HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1888-01-13, Page 8111
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The. ,school Tawe la. W4.407,']b !t relriued lftltt<the ob'eat ,Ors,
g (ormaitu .aehooIe;
* full:eized hatabery, With it eft
t atff fteeP initlioel eddie., will; be t
tare of`�the, Ottawa fisheries B
blbit;on'''
Vie
�h 'Montreal:pplice force is to
reorganiz,.ed andincreased. One h
'dretl and fifty additional wen are.
quir'ed.
The nit
U ed• 'States G
'� yr
o enm
will not entortaiii the Canadian h
•eitporters' claim for a refund of ails
ed excess of duty paid,.
his is said to be the severest .wint
-eveCFtperienced at Vienna. Deat
•from exposure are reported da
end the water supply ie begiuning
fail.
A car load of straw shipped fro
'St,Johns, P.Q.,on the Southern Ra
road a few days since,lwas overhaul
at Newport,' Vt., by the customs off
labs and 38 cases of gin and 18
`.-'brandy were found.
•
>l ar t a t it l . takes a
lion dollaii in mull. t, ,cola, and.pao
,er,, Vet AO normal,;ever ; f
are„ ,demands of the 4 noiioalt people,
p a Labor iroub]ea: in connection. with
the IMNSufAott]< 0 of flint glues .have
pad- lod to a general c1Q$ing of the works
bre throe hout the United States. It is
= est mated that 15,000 men are thus
be tbrOWD eat of elnlil ywezt.
un- , man, in a Western town hanged
re- h self to at bedpost by his suspenders.
The coroner s Airy, which wee cem-
ent posedTh
of mother., decided that " e
a deceased came to his death by coming
y dceas
home drunk and mistaki ng himself
fur hilt, pants."
er The Dominion Government has
hs decided to postpone the operation
sly of the new grain standards in con;
to sequence of 'she many representations
received as to the effect of the new
it classification upon contracts for fu -
ed tore delivery
o• Of the 400,000 Hebrews computed
of to be in the whole United States, at
least 125,000 are settled in New York.
n Among them are many millionaires. A
s New York paper recently published a
on list of nineteen Hebrews in that city
as whose fortunes range from $1,000,000
a up to .$8,000,000 each.
Mr Jolly, Secretary of the Sabbath
at Alliance of Scotrand, who recently
s- made a lengthy tour through Canada
v- and the United States, has written an
it • account of his travels, in which he
of asserts that nothing impressed hint
more foroibly,in such pities as Toron-
di- to and Hamilton, than the Sabbath-
r- keeping propensities of the populace.
re. In the season of 1885-6 India ex•
allported 39,342,960 bushels of wheat.
of Ten years previously it exported only
ig
Professor Sheldon, in his report o
=his visit to Canada last year, ea
y
-Oanadiau farmers have every teas
Ito be satisfied with their condition,
agmpared with that of farmers i
teat -Britain and elsewhere.
A bartender and an ostler
Orangeville have been fined for a
saulting a constable, who was endea
oring to serve a summons on the
.employer f >r an alleged violation
the Scott Act.
No sufferer frog), any scrofulous
.cease, who will fairly try Ayer's Sa
•saparilla, need despair of a cu
remedy purges the blood of
unties, destroys the germs
ala, and infuses new life and v
ughoutthe physical orgoniz
4,663,278 bushels. This euormons
a' increase is of great moment for our
Canadian farmers. And the Argen-
s, tine Requblic, which a few years ago
imported flour, is just beginning to
contribute to thewheat marketlof the
world, and she has an area adapted
to wheat -growing almost as extensive
as that of Canada.
Australia hai 82,000,000 sheep,
or abouttwenty-seven for'every min,
woman, and child in the country,
and' the increase,' alone, hist year,
was almost two to every person on
the great island -continent. Most of
these sheep are of the . finest breeds
in existence, and in . every respect
the wealth of the antipodean col-
onists in flocks surpasses anything
known in modern times. Australia is
quite an infant of nations.
