of the Indian settlements. • Prices are now being secured from the local hardware dealers by James Gibbons, the Indian agent, and it is the intention shortly to purchase in the vicinity. Of siitty miles of .wire. The poets necessary for the fences are now being got out by the In- dians of the White Whale Lake, Alex- ander, and Michael reserves, and about:20 miles of fence will be put around each reserve. As a reault of the recent sales , of Indian land the territory held by. the -aborigines is greatly eitcumseribed, and its complete enclosure is a task of mach less magnitude than it would have been several years ago. Lady Minto as a Tiger Shot. Lady Minto and her daughters are remarkable for the test with which they throw themselves-intoany sport: that offers. While in Canada they gained the reputation of being the best and most graceful women skaters Ottawa has ever seen, and in India they have established something of a, record as tiger shots. Shooting at Kolabari it few weeke ago Lady Minto killed a particularly fine animal, while Lady Eileen Elliot accounted for a cub and a full-grown tiger in the BOUM of one day't sport. CLING NO 01.6 CUSTOM% '1.••••••••11M71.0 White Man's Invasion Has Not Inter- rupted Tribal Relations. Although the White man is fast in- vading the hunting grounds of the Ba.tchawana Indians, who inhabit the wooded shores of Lake Superior on the Canadian aide, the march of civ- • ilizatieu has not wiped out the tribal relations of the red men, who still meet annually to elect their chief, at which time they don gala attire and hold strange ceremonies, says a Sault Ste. Marie special. It is customary at the meetings when the election of a chief is held for the candidates for the honors of the tribes to come north and addrese their people, setting forth the reasons -hy they shou1d Tee chosen. .1., Attend In Finery, Many strange dances are sometimes indulged in, the music for which is furnished by rude instruments some- what resembling drums. All the mem- bers of the village down to the pa - nooses gather on such occasions, the women being attired in all their fin- ery, e Years ago, on the site of. what is now Fort Brady, the Michigan Soo, before the red men had been forced to mone further north into the Cana- dian woods, they worshipped annual- ly at the foot of a huge elm tree which was supposed to contain the spirit of a beautiful Indian. maiden. As the story goes, an Indian brave was.. smitten by the charms of the dusky lass, who Ni as the daughter of a great chief who ruled over the tribes north of the- Straits .of Mack- inac. But they quarrelled, and in his. anger he struck her to earth. The Great Spirit came and. took her, away and her lover fled into. the forest and was seen no more. Calling For Revenge. It was at the foot of the elm that the tragedy occurred. Some time af- ter the Indians were startled by the strange sounds which came from the tree when the wind blew through its branches, and they imagined that it was the. spirit of the maiden ceiling out to them to avenge her death. ' And so every week they gathered and laid trophies of the hunt at the foot of the tree and piled green boughs there as tokens of their sorrow. The tree would then sigh its blessing on the people, and for a. moment a strange white light would pervade the woods. In the darkness that followed the red rnen would wend their . way back to the village with heads. bowed in reverence: It was under this tree that genera- tions ago they gathered and held their elections. It was believed that when the right candidate appeared the spir- it of the tree would make known its choice by .uttering low moans. Then the vote would be taken. But when the army of Uncle Sam invaded the valley of the St. Mary's and built a road around the rapids, the tree was cut down. Then more settlerscame and gradually the Indians went across i the border nto Canada, where they have been holding their annual elec- tions tothisday. Postafice Promotion. • Intense feeling has been stirred up in postoffice circles in Winnipeg through the appointment of eastern- ers to responsible positions at the of- fice, many ' of which, it