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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1888-06-29, Page 4ONL 25C . � �� .... T r t, .'va at to add one thousand new Subscribers to our list, and as ancI l-�i.ent thereto we offer the paper to new subscribers THREEn - uc- urial for 25c cash i.� advance. r • ��o��-�-� ONe Now is the time to take advar tage of this low offer. R. HOLMES, PublisherNew Era, Clinton. N E'X'S NOTES. Deputy -Marshal Warren bhp load 1\ D 1 Donald .fol r] •aon Lake at Iblegantit•, Que., on friday after noon. Tho old Grant homestead neat St. Louis, has been sold to satisfy a mortgage held by W.H.Vaudcr- bi l t, The Leeds and Gvooville Council has ordered the releause of a roar who was imprisoned for infringe- ment of the Scott Act. Manitoba millers say that owing to the unfair discrimina-tion by the•Caiadian Pacific,thoir Min.nc.- apgjis !wale. are.alJe -to undersell them in the Montreal market. The water in Lake Ontario is two feet lower than last year ow - V ing probably to the light fall o rain and snow during the past season. Seven fires were discovered in a Hamilton house within twenty- four hours. No cause can bo as- signed to the mysterious incend- i ary attempts, John C. Jackson, bailiff, Chats ham, and well known throughout the Western peninsula, died on Friday da from sunstroke. He was about 56 years old. Three young men of Elgin, Leel went vent to Portland for' jolli- fication. • do fication, While returning home one fell out of the vehicle, was abandoned by his companions,and found dead. A severe thunderstorm at Dun- das on Thursday lifted the roof off the courthouse, and dropped it six inches out of place. Lightning did considerable damage, but 'no pe rson was hurt. The Massachusetts Medical So• ciety will dispense with its sus• tonlary annual dinner this year and have a simple feast of reason instead. The doctors set a good example to their patients ;n avoiding big dinners, though we should ,fry the prescription might •sea ions'.y interfere with their in- comes if it isextensively followed. That popular summer sleeping spot—the house roof—in New - York, is receiving advocates at Boston, ,and already ono of them a has tried it. But he personally doesn't DOW approve of such a lo - .cation for sleeping. He rolled off to the ground, and miraculously, as the building Was six storeys. high, escaped serious injury. The immense ice house erected at Waterford last October by Geo Hammond,of Chicago, was totally destroyed by fire, on Friday. The building contained many thou- sands of tons of ice, and the loss will be fully $8,000. The struc- ture was 30x140 feet, and one of the largest and finest ice houses in Canada. The year '88 has beer, for several centuries,fatal to the royal house of Stuart. James I1I., ,on 1lth June, 1488, lost a battle with his subjects, by whom he wfis i)ur• sued and assassinated. Mary Queen of Scots was beheaded on 8th February, 1588. James IL of England abdicated the throne of •Great Britain 12th Decem ber,16 88, and in the year 1788 tlio last legitimate- male of the. Stuart Family expired. Strange, but true. The name of Theebaw,fctlwta erly;., King of Burmah, has almost pass- ' ed into oblivion; so far as the gen- eral public is concorpod. It has been revived in England,however, owing to an enquiry as to what has become of the treasure once possessed by Theebaw•. When Mandalay was captured by Sir •Henry Prendergast in 1885,Thoe- baw's palace contained booty valued at twenty lakks. Theebaw was permitted to take away with him a few V articles„ • e .u•t' lett, ,abut the larger part of his fortune was seized by the English. And now, after an interval of three years, certain inquisitive Londoners are wondering what became of the rich spoils which fell to the eon - ti uerors. It is understood that Mr (grant - Powell, the Dot.,inion Under -Sec- t rotary of State, is anxious to re- sign, and the name of Mr Joseph - I'opc,Sir John Macdonald's pri vate secretary, is fiivorably mentioned • for the. vaeanct•. Deserters from Stanley's ex- pedition have brought word that the explorer was badly wounded in a tight with natives, and that he and his force was encamped, surrounded by hostile natives. A Pennsylvania newspaper has the interesting news that Miss Gosh is the handsomest girl in Watsontown, Pa. All the young. men in that neigborhood swear by.Gosh, figuratively speaking. •Wm. A. Smith, who died a few days ago in Richmond, enjoyed a unique distinction. He resigned f a seat in Congress because ho did not think he had sense enough to properly represent his Constit- uents. This is the first and pro- bably the last instances of the kind. Michael 1Cnikomoke, who died in a miserable hut in Quincy,i11., last week at the age of 80 years, was once a Ilungarian noble who was exiled with Kossuth. IIe was R t of more than or- dinai•V attainments, and was familiar with all the tongues •off Eastern and Southern Europe. Judge Gill, ,at Montreal,granted Mr Fortier, cigar -maker, $160 damages from the Canadian Workman for advising people not to buy cigars made by a child - beater or woman -spanker, In two weeks Fortier's sales had fallen off $6,000, but that (night havo been due to the labor inves- tigation. The damages claimed were $50,000. To a Chicago reporter who was interviewing hits a few years ago Robert Louis Stevenson said :— "Don't ask nae anything about 'Dr Jekyll and i1i Hyde.' I'm sick and tired of it. Ask me any- thing about my other books, but I've heard 'Dr Jekyll and Mr Ilyde' until it makes Inc sick." The worst flood,s ever known r • ) \11 111 Mexico occurred Junel9. Solos reports 500 houses swept away and many lives , lost. Ilundreds of' families aro homeless and crops :u'e ruined. At Leon, the next city in sire to the capital, 1,000 bodies had been recovered up to 6 p. m. Thursday. One mile square in the heart of the city is gorged, while every hour brings to light more horrors. ' William Patterson, eolored,was hanged Friday morning at Louis- ville, for the murder of Jennie Bowman on April 23, 1887. Death ensued from strangulation ten minutes later. Patterson died very hard, lifting hid body up and dowel by the neck in a horrible manner. Four minutes after the dop fell he drew his legs up and cried, 'Lord take me.' I)r Garvin says talking after the drop is Unprecedented. Ile pro- tested his innocence to the last Patterson was convicted of com- plicity with another negro named Albert Turner in the murder of a serv,lntgirl named Jennie Bow• man. Tuner was executed fur the ;rime on July 1, 1587, confer - sing the act and declaring just be• fare the drop that Patterson WO innocent. .A idol) attempted to lynch the neggroes, hut the mil- itia drove them away. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Mr Wascorn, Indiana, has been married three times. In 0 that there is nothing remarkable—but it is a trifle odd that his three Wives were sisters all, and that each of the last two ceremonies were performed within a day of the dead wife's burial, and by the minister who officiated at the bur- ial service. The last sad occasion was just a day or two ago, and the groom was 79 and the beide 71, and the one witness a great grandson and gf•eat nephew, re- spectively, of the' blushing pair. A Cincinnati gentleman and his flintily, who spent the winter in Florida, became much attached while there to a colored waiting maid, and wished to bring her home with them. • After study ing the matter over she agreed to come on one condition ; that was that the family should keep her -foreverM anti—ant•- sett -..Lor, Of course this condition was accepted. The poor creature actually believ- ed that by going to live as a ser- vant in the North she became a