At the„4 quest of the W. C. T..;U.
t)h(l ;r• ,ons thus states the position
Y' to temperance instruction
lie schools : The subject
fie. temperance education is
awry, and the teacher is under
egobligation to teach it a9 he
irch.,reeding or writing. The
Inspectorehas no powIIr to -omit tem-
"perAnce Instruction from the school
currihiilaur, mill if. he reports that
scientific tempera ;.e is not taught
the department will insist on it being
made a subject of instruction, • or
withhold 'the grant. The subject
of scientific temperance instruc-
tion has not been placed on the
list of departmental examinations for
public school.ifiupls. The text bouk
has been had.; compulsory, where a
text book is usedbut the teacher, as
in all other subjects, niay teach with•
out a text book. The new regulations
embodying these changes will be is-
sued in a few days, The minister was
willing to change the word ” should
to "shall," if it was necessary, but he
+did not think the alteration would
make the regulation any more man-
datory.
ohm Rumble, of Grand Rapid
Mich., a guest at the Martin house,
London, glew out the gas in his room
on retiring Tuesday night, and next
morning was found lying insensible
in bed. Medical assistance was hast-
ily summoned and the man was re-
etored to consciousness with much
difficulty.
How is it you charge me fifty cents
tor this' little pinch of bicarbonate of
soda. when you gave =.three times
p�ss much for s yesterday?
`Oruggista:—" ' filling a pre-
scription to .pose we are
going to tra for nothing?
My dear sir . eemto appre-
ciate what ' 'n a classi-
cal educatve given
you oxali s always
ebifting nd.
The Do . ,tion agen
for Belgi tten Lan
Commiesfo • ' f-the,Cau
adian Pacific i . • . its for Bel
gluts on March the 1 "'aa' 0
^'f"armers for Manitoba. He'
enough homesteads selected for, tb
whole party and contracts Made a
6tice for the erection ot small far
houses, to be ready for the farmer
-upon their arrival.
In some places in China debtors
who are unab'.e to meet the claims of
their creditors are punished with the
loss of sight. In the case which came
under Dr Morrison's observation it
was the debtor's son who was the
ictim of the diabolical custom. Ile
tied hands and feet, and deprived
illy of the sight of one eye, while
t of the other would have been•lost•
t for timely surgical aid. The of-
fence was that the poor fellow's father
owed the remorseless Shylock 40 taels
or about $50•
There are Alaicure practitioners
' in Chicago who are said to be making
from $5,000 to $10,00') a year out of
the people who believe in their doc-
trines. AI together there are severa
hundred faith cure doctors i the city
and the Christian ScieuceiColleges
there are turning out graduates by
the score every month No attention
is given in these colleges to the study
of anatomy or physiology, as they are
not considered necessary to a practi-
ionfr's training.
A London, Eng, telegram says:—
It is stated here by persons known
to be familiar with Canadian Pacific
affairs that the company will uridou •
r . btedly appear before the Dominion
Parliament at the coming session and
request a "new deal," the monopoly
e to be surrendered for cash or for an
k additional guarantee, and the lands,
. oe,some portio•i of thea ,to be return-
ed to the Croe n for a cash cobsidera-
tion. In well informed circles here
l it is considered certain that a "deal"
hof this kind is on the cards, and has
in fact, alreay been submitted in out-
line to the Dominion Government.
1 The Napanee Ext less nays that
since the hotelkeepers of that place
entered into an agreement to obser ve
the Scott Act and to charge for the
use of their -sheds some of the mean
men in the community have • come
to light. All sorts of devices to
secure free stabling are resorted to.
One man has collectedstray boards
and fixed up a ricketty shed in
which he stands his horses. The'
men who do these things simply
advertise the factthat they have
never paid their legitimate travell-
ing expenses. They would compel a
liquor seller to close his bar and then
force him to keep open a free shed.
It is a wonder they ate ever found
in the Temperance party. They
have nothing to fear from whiskey,
for they are too mean to buy it.
They are injured 'by Probibition be-
cause it tends to restrict their facili-
ties for sponging on the public.
They should form a third party and
camp out and the farther they camp
from the neighborhood of men who
respect themselves and p,y their
way the better.