is alleged, have been made without consultation and the consent of the local postmee, ter. Local employes claim that era pointments to different positions on the staff. of the keel office ' shamed rest With the postrnaiter, which, of coarse, would do away With the pos- sibility, of bringing in Outsiders. As matters, eitand now,owever, it is lls\ claimed that George Re superinten- dent of postoffices of the Dominion, has has taken upon himself to\ aim ap- pointments in the postoffice, • 's lat- est action being the bringing in of Thomas' T. Bower; of Toronto, to irn. nipega The latter came .to Winnipeg last summer, taking tip a position in the office, .ad • has been recently ap- pointed superintendent. , It is now stated he is' now slated for the posi- tion of deputy postmaster,. Made va- cant through the death of the late . William Braden. So much have the employes resented the appointment Of Mr.. Bower to the superintendency that already_ there- have been ten re- signations. With the prospect- that Bower may be made deputy poatmas- ter, things have reached a 76t,i, en a general walkout may be e cted; ' „--- -7 -Deported to -Egiand.--7 —7 Jennie Cauldwell . n English degen- erate; who some4ime ago, at Teton - to, was orderedtd be deported to Eng- land,*willeelfave to serve her sentence of six months in the Mercer reformea tor efore she ca.rt be taken out 'of Qaiiada. The young woman, who has a long string of convictionsagainst her, both in Canada and England, in addition to the present sentence,,Wae sent' to the Mercer for an indeffaite• period by the' police megistrate of Ilitinilton. It was thought she emild be deported without completing her, sentence, but Chief of Police Grasett was notified. by Mr. Armstrong, pro- vincial 'inspector ' of asylum e and prisons, that under the Immigration Act the girl could not be deported un- til she served her time. Inspector Dunbar', of the 'detective department, stated that it is the intention of the city authorities to deport every unde- sirable immigrant that comes into To- ronto. Isaac Isaacs, who has been •ordered to he deported"by the Immi- gration Department at Ottawa, will sail from Portland, 'Maine, in a day or two. An officer VW be sent from Montreal to escort the prisoner. to ,Portland. _Canadian Peers Without Heirs. It is a noteworthy and curious feet that of our three Canadian peereges • not one 48.8 an heir male to continue it. Lord Stiathcona's title will pre- sumably descend one day to his daughter,*Mrs, Howard, who will thus add another to the small .and select • company of peeresses intheir own right, Lotd Mount Stephen, though he has been twice married, has no children; and the one other Canadian peerage, that of Mitedonald of Earns- eliffe, is now held by the widow of the first Lord Macdonald, and AA yet no provision has been made for its inheritance inr her only daughter. ' Get Your Hair Pulled. --EIowever-inucli-you- may ;lave resent- ed it when your small brother pulled your hair, he was BlICOUSCIOUS13." doing you a great favor. Though he did nal' know it, he Was going through a. bean:` V exereise. A health ealturist hae Made the diecovery that men who go • bald en top of the head, yet continue te possess long flowing beards, illustrate the fact that puullng the hair makes It .grow. The gentle massrio given the • beard every time it is pulled keeps It Real Modesty.tinand strong. ,A new method of "Was yonr marriage a failure?" n& mssaging the scalp by gently and per - "No, but my wife's wee." slstently pulling the hair has become •fad. 1 AMONG YUKON INDIANS. Thirty Years' Service With Resident; of the' Canadian Nbrthwest. One of the makers of history in Western Canada is now spending the evenings Of his days in Winnipeg, venerated by those who know him and his life's journey. The active years of his life were chiefly spent above the Arctic Circle. The Yukon, the Klondike and other regions since made famous by gold were traversed by hitit long ago. He was ordained deacon in 1852 and ten years later was selected to establish a mission at Fort Aux Lia,rds, Mackenzie Riner dis- trict, but proceeded instead to, Fort