slave, and could be sold. A case of child murder iS report- ed from Lakefeld on Sunday night. A young woman named Windsor, employed as a domestic servant by a respectable family, gave birth to an illegitimate child. As soon A8S1 1 0 could l cave her 1 • bed she wrapped the infant up in some eiothes and tossed it from the window. Then passing down through the house she made off with her luckless harden unob- served. She hid the bnndle'nnder the cheese factory, and returned to hot•r , 1 )c m in safety. The cheese- makers, on going to work Mon- day morning, heard the infant still crying, but soon after being found it died. The crime was traced home to the girl, who was com- mitted for trial. A recent Bismarck, Dak., bride had "bad luck" on her wedding day. She had almost reached the church when she discovered that she had forgotten her bridal veil. She went back after it. On the way to the church again she sneezed three times and split the satin bodice from belt to shoulder. The carriage stopped at a millin- ery store, needle and thread Were procured, and the rents repaired. As she stepped from the carriage at the church door the lace bodice of an underskirt caught and the underskirt at the waist gave way. As Hilo walked up the aisle the skirt began to slip down, but she managed to grab it through the side of her dress skirt and hung on until she was safely married and back in the carriage. Then she wept, The Sultan of Turkey gots $7,500,000 a year for his services. The Presbyteries General Assem- biy is to meet next year in S. An- drew's church (west), Toronto, . The average ..Mexican laborer supporta his family on 10 cents per diens, invested in corn and beans. Josie Mansfield, notorious fifteen years ago as Jim Fisk's mistress, is still living in Juxur•y in Paris. Senator Fair, despite the reverse he has net with in recent years, is estimated to havo a fortune of $20,000,000. A lady subscriber wants "a sure receipt to keep jollies from mould- ing.' Place the jelly on the sup- per -table and toll the children to help themselves. During the last seven years more than 200,000 acres in: England have gone out of cultivation. It means a Toss of £300,000,000 to the land owners and farmers. Tho London & Northwestern Railway Company has begun to lay rails along the Shropshire Canal in order to try the substitu- tion of locomotives for horses for canal boats. Tho general election ] n Mani toba comps offon the 1 lth ofJuly -The Liberals havee-a -candidate i the field in every constituent.) and there is little doubt that th Greouway government will be sit tained by -a large majority. A butcher of Gallipolis, O., dream ed that his horse was running awe and that he jumped from the waggon The dream was so realistic that h jumped out of a third story window and when picked up was badl bruised. n 0 y - y e y A'Dakota paper reports that John Hyatt, a citizen of Minot, who is 70 years of age, has never had a tooth, none having ever grown; but his gums are almost as hard as stone. FIe says he can eat almost anything, and while in the army could master hard ,tack. A WCI1.kuowu London firm of t•efreshlnetit cbntraCt0i•s rec•cutly- advertised fin. 4,600 additional waiters, anti 10,000 applications \C ,• t0 'P' 1 CC ISCII ' to response, the whole of the candidates claiming to have had experience. • Peter Buckman, a yOl.ulg lad in St. Cloud, Minn., breaks a bone every time he fulls. His bones are so brittle as to snap under the slightest blow ; and,although only 9 years old, he has sustained six- teen' fractures of the arms and legs. W. P: Chambers, a wheelman of Pittsburg, last week rode on his bicycle down a number of steps loading front the street to a railroad station in that city. On the last step he met with a slight accident, due to the snapping of a pin in a break bar. As Mr Cham- bers wears an artificial leg the defeat is