,t
r 'the Department of Agriedlture is
interesting itself in obtaining infor-
r-motion from the....Northern or wheat
it ;growing districts of Japan regarding
the growth of a hardy variety of bam-
boo and a coarser variety of tea and
s other plants, with a view to makingexperiments with them on the cen-
tral experimental farm. A tea plant.
. somewhat analogous to the Japanese
tea -plant is found in Labrador. It is
pdssible that steps will be taken to
cultivate these hardy varieties on the
Y Ooveinment farms.
M..; A sad accidet t occcured the other;,morning at the home of Geo Wilson,
,'.'tlf Lobo, whose son Richard, a clever
Irl
.young man, has been employed with
ares+ Bros. ot Strathroy. Young
'i"tbn home for holidays and
e in the barn ono et the rails
ser which some turkeys had been
%'iroosting, fell and struck hien a serious
blow on the back of the neck, knock-
ing hien down. He, however, got
up and walked to the house, where
he told his fattier what had happened
' who wished to send for medical aid,
rut deceased thought he would come
aril right in a short time. He then
laid down, but in a short time w'ts a
corpse. ,
Gladstone it a great lingo ist.
When James G. Blaine was recently
ep�resented to President Carnot of
,:France,the interpreters were required
to make conversation possible. Mr
'`.Gladstone, however, talked Erench
);,glibly to an interviewer it few days
t,Iigo, and responded in Italian to a
demonstration in his honor tit Flor-
ham If be should go to Athens he
`could Chat with the natives in mod-
Le.,r,.n Greek. Ho could address the
rB111deats of a German university in
(beer ntothef tongue, or read to them
in the Latin and Greek classics, Glad -
tone's tongue is not alone eloquent—
is highly cultured.
Children Cry for
REDUCED AT THE BRINIK,
THE STORY OF A roost WOMAN
I'called upon a poor Woman who
was very sick. She had not left her
bed for weeks. Her friends said'she
was dying of consumption ; indeed
she was so low that it seemed,that'it
would be but a very short time until
she would pass away. I looked round
on her little children and resolved if
possible to cure her, but how to do it
was the question. I was well used to
the different forms of consumption,
and knew her trouble all came from
the "head" and that her lungs were
being destroyed by breathing the
poisonous secretions into them. I
came hone• prayiug that God would
give me what was wanted to cure her
—and he did in a strange way. A
little boy came i.n'o my room where I
wns and wanted hie to look at a stnr
on it piece of paper. 1t proved to be
an advertisement of Na•.n' Balm. I
ordered, it tit once and it proved to„ be
net what l wanted as today .the wo-
man's head is all right. She is able to
do her own work and is getting strong
very fast. This remarkable change
was effected by a bottle of Nasal Balm
Enclose 50 cents for another bottle
which is for a young lady stopping
here who has had catarrh for a long
time. Please send at once and I will
try and make it known •in this place,
It te a pleasure for me to work for the
suffering and praise the medicine that
deserves it.. Mrss JENNiE hiCNAni,
Bruce Co„ Ont.
�itcher'e Caetorla.
Th , Postniitiltpr,'-Qenerare 'mot
w1 l b a. uled la ;a few deal, Thla,l7llat
. a,.. nue o:.- tb. ileal year endlug:�..►
of June liutt was 4.2,.608,285, againat
$2;,469,000• far the Previage iar,, in
�i;ncreai a of over: ,8.184,000,
ppendituror the Acetal year 1886.7
tai 14.458,1•00.gas .e- $8,880,000, for
the previous year,: an increaa►eof $78,-
000. Thi0 **inn excesa of recellts
of $66,000.A compared with the ores
'done year.
John Beck, a druggist at Pitts-
burg has been the victim froth time
to time during ,string the past seven sesta
of systematio and mysterious rob-
beries. The thieves have been dis-
covered. They were rats: At the
bank end of the money drawer an
opening of about two inches from the
top of the counter, through which
any small -sized rat could climb, was
found. In it was a bed or nest made
of a pile of greenback and other
small articles, and in it were eight
rats, which were too young to make
their escape. Several hundred dol-
lars are supposed to have been lost
in this way.•
A Philadelphia,. Pa., despatob
says: John North, aged 42 years re-
turned to his home on South -Twen-
ty-fifth street last night under the
influence of liquor. Soon after en-
tering the house he picked a quarrel
with his wife, who was nursing their
3 -months -old child. He. became so
enraged that helrushed upon her and
aimed a powerful blow at her face,
but as she turned to avoid it, the'
blow fell upon the head of the child,
crushingits skull and causing almost
instant death. The horrible act sober-
ed the man, and he became frantic
with grief and offered no resistance
when he was arrested. IfIrs. North
was alto taken into custody.