Yukon. ProceedinLine1862.1romeavhat--eVaa• Wen called the Rea River settlement to Fort Yukon. Archdeacon McDonald labored there among the Indians com- posed of • numerous tribes and who annually assembled there forahe pur- pose of fur tradingwith the Hudson Bay Company. During his eight years' stay he visited the Indians in the surrounding country both winter and summer. Thousands of miles were tra- versed annually, either in canoe or boat in summer time and on snow- shoes or in dog sled during the wine ter, In 1865 scarlet fever spread. among the Indians and many of them were carried off by ethe disease. Gained Many Converts. During the first four years only the infants were baptized, but then it was deemed advisable to baptize the adults and they were examined each summer as they came down to the fort with their furs and in later years the. archdeacon traveled around from post to ,post administering baptism wherever necessary. From Fort Yu- kon tribes of Indians were visited about four hundred and fifty miles down the river at the spotawhere the Tanana enters the Yukon, where such rich gold deposits were afterward found. At first the Indians held them- selves aloof from the missionary, but after three or four visits all gave their consent, over one hundred of them receiving baptism; and the following year there were three hundred more. These pdople •had to lie addressed through an interpreter, one of them- selves who could speak the language of •the Tukudh, the people among whom the missionary resided. During these forty-two years of residence in the frozen north Archdeacon McDon- old was accustomed to travel thous- ands of miles each year. A blinding blizzard or a windsterm did not hind- er him on his mission. For thirty odd years his work went on Without ine terinntiori, 1864 the great rush for gold began, and rapidly the coun- try around Fort Yukon became civiliz- ed and to -day is Sathriviat city known: as Dawson City, with ten thousand people. • . CHAD'S BEAR *SONE; • • Familiar Figure'at W.ell-Known Win- . ' nipeg Hostelry Strangled. .Winnipeg last week suffered the loss . of one of its widely known "citizens," in the person of a lame bear, who - met death in •Bghting for freedom. "Chad's Bear," as everybody called the ;mime", has been for years one of the chief attractions -at Deer Lodge, a popular suburban hostelry, owned by "Rod" Mackenzie, son of the presi- dent of the Canadian Northern. Sil- ver Heights the suburb is called, and was the home of ' Load Strathcona when he was commissioner of the Hudson Bay Co. The bear took his name from H. W. Chadwick.; the* genial manager of the hotel. The ho- tel was burned kat month, and now the bear is gone; the former is to be rebuilt at once,• but.--1-1-Chadfs Bear" • • NATIVES PREPARE TO LEAVE, Eruptions of Stromboli and Etna Con- tinually Increasing. Messina, May 13. -The eruptions of Etna and Stromboli volcanoes increas- ed as the night came on. An enor- mous volume of smoke and quant - ties of red-hot projectiles are beiug thrown out fiom Etna in all direc- time. There' are also am:Ahmed loud ezplosions and earth shocks. These latter are especially severe at the Etna Observatory, which is at an ele- vation of 9;000 feet, and onlY 1,700. feet away from the crater. The ob- servatory lies above the forest district in a zone where scarcely any animal life exists. In winter this is covered with snow -and in summer with dry The latest reports from that island declare the situation to be more ter- rifying, A few weeks ago Stromboli was tovered with rich vegetation; now the island is stricken and deso- late, everything having been buried under ashes, Every boat at the is- land has been pressed into service by the inhabitants to aid in their escape from the danger, Resembles Vesuvius Eruptions, Frank A. Pereett of New York, as- sistant director of the Royal Obser- ✓ atory on Mount Vesuvius, and the companion of Prof. IVIatteucci, the director of the observatory during the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in April, 1906', retained here yesterday, after having visited Mount Etna and Stronn bon. He Made most important ob- servations and took