all the more remark- able. • .At Hallst'ille, DIo., lightning recently struck a smokestack of a mill. On the window of the still the stroke of electricity plainly photographed the numerals 1888. Between the figures was a zigzag line. -• On the wall opposite hung a calander for the present year from which the photograph was supposed, topes''() been copied. W. J. Lown, of Winer palish, Louisiana Is a deffmlter to .quite an amount; but strange to say, there are no hard words for him among the people. lir years he has been taxeollector,and in each of the many cases where enforced collection would work hardship he would give a receipt in full,'and himself became responsible for the "money to the authorities, " sitNE FOOT IN THE GRAVE," IIow often do we hear the above said of some poor pilgrim o'er life's thorny path, whose tottering step, pallid face, unnatural glitter of the eye e y and hacking cough, and its accompaning involuntary pressure of the hand over the lungs, the seat of the dread disease —Con sumption-•-' that causes the remark? Too frequent- ly, alas! and in the interests of such un- fortunates this is penned,toassure them that their steps need tend no longer to- ward that narrow receptacle that aivaits al — 1 th at until life's , lull hfs alto ttec 1sl ) ace is covered— from any such cause, for the scientific researches ofDr.B. V. Pierce, resulting in the " Golden Medical Dis. covery,"have wrested from Nature n remedy which never fails to cure this scourge of our race thing ore nor less than Scrofula sof the Lungs), if taken in time. Druggists sell it. :1 Yankee riding on :a railroad was disposed to astonish the other passengers with tough stories, At last he mentioned that one of his neighbors owned an immense dairy, and made 1,000,000 pounds of butter, and 1,000,000 pounds of cheese yearly. The Yankee, per- ceiving that his veracity was in danger of being rinestioned, ap• pealed to a friend. "True, isn't it, Mr . --_ ? 1 speak of i)caeon Brown." " Y -e -s," replied the friend ; " that is, 1 know Deacon Brown, though I don't know as i ever heard precisely how many rounds of butter and cheese he makes a year; but 1 know ho has twelve saw mills that all go by, bet lermilk." Children Cry for •► ITwenty new policemen havo Johanna Moore,of Alba ny,drew ben added to the Toronto force. $100 from the bank the other day W. II. Griffin, Deputy Post- A foW minutes after her arrival master-(acueral, is to be saperan- n tutted. Tho discovery of rich gold ore on Sultana Island is reported f)•om Rat Portage. Tho Governor-General is oxo pectod to visit Manitoba and Brit- ish Bolumbia next full. Rho Atlanta Constitution says that the uegrees of Georgia own more than $12,000,000 worth of property(. The Dominion Government has granted $5,000 to the Hull fire sufferers—the same as given by the Mercier Government. • Rev Dr Wild, of Toronto, dc- nies that Rev C. O. Johnston, of Hamilton, has been offered the position of assistant pastor of Bondtr • m St. Congregational l obational church. Avoid the use of calomel for bilious complaints. Ayer's Cathartic Pills, entirely vegetable, have been tested forty years, and are acknowledged to be the best remedy for torpidity of the liver, costiveness and indigestion. Seven of the family of Mr R. Linton, of Campbellford, were Poisoned by eating canned salmon n Medical aid was ealled in and all are improving. The Ingersoll Council have made an offer of $60,000 to the Oxford County buildings from Woodstock. The position will, in all likelihood, be tabled for future reference. The Orphans' Court, of Pitts- burg, is puzzled over the will of' a lady there who willed a sun of money to the Now York IIospital for Crippled Children on 42nd street, but wrote out the amount, and the lawyers are fighting as to whether the wool of three letters is 'two' or 'ten.' • Tim Williams, an old hermit