Commercial Union has been
brought up in,Cougress by MrTown-
send, of Illinois. His Still is a very
broad one, but its broadness is not a
built. Free commerce and a common
system of •weights and measures and
arbitration for all differences between
the two nations are all first rate
objecis,and. if the writs of the Queen
and of the people of the UnitedStates
ran indifferently in both countries it
would be a still further gain, Mr
Townsend's Lill is for continental
union as it includes "all the nations
of America," or is it for Hemisphere
free trade,tlrus including South Am-
erican nations? Except where.their
own tariffs are high we do not see
what is to tempt the South Ameri-
cen countries into the union, as their
trade is with .Europe.
HOARYOLD TIME SERVER.
"Ma,"said Bobby; after a thought-
ful silence, "do you know that I
don't believe Saute Claus is really
as good- as he is cracked up to be?"
"Why, Bobby, what makes yo.i
drink that?"
" Because he gives his nicest
presents to little boys and girls that
have rich pas." •
A ME.iN SORT OF HORSE,
Last Week George Herring started
from Indiana Valley to Gibbonsville
in a cart drawn by a wild mustang.
When he came to the soda springs
he stopped to get a drink of water.
In getting mit he stumbled against
the mustang and frightened it so that
it started to run with George hang-
ing to the lines. It went quite a dis-
tance, when horse, cart and driver
went over the grade, going down the
hilt- ,fifty feet, bringing up against
some bushes. He got the horse and
cart back 'on the grade, when the
horse fell in the road- and was unable
to rise. Georgetied the halter strap
to the cart and proceeded to unhar-
ness the horse. As quick as the har-
ness was off the horse struggled to his
feet and went off the grade again,
dragging the cart by the halter strap.
By this time George, who had been
sick for some time,was about exhaust-
ed, but he managed to get down to
the horse and got him back on the
grade again, leaving the cart. Think-
ing horseback riding would be good'
for an invalid he attempted to ride
back to Shoofly,but was ignominiously
bucked off twice in the rine minute.
Eie was compelled to lea I the horse
to Shoofly, where he got a saddle,and
again attempted to' resume his jour-
ney, but the bronco, again bucked
Wm off. His foot hung in the stirrup
and the horse ran over him a couple
of times and kicked his clothes nearly
off. George came to the conclusion
that a freight waggon was the safest
mode of travelling, so he came to
Quincy with Mr McCutcheon, where
he arrived in tolerable condilio I, a
little sore and his clothes badly dam
aged—[Plumas (Cal.) National.
ODD SIGHTS IN JAPAN.
WHAT An AMERICAN TRAVELLER
HAW THAT IIE CONSIDERED
CURIOUA.
A genteman, who formerly resided
in Washington, but who now lives in
Japan, has recently written a letter
giving some descriptors of odd sights
to an American visitor. He says :
"If you could go out with me in the
morning I think the first thing to
startle you would be the newsboy.
The newsboy hero is usually an old
man. He trots around with wares
that look as if he had torn the wrap-
pers from a lot of tea chests. Ho
rings a little bronze ball as he goes.
The bell would be thought an art
tie.tsure at home, for itis chaste, and
hes undoubtedly done service in some
temple before now. 'l'hen the post-
man would surprise you,for you would
hardly believe that the free 'delivery
system' exists here, not as we
have it at home, where it is con-
fined to the large cities, but going
to every little hamlet and isolated
farm house, Perhaps we would see a
carpenter holding his work with his
toes and drawing his plane mad saw
toward him. We would certainly see
the 'false -hair reviver,' for our Jape.
nese sisters are like the rest of the
world,bound to be in fashion, and the
elaborate style of coiffure compels
,thein toaupPletmentihe aatural-groilrth
filet# tie; bwitcb. becpane..rusty lit is
handed, outto aperipatetic hair-dreaa
err+, tfbo pukes a cad "rcontaining a
ei>gall furnace, a covered kettle, and.
several bottles of dgee,. And on, the
front of which, from a *man gallows
frame, hangs a switch as, a. sign of, his
trade. He bolls the switch in bis.
dye-kettle--goodneee knows how.
many others bave passed through it
and returns it as good as new.