interesting photo- graphs. He said: "The disturbances much resemble those which preceded the eruption of Mount Vesuvius last year. The smoke. is now more dense and the dynamic force in the main craters has increas- ed. The roaring of the volcanoes and the violent discharges gives the im- pression that stronger eruptions are imminent." Grey Ashes Fall. J • Naples, May M. -Enormous clouds of grey ashes appeared Saturday from the sea, •darkened the sky and fell on the town. Considerable apprehension was felt when it was realized that the clouds were ashes and cinders Irom Mount Etna and Stromboli. A similar phenomenonwas noticed along the southern coast and caused panics in several places. • PERKINS! BODY EXHUMED, • • Kidneys Had Not Been Removed - Crown EVidence at Fault. Cayuga; May 13. -The exhumation of the body of Henry Perkins has re- sulted in the discovery that the kid- neys had not been removed for medi- cal examinatiori, although Dr. Bauer of Hamilton, in testifying for 'the crown at the recent trial of Mrs. •1VItettie Perkins on the Minder 'charge, declared- that, to the 'best of his un- derstanding, the organs had been tak- en • to Toronto for analysis by Dr. Ellis, and. had not been. returned. It le understood that the remains were brought to light at the request of the widow, who wished to have established that the crown had erred in its 'evidence as to one' or more particulars of the autopsy. She re - garde the 'discovery as of considerable importance,. and has. :comniunkitted with Gideon Grant of Toron o, asso- ciate counsel for the defene. 'ring the late proceedings, • The exhumation was ear •d o p in the presence of Dr. Snider, r ter (solicitor), Rev. Mr;iJ the Presbyterian Chum 'IN ry, a brother of •Mrs •r Heaslip; a brothe n - Grant, a local ti.' ber So successhai y has process been perfo .1 e. showed little trac • will be hard to replace. altlgergli sever Bruin had a great capacity for Soft . Op the buri drinks, and after visitors had irri- -little group gated at the bar, which was just der went ' beyond the city limits ,and not ipider of reino regulations, they took ginger .p to found the bear, who \ handled it smenti- the • th fleetly as any man. The bean e `got loose last' wedlc and at- te pied to ,destroaaa big. buffalo 1 • in the DeerLodge Zoo and • . ' He46ught hard, a ee strangled h' to escape. "' he local we tied in his effo ear" WBS 80 an, and t day when he rg from his inter sleep w recorded regularly in the local papers as a„guide to the people, signifying that spring was come. "Chad's Bear",will be repro- duced , by . the tmrideriiiist-and---will- -sirbifoiMic new hotel this glimmer, but, . alas! he will be on the '"water waggon:" Many a person who has en- joyed the *famous "possum" dinners at the Lodge will mourn the loss of "Chad's Bear." • THE CANADA WIND. _ Whence bloweth the Canada wind? Not out of the west,' though the west winds _bear Lightsomehours and the joy • of spring, ' And the heavenly blueof a wild birds' wing; For the heart of the violet scents the ' air, And the scant of the violet's all too 1 air -Its flowers in my hair to bind - The west wind's of the lea, And palls: on the soul of me. Whence bloweth the Canada wind? Oh, net from the Beath, for the eolith . • wind brings • Summer and dim, sweet, forest deeps, And a bird in the • wildwood hidden keeps And mellow songs in the green light sings; And fidwer, and song, and mystical • things e My. send with drearaings blind - Tho south wind's of the sun, My soul'sfor a day Undone. . Whence bloweth the Canada wind? Not out of the east, for the east wind chills With its dank, grey mists and its attires of rain, • And dawn is foredooming again and again; Noon's dripping sky with greyness filler And night is black on the endden hills, And never a Star I find- - The east wind's of the sea, And drives to the heart of me. Whence bloweth the Canada Wind? Its pathway is the way to the world's white rim, • The strange, white tracts of the bar- ren zone, immutable, luminous, wild and lone; Spaces enduring through aeons dim. Veiling the sea, and the bine sea's brim, • Striving forever, yet never free, Petters which ever' bind- • The Canada Wind is the keen north wind; The wind of the secret sea, • And quiekens the soul of me. Helen• M. Merrill. •. 