et Lebanon, Conn., had a hive of bees which swarmed on a huge apple tree. Fearing that they would escape lie climbed the tree •after thein, but fell and broke his leg, stirring ep the bees in his descent. They followed him down and stung him to tient h. • The past'sunlnler in Australia has •been one of the l'oolest, and certainly ono of the dry -est, since the.settleinent of the colony. The soil on April 20 was so hard as to almost preclude the operations of the farmers, the rain was badly mode,. The 'absence of showers had also been badly felt in Vir• feria, while in Tasmania the still - protracted drouth was causing great anxiety. A late cablegram states that the long -wished -for rain's have fiAlen in Victoria and Now South Wales, and fanners will now be able to get the ground ready for the seeding. The IIolmden farm, near Pit - hole, Pa., which was sold during the oil excitement of 1865 for $1,500,000, changed •hands on Friday at a sale for taxes for less than $100. 'On this farm was sold the famous United States or Fraser Well, which started with a flow of 250 barrels a day in the winter of 1865, when oil \vas $1 a barrel. It is said that Thorns IIoJrnden sold the fans!• for $25,- 000, but his wife refused to sign the deed, and they paid'hor $50, 000 more to ov (.come her object- ions. Subsequently this farm was sold to the Garden CityPetroloum Company, ofChica;o, for $1,500,- 000, of which $750,000 was paid inncash. Rather an unusual circurnstance occurred a fess days ago in cnn- noctioh with a burial in the Stroetsville cemetry. The body was that of Mr Thomas Johnston, of Galt, who resided in Streets- ville some twenty-five or thirty years ago. O. I o died on Sunday and on the following Tuesday his remains were brought to Streets- villo for interment. 'But through some mistakeanother t herr lav' was dug in the wrong lot, and the error was not discovered until a couple of days after. As fl re- sult e- sult of the mistake the proper lot was found, the body was exhumed and interred in a newly matte grave beside his son, silo dial some years ago. A .Dunkirk, N. Y.,desp:ttch say s One even inglastDecembor a party of young people gathered at a Cer- tain residence on Gerry II111, this country. The evening was spent in dancing,games and other social amusements. Toward the close of the evening ono young man, who was a social favorite pulled 8 chair away just as another of the young men maned CharlesJitJ•idge was about t; seat himself in it. Ile fell to thelloor but apparently uninjured. Subsequent develop- ments showed that. his spinal chord tund his hrfl'n were affected, and the other Clay he became so violent as to make it necessary to have him taken to the insane asy- lum. There it was necessary to plat7c Lim in the strongest eell in the place. hopes are entertained for his recovery to sanity, last the prospects are doubtful: Pitcher's Castoria. home a young man called on her, saying he had come from • the bank, "The money is counterfeit.' lie said, "and they sent me to get it, and I will bring you good money fur it. The bank did not discover the mistake until after you had lett." Mr Moore handed the money to the young man, who loft at once and of course did not return. There is great excitement in - Australia over the silver mines. Two or three companies out of nearly a thousand organized in Melborno havo paid dividonds,and this has sot the town in an uproar. New companies are organized ev- ery day, and the stock is immed- iately taken. Everybody is spec- ulating in mining stock, and the fever runs as high as ever it did in San Francisco in the passionate days of,the Cornstocklode. Mol - borne stock exchange seats that wont begging at $1,000 a few months ago are now in demand at $7,000 and 18,000 each. There is but one result possible, and that ie a reaction, heavy losses and financial depression. A. i DRINK h of WATER. 