Just now the children are play -
log with dolls, and every little girl
who does not have a live baby tied to
her back will have a toy one. I;ve I
often seen a mother carrying her own
child pick -a -back and on the little
one's back would be tied a dolly.
The dolls are wonderfully cheap and,
generally speaking, good ones. The
Japanese boys spin tops,but,of course,
differently from our American boys,
for everything is done differently here'
They usually put a bit of matting
over a tub 80 as to form a shallow•
basin, thou one little chap throws his
top spiuuing into the centre. Imme-
diately another sets his on,and which-
ever 'knocks the other out' wins, the
successful spinner pocketing both.
Mild gambling? Yes; but they always
gamble here when tbey hayeanything
with which to gamble. Travelling
kitchens are plentiful, but not in the
morning or during, the day, when the,
cook shops are open. After dal'k you
would see pleuty of them, and I sup-
pose they are going all night, for I
have never been out too late for them.
The linrickishas aro legion and one is
importuned>by them at every tut .
The children all seem to live ,iu t e
street, and the passers give way',o
them always. I have seen port rte
dragging heavily loaded trucks sw ug
out of the way to avoid a little tot
when it cost thorn no small effurt to
do so "—New York Times, t
c6 ph. ,:
.me `,.,ur , nielnbera ere ilke
.
railroad strains__th,.'T.!.hed: alt thaix:
light ahead, oA thleir >t, ,trade, and
!eaya a little old blueblit bunging
on. the rear to .tlte...sinnere' in the
dark.. -,Sam Jones.
he naipiat►•ry is a nailing not a
profession; it is net redilated by the
law of supply anal decpand. How
',long do think ink '
I t
e Yea � i would have
taken Nineveh to make out a call
for Jonah?—From Bishop M'cTyc-
ire's Sermon of North Georgie Con-
ference.
Eighteen years ago, when the air -
brake was tried, it required 18 sec-
onds to apply it to a. train 2,000
feet long. Four years later the time
was reduced four seconds. Recent
experiments with the air brake on
freight trains show that it can be ap-
plied to every car in the train of
that length running at the rate of
forty miles an hour, and that this
train can be stopped within 500 feet,
or one-fourth of its own length, and
all this without any serious jolting.
A few years ago a pious church
',ember in the western part of New
York arose .in an experience meet-
ing and gave'a review of his life.
When he came to the deolaia-
tign, 'I. thank God that I owe no
man anything,' a quiet man in a re-.
mote corner jumped up and said:
'I have a little account against you,
brother, that yon must have fo' ot-
ten.' 'Ab, B'•other C.,' said the
speaker, unctiously, 'shat debt was
outlawed a good 'while ago.' [That
'Christian' was outlawed too.].. - .
FOR SOBER THOUGHT..
Iiearts can be young in spite of
gray hairs. -
Blessed are the
ch eerfulncss.
Don't hunt happiness- -do honest
work and happiness will hunt you.
To the heart that lays hold upon
the promises, the darkest cloud has
a 'silver lining.'
Thole is never a wakeful hour
that one cnn afford to be off his
guard in his thinking.
A surplus of saloons is the worst
surplus we suffer from.—New York
Tribune. es
The blue ribbon is now worn by
many of the aborigines of Aus-
tralia.
Nearly every new town started
in Southern California nr:s a pro-
hibitory cl'suse in the deed.
Trio prohillitiin-amendment to
the Constitution of Orogori was de-
feated be about 7,000.
That sort of self-denial which is
the least l,r.,cticed, is denying our-
s=.Ives lawful things for the good of
others•
missionaries of 1
The trout Idiilesol'hy of prayer
is learlied in the deepest distress. It
is then Gull i.; everything to us,; the
helper of the helpless.