4,4 0 Caul- • ard of ph Cur - ns; Mr. -Ind Mr: hant. • emblaming that the body decomposition. ths have roissed urrounded by the cemetery, Dr. Sill - h with the operation • e kidneye. One was cally .untouched, While partially gone. They aced • it jar and sealed. and • sent to Toronto. fore the. tri opened, the defen torney-General for remains exhumed, bet showed hesitancy, and dropped. , • Mr. Grant, for the defen ed The Toronte Star with n a suit will be brought for libel in certain published m late heap --fence. • of Mrs: Perkins epplieat to the Me- er to have the he department e matter was has serv- tice that alleged de - CANADA'S MINERAL, WEALTH. Prof. Adams', of McGill, Optimistic Address to -Empire .Club. Prof. Filink D. Adams of McGill University, Montreal, in a recent ad- dress to the Empire Chita Tomato, on "The Undeveloped Resources of the Dominion" said that it was somewhat like carrying coals to Newcastle 'few anyone from a 'distance to speak upon. the mineral resources of the Dom- inion when Toronto itt in itself such an important. mining centre. The speaker went on to show itaw the mineral output of the Dominion compared with that of twenty 'yeara ago. In 1886 the total :mineral ex- ports only amounted to $22,221,000. In 1905, which itt the last year for which official reports have been made out, the amount was $68,574,000,While for 1906 it may be safely estimated as :exceeding the seventy million mark. The country was generally regarded as an agricultural one, . our mineral resources having less attention given tothem than they deserved. The speaker pointed out that this view was to a great extant erroneous, as . the mineral output of the Dominion had now reached two-thirds of the amount of the agricultural exports of Canada. Prof. Adams then asked .this ques- tion, "Will this increase continue, or will it decrease?" In answering his own question the professor argued from geological data that the growth not only would in all human prat, - ability increase, but it was quite within the bounds of possibility that still greater riches might be discov- ered, the existence, of which we are at present ignorant' of. The remain- der of the address consisted of a careful analysis of the products from theit Various districtsof the coal, gold, nickel and copper, iron and sil- ver in the Dominion, and pointed out • that so fat as-ene could judge by geology these products were not likely to diminish. Entertains Prince of Wales. tendon,May 13. -Ambassador Whitelaw Reid and MM. Reid enta‘ tabled the .Prince and Princess of Wales and other distinguished per- sons at dinner at Dorchester 11=4e on Saturday evening. At the request of the Princess whose first visit it 'as to the Park' lane residence of the American Ambassador, the dinner was Cuita -an infernal" affair. 041141,0040044104140411004100410400 Consumption is less deadly than it used to be, Certain relief and usually complete recovery will result from the following treatment: • -Hope, rest, fresh air, and—Scott'," Ematsion. ALL DRUGGISTS 50o, AND $1.00. 40/0414/10/41"0"0/104"0"1:40041"3"0"0"044 THE RECORD - ADMIRAL FURNACE 1'600 fills the demand for a fur - Race possessing the larg- est amount of. grate sur- face in proportion to the diameter of the top of the fire pot. It possesses all the advantages , of a re- turn flue construction. The "Admiral" has the largest ash pit of any furnace- on the market, thus permitting. the free re- inoval of ashes. - Wood or coal may be burn- ed in the "Admiral" furnace. • Write. for Catalogue 102 THE MORD FOUNDRY& MAtHINE CO. ‘Citge9 trilt Foundries at MOidCTON, N. b. E. MONTREAL, PQ `1';i lAiliamarem ,T,V4V6,,:61,: , ' For Sale In HARLAND BROS., CLINTON° •.inairacipmwsisameeleesals • The settlement of French, troops. in Oudja, Morocco, is said to have. eVery• appearmice of being a permatiert one. • The weak, fluttering heart becomes stroog and regular wh,ea - Millers Compound Iron Pills are. used...:Sold• by W. A._ Mc_Carenell; dyaggiat, Clin- ton. - • It is expected that. another spedrial venire of one hundred men will have te be euramened for the Haywood trial. 