1.R A Tittle five-year-old boy left his seat in church ore Sabbath morning,and walked up the pul- pit stamps, and stood by the side of the minister. 'What do you want, my little meal' said the pastor stopping in the middle of the sermon. • 'Aidriukof water,'thec1tt d--itlYtn-- c•ently replied, The gond man pouro.l out a glass of water, the c••hild drank it and left the platform, bat seeing the an1ns0(1.1m:es of the audience, lie thought some mistake had been !nada and remembered that he had not expressed his thanks; So tlll•nlllg to the minister he made a how and said,'Thank you, sir,' and went to his seat, perfe01. ly satisfied that all was right.—S. S, Messenger. sW:1 LLOWi?D BY QUICK- SAND. Last Saturday a farmer ((05 11 IIg the Republican river, near 13enlclenllul. Nebraska, found an 014 man 'fast in a quicksand bog, of which Inc. t ! there els ar e many in that neighborhood. Ile was.buriod up to the armpits, and going down slowly. The farmer waited until other mon carne along, and the victim was rescued and ca'ried to the town, a maniac frr)m his terrible experience. A thousand - dollars in money was found in a telt around hie • body, and papers -in his pocket gave his name :unh.addre•s. A few moms, ago awelI•knowil citizen of O:akland,Calif ,rnia,wen 1 gunning :ld has• never since been seen. An organized seanh for hint stet, with no reward. 'Some- what hater 0 man crossing one of' the rivet• valleys heard a dog harking titintly' in the distance. He fi)Ilowod the direction of tho sound, and isanle upon. tie' faith-" fol boast, starved to a skeleton, lying on the ground, before him the hat of the missing man. The evidence was circumstantial only, but the cOnC1118ion W84 that the hunter hall got. caught in the quicksand and krone down, inch by inch, to a htir•rible lingering death. 5ines lery «mpound For The Nervous The Debilitated The Aged. URES Nervous Prostration,Nervoud Heed, eche,Neurelgia, NervousWeaknesr, Stomach and Liver Diseases, and e;l affections of the Kidneys. A NERVE TONIC. GIOROR W. BOTITON, STAMFORD, CONN., Paye: For two years I was a sufferer from nerroue de Way, and I thank Ood and the discoverer of tiltvaluable remedy that Petrel CELERY COMPOCN11 cured me. Jr to a valuable remedy. Long may 10 live. Let any one Write to me for advice." AN ALTERATIVE. ALON20 ABBOTT, WINDSOR, VT„ Pays: "I believe PAINE'S CRUMP COMPOUND Paved my life. My trouble seemed to be an internal humor. Beforel used it wasctrrered with an eruption frore andel am live hundred per crept, better» rapidly be` war." A LAXATIVE. A. 0. BRAN, Wnrrz Aryan JUNCTION, VT., says: For two years past 1 beve been a great sufferer from kidney and fiver trouble,', attenddeed wltb dye, PRLEI14 CO FN and oOTin itsseemeed Before though a egan ereftaket paled me, Now I can say nothing we me. A DIURETIC. °SCROD ABBOTT, srorrx Crrv, Iowe, gage: "I have been liking PArNR'e enmity coMPOCNt• And it has done me more good for kidneys and lam , Pack than any other medicine 1 have ever taken. Rundreds of teettmoniate have been received from persons who have need this remedy with remarkable Ireneat. Bend for circular, Pekoe 01.00. Sold by y►rngg1,te. WELLS,RICHARCSON tlt0,',O, Proprietors Montreal, P. Q. A woman of Oso eloped with another's husband, taking her child with h he The !holt .tuber fol- lowed her to Gananoque, took the child front her and told her to proceed. Dr. %1V:tshi,n to,i's NEXT V1s11' Throat and Lung Surgeon, of TORONTO Will be at the Rattenbury House WEDNESDAY . JULY 18, ALL DAY Chronic'11ronellitis Cured. An English Church C'lergy'man speaks, Rectory, Cornwall, Out. Da WAstuNOTON,_ DEAR Sia,—i 001 glad to be able to !Wenn you that my daughter is finite well egaht,-' As this is the second time she has been cured of grave bronch'al troubles under your treat inhnt, when the usual remedies failed. I write to express my gratitude. Please accept toy sincere thanks. Yours truly, C. B. PETTIT. Throat, s Catarrh T Deafness, Chronic Bronchitis, sorra and throat, enlarged l'olvpusf oiothe e nose removed. Conte early. Consultation free. A few of the many cured by Dr (Vayhingtons new method. 