To Save Life
Frequently requires prompt action. An
hour's delay waiting for the doctor may
be attended with serious consequences,
especially in cases of Croup, Pneumonia,
and other throat and lung .troubles.
Ilence, no family should be without a
bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral,
which has proved itself, in thousands of
cases, the best Emergency Medicine
ever discovered. It gives prompt relief
and prepares the way for a thorough
cure, which is certain to be effected by
its continued use.
S. II. Latimer, M. D. Mt. Vernon,'
Ga., says: "I have found Ayer's Cherry
Pectoral a perfect cure for Croup in all
cases. I have known the worst cases
relieved in a very short time by its use;
and I advise all families to use it in sud-
den emergencies, for coughs, croup, &o."
A. J. Eidson, M. D., Middletown,
Tenn., says: "I have used Ayer's
Cherry Pectoral with the best effect in
my practice. This wonderful prepara-
tion once saved my life. I had a con-
stant cough, night sweats, was greatly
reduced in flesh, and given up by my
Pphysician. One bottle and a half of the
ectoral cured me."
" I cannot say enough in praise of
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral," writes E.
Breeden, of Palestine, Texas, "believ-
ing as I do that,,but for its use, I should
long since have died."
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral,
PREPARED nY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5,
•�� • The Uel incl 1 la' r..� .......,.
"alesC avgLITTLE
We tett ill a LIVER
AliVatiat2s PULLS.
DICWAnn ON IMITATIONS. ALW'IPS
ASIC FOR Illi. FLEECE'S PELL L 7'S, OR
LITTLE SUGAR-COATED PILLS,
Being • entirely vegetable, they op-
erate without disturbance to the system, diet,
or occupation. Put up in glass vials, hermeti-
cally sealed. Always fresh and reliable. As
a.laxative aitorative, br purgative
these little )Pellets givo tie. most perfect
satisfaction.
SICK HEADACHE,
Bilious Headache,
Dizziness, Constlpa.
tion,' Indig1restion'
Bilious Attacks, and all
derangements of the stom-
ach and bowels, are prompt-
ly relieved and permanently
cured by the use of Dr.
Pierces Pleasant Purgative Pellets.
In explanation of the remedial power of these
Pellets over so great a variety of diseases, it
may truthfully be said that their action upon
the system is universal. not a gland or tissue
escaping their sanative influence. Sold by
. druggists, 25 cents a vial. Manufactured at the
Chemical' Laboratory of WORLD's DISPENSARB
__Chemical
AssOCIATION, Buffalo, N. Y.
is offered by the manufactur-
ers of Dr. Sage's Catarrh
Remedy, for a case of
Chronic Nasal Catarrh which
they cannot cure.
SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH. -Dull
heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal
passages, diseharges falling from the head
into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery,
and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous,
purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are
weak, watery, and inflamed; there is ringing
in the ears deafness, hacking or coughing to
clear the throat, expectoration of offensive
matter, together with scabs from 'ulcers; the
voice is.ohanged and has a nasal twang; the
breath is offensive; smell and taste are im-
paired; there is a Sensation of dizziness, with
mental depression, a hacking cough and gen-
eral debility. Only a few of the above-named
symptoms are likely to be present in any one
case. Thousands of oases annually, without
manifesting half ot the above symptoms, re-
sult in consumption, and end in the grave.
No disease is so common more deceptive and
dangerous, or less understood by physicians.
By its mild, soothing,and healing properties.
Dr. Sae's Catarrh Remedycures the worst
cases of Catarrh "cold in the head �r•
Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache.
Sold by druggists everywhere; 50 cents.
"Untold Agony from Catarrh,»
Prof. W. RAUSNER, the famous mesmerist,
of Ithaca N. Y. writes: "Some ten years ago
I suffered untold agony from cheonio nasal
catarrh. My family physician gave me up es
incurable, and said I must die. My ease was
euoh a bad one, that every day towards sun-
set, my voice would become so hoarse I could
barely speak above a whisper. In the morning
mycoughing and clearing of my throat would
almost strangle mo. By the use of Dr. Sage's
Catarrh Melody, in three menthe, I was a web
man, and the euro has been permanent."