7 • - „LIKE A TeISU IN, THE. ;virr. , •That'e Ji pain comes: Wel sit rear aen'apen window, get stiff neck' or ette back, Perhaps cook oft :*4-4rie A Wily after exertien--elieumatiem develops. apteed •' what you May, hut money oan'tehuy anything he-tter than Pol- son?s Netviline, Its penetrating pow- er enableaalt. toreach deep tisaues,- that's- vehy ita cares aches that all else' Can't t,oncli.- Far outward appli- e° Mien, we guarantee five times more strength than in any , other liniment. Ihwerdlyit'sharmless and as elite - as the hereafter ito easei a.t once. Don't adeeat a, substitute for Polsoo's Nervillec which is the one great househpld penacea, of teday; ' . Three perseas were traeripledi death and 'Many injured in a panie in, a negro splfool 111 Indian Territory.. . _ • .GREATeDISTRESS IN HER . , THROAT. Not aii uncomnion experience was that of Mrs. II. S. Wilinot �c Ors failed, stIU at keuick cure was „ fOUnd in, "Catarrhozorne.' Notice this statement : "I have been a most dreadlul sufferer . freezi bron- chial trouble and catarrh.. On damp eys I evOeld hawk and sutler great d tress in my threat. I used all ki st of medicine but didn't get per- m t relief till. 1 used Catarrh - °Zone. It has strengthened my throat, cured n cough and made me enitire- ly well.' Refuse substitutes for the one renal) e ,bronchial and throat cure. All de lers se1l,7"Catarrhezone" in ..5C WO; $1 . 0. siees. - • "Kelvin.; owned by Mt. T. Ambrose. Woods,.,was the winner of the King's Plate* race .at. the opening *of the sPriateyg: meet•at7the • .Woodbine on. -Sat- tird • State ei.Ohlo,,..City of - :Toledo; Limas: .CotinVe-esS. Frank J. Cheney *makes: Cloth that senior partner of ,the firm:oiF. J. Cheney &Co. - deing .busineas hi • the *City of Teletta, County and state .• aforesaid, and that said firirt will pay the. 'slim of ONE HUNDRED DOL.!, • ,LARS for eachand every case of 'cat- . errh: that cannot be cured .by the use. of Hail's Citanrh Cure. • s., .. FRANK J. CHENEY: • Sworn to before . the and subscribed in my presenee, this • 6th day of DOC - wither, .A: D. '1886. A... W. GI.;EASON • (Seal) .-Netary ' liall!s Catarrh Cure is )kdli inter. naily,, and :acts directly t the blood - end' mucOns, surfaces . of 'the system Send for testimonials free. . • ,. * Toledo, .. Sold by Druggists, 75c Take Hairs Family Pills efor .• cane . ,*': sttpation hxy Relay River Settlers endorsed the. movement for secession from Oa- . tarifa \ ' Burglars got e $400in dianionds in a. raid . on „Iiefoe",s jewellery • steee, " : PoRmvErt - : • Mrs: Wilslow's Soothing Syrup has been used by millions of mothers for • their -children While teething. IL dis- turbed by night•and broken of your • rest by . a sink-clilld suffering and crying with pain of cutting teeth Send at once and -get it bottle of "Mrs. Wilslow's Soothing Syrup" kir child- ren teething. It Will relieve the poor . little. sufferer immediateiy. Depend .upen it, mothers, there is .no mistake _about it, n .cures Diarrhoea, reguk la,tes the Stomach and Bowels, curets Wind Colic, softens the Gums, teduces Inflammation and gives tone and en7, ergy to the whole system. "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing 'Syrup" for child- ren teething is pleasant to the taste and is. the prescription Of one of the oldest and best feniale physicians and nurses in the United. States. Price' 25 cents a bottle. Sold by all drug- gists throughout the. world. Be sure, and • ask for"Mrs. WinslOw's Sooth- ing Syrup. • The True Men o 'the Russian. Em- pire have demanded the diaaraniment of all the Jews in the country. ter, Pc.V4f, ”re cce. • Idl41111. ear._ Sold 'byr A CATARACT OF COAL is needed in most ranges to provide an evenly -heated, bake - compelling, perfectly regulated oven,—and th.2n it often fails. Buck's "Hap,pg Thought" Range needs Iittle isq: Long experience; ingenious construc- tion and exclusive patentsemake it the most per- fect; most econo- mical cooking appliance known.. oho .903111tan II um atom da., Ltd. braiittord Itroatraal Wiattxasit Eros, • Clinton