11H Storey, of Storey Sore•, Son, manufacturers, tfacturers, Acton, Ont, lso Pres'l Manufacturing Ass,, of Canada. permanently cured of Catarrh, by Dr Washington, pronounced incurable by noted specialists in this country. and Europe. Write him for particulars. Mrs John McKely, yy 1•'' and Consumption. ' v"gstun, Out,Catarrh John McKelvy, Kingston, Out, Catarrh. Mrs A Hopping, Kingston, Ont, Broncho Con- sumption. Mr D Scott, Kingston, Gut, Catarrh, head and throat. Mrs John Bertram, Il,rre\,, 1,) h, Ont, Ca- tarrh, head and throat. Miss Mary A Bombourg, Curtrevillc, out, Catarrh, head and throat. James Mathews, P itlaster, Acton Ont. A E Fish, Gents Furnishings, Belleville, Ont cured of Catarrh, throat. John Phippin, Sandhurst P 0, Ont, (near Na- AAPea office Yore a Street, Toronunto. Con- sultation Free.. 1KcKillo ll�otnal p Ills! (gate Co. T: NEILAPIS, HARLOCK (;(:gnatA(;.l N '. isolated town and village 1r0J (try, as (:ell as fa on (1) igs 0,4steek.insured. Insur- ances elrnc•ted against stock 'that )nay be a ktnt 1h •• lightning It you vont insulauceOra 5ar<1 to tit above u4dr the M1LLOY & FERGUSON.• Mr,.Itunos Ferguson has entoreri into part- nership with Mr. D. Malloy in the Pump staking busiuees. They are both practical and well e'perieuced then, 011(1 are prepared to do all hinds of work in their line, such as Pump Making, well Digging and Sinking Cisterns, on the shortest notice and most )•aso,utl)1 terms Orders solicited. I). MULLUY, JAS. PF.nfl USON. Clinton, Juno 7. OF ALL HINDS., Field and Carden Sheds ol'alt kinds, fresh and Less, ineInd- ing•Seed Paas, Oa and Buck- wheat, at the CLINTON PLED ST(111 :. It. FIT(/.S1 31ONS, NEW PAINT SHOP. . KAISER & %VIi.SON. Desire to announce that they have opened a shop on Albert Street, Clinton, next to Glas- gow's store. Being practical workmen they believe they can give satisfaction to all who entrust their work, ' PAPER HANGING, KAL- SOMINING, PAINTING, GRAINING, AND CEILING DECORATIONS, &c , executed on the shortest notice. Orders respectfully solicited, Dr• Chase Hasa worldwide reputation as a physician and author. His Mandrake Dandelion Liver Cure is triumph of medical shill. curing all diseases of the It 11 ey amt Liter, Symptorns of KIDNEY r'1►tIPII,AI14T. IY.treasing aches nal pain., In the beet; a dull pain or weight in the 10541,101 and bot of the abdomen; scaldugc iirime I,ften nt.,arnctul; frequent desire to uriuute, r9peei1t11) 0 1, hrht arming aged pe)'- snns; hot, dry .kin, pale c,rtnlde,ion, red and white tleI11+ttV dr,1•r'. a allss ." ur+.� r ti..u•{ 1 (nri- stihnlim, pile., Ilrt n•s�.l„I +luta fogs A,•, sYN11.10314 01' LIVER 434,111PL* V'1'. 14un -uud,r 0,0 4hnulder (lade Jnui,d!e5, .:,!Lar eetuplrx,„n, sears, tired Ireling, un lite or energy, Ilen8,che dyspepsia, ir,di•,5stm•n -put s, pimpies, h.r. HD** 4liR11►. 1 land rake and ) , t innhlin u Are natin•c's Liver re•s and when rembimel with Kidney remedies as iu Dr. Chase's Liver Cure, will most po4itivel v cure all Kidney -Liver trouble•. It acts like a charm, stimulating the clogged liver, strengthening the'' kldheys, ani nv'gl retitle fi,•• wbola buds. Sohl by all'denlcrs At. 11, (11111 )1t•.. pt It„nk, 0011icb a lone is worth the money. KID EY 1,111'111 l'11.1,44. Dr, PIlls aro the only Kidney -Livor Pills made. May n be taken done. any en, dr.ymeet They cure Kidney•Liver 1roueles, Pl,ndaehe, billiousness, costiveness, A5, One }till a 110411. Noll by all dealers, Pelee 21 cents. '1'. EDNI ANSON at 4'0., llimuhreturers, Bradford, Ootatrio. 1-3 ims rn zima1-4:1 cG CD C/11=1 =Li e;CICD e -r 1-4:1 CD ►5 E.