"Constantly Hawking and Spitting."
TROMAS T. Rtrsnit t, l i3ij., 2902 Pine Street,
St. Louie, ltfo, writes: "I was a great sufferer
from catarrh for three years. At times I could
hardly breathe, and wqs constantly hnwking
and spitting and for the last eight months
could not breathe through the nostrils. I
thought nothing could be (lone for rhe. Luck-
ily, I was rely Ned to try Dr. Sngo's Catarrh
Remedy, end I um now a well man. I believe
it to be the only sure remedy for catarrh now
manufactured, and one hes only to givo it a
fair trial to experience astounding remits and
a permanent cure."
Three Bottles Cure Catarrh.
ELI Ronnnes, Runyan P. 0., nth/meta Co.,
Pa., says: "My daughter had catarrh when
she was five Remedy old verde badly. I saw Dr.
Sage's Catarrh Roedy n vertised, and pro-
cured a bottle for her, and soon saw that it
helped her; a third bottle effected a perma-
nent cure. She is now eighteen years old and
sound and hearty."
,r'
CLLTON NEIY ;RA.
THE' LARGEST
moo,
AND BEST
N EWSPAPER
IN THE COUNTY:
*5 ***t€*%*ek ***t€**M *:h**
One 'of the best
equipped JobPrint-
ing Offices' inthe
district.
OUR AIM IS NOT TO DO
CHEAP, BUT GOOD WORK.
ONLY :-: COMPETENT :-°`WottgMFN
* EMPLOYED *
NEN LETTERS, . NEW BORDERS NEW
ORNAYIF.NTS,FINE PAPERS, Fix E
INKS, NOVEL COMIRNATFONS.
--0--
Business Cir
--.i HFEL`IAL'I
NEAT.
TASTY;
ARTISTIC.
fir'S I. E
()UR SAMPLES -lie
1'1g'.0ICi
A ouc�
':.�•fi
Set
Sed° :n±�� o
1.
WOOD : CORNICE
A -- TRAYS.
R M RACEY'S
Hardware Store, Clinton
$3,000
Last week an offer was made to us, which it is seldom the good fortune of a business
man to receive. We purchased at less than manufacturers prices, a lot of
ronch FELT HATS
---AND A LARGE QUANTITY OF ---
Flannel Goods. and Hosiery,
sirAnd are going to give YOU the benefit of our good luck. We offer you
FRENCH FELT HATS; Newest Shapes, that sell at $2.75 and $3,
for the incredibly low price of $1.25 and HATS that are good valve at $1.255, you
may have for 35 CENTS
The WOOLLENS
OO L L iL'm N S We have for you were pnr-
I� chased at the same time, and
we are selling at the prioesithe wholesale merchiints charge the retailer for them.
These are beautiful goods in LADIES RIBBED HOSIERY and HandsomePatterns and Fine Quality in DRESS FLANNELS. We have a nice
lot of notions in Fancy Goods, suitable for Christmas presents.
We want $3,000 on Jan. 15, and in order to get it are offer-
• ing you a store full of very choice wares, at prices we were
never beforo able to quote.
--fie---�
BEESLEY'S : MILLINERY
EMPORIUM.
XMAS -Goons
The subscriber, while thanking his friends for their patronage during the
past year, world remind them that he has a splendid stock of 1 oliday
, Goods, consisting of
FRUITS. CANDIES NUTS, I.ISii, &c.
—BESIDES A FULL STOCK OF
Choiee 71Paainily Groeerie c',China,
Crockery mad ( lards ware. A11
Bottom I'riee�l.
A CALL SOLICITED.
:X.
.N. ROBS.ONI. CHJNA HALL.
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DROP IN AND SEE THE
'1.0,s„,
GRAND ILLUMINATION
G.
GLASGOW'S
ON SATURDAY NMI
MAINIFt('R;7T Di3PT,A1 OF
SILK HANDKER-
CHIEF' TIES; Me.
A FI?LT. LINE OF
FUR
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