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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1888-07-20, Page 6We wantt ment thereto we er trial for 2c p kCiv offer. NEWS NOTES. The Brack rifle shot. of Aylmer and vicinity •is Miss Ella Stevens,Tho Quebec Tlegislature ionsdaughtor of Lawyer Stevens, of r prorogued on Thursday. that village. Two or three.cases of snla}1 oYAu cuterw1)►tising physician in have occurred in the northern )ut•tAustralia ttdvortisos:—" I will 1a , half the funeral ex tenses in eases where1 am not successful. of Toronto. p 3 t Mr Marks, of'Moosemin, N. W. WVonren aro fro uentlydebarred T., was fatally burned, her dress from acting on Schoot Boards and being ignited by a catup fire. Church Boards, bat they can have Rev It. A. Temple, of Ilalifux, a complete munoply on the wash has been elected Diost Worthy boards. Patriarch_of the National division A paper calls attention to the •caf the Sons of Temperance. fact that Lucretia Borgia was Track -laying on the Rod River counted a beauty in her day, al - Valley railway is progressdng though she scarcely had any neck. ra !)idly, and the line will, it is The trouble•waastl at no ono dared expected, reach Morris early call Lucrece anything else but a Next wook. beauty.Whether from swampy land or sag- During the present Presidcutsl' nand pool, or from the deadly' gases of city seWer's, malarial poison' are the same. Ayer's Ague Cure, taken ac- corPding to directions, is a warranted specific for malarial disorders. Great damage, was done by Wednesday's storm at Boston. It is reported -that nearly a dozen yachts, largo tend • small, were sunk, tld that so er'al persons aleepipg in them -were drowned. Sam Jones told the 1Vindsorites that they were "the ugliest look- ing lot of mon ho over got tangled up with." No doubt Sam �i'iIl blattle the't:nlgling' on Walk- er's (listillel•y. •'Tho coming nt' age of Canade was celebrated in Lon'lon, Eng.lund, on Thursday, by a great banquet, tit which lord Lans- downe, Sir Charles Tupper, 1lon. . Oliver ,Mowat and other distin- guishc d' men were present. Railway statiistics for the first six months of 1888 show that '+1,- 754 miles Frere laid in the United States, tiro largest. number of any similar period except last year. Iu Canada there is a lull in rail- way building, though several ex. tensions are in progress i'n ditl'er-ent parts of the country. Serious Indian disturbances are threatening in British Columbia, owing to the arrest of en Indian for murder, tld tho Government propose scndi•ng a detachment ofC 13atterw on 1I.'_1i. S. Carline to Skcona. 1t i.s said that the lives of the unites in the district arc at the mercy or rile Indians, A London despatch frogs Cape- town, Africa, :says the .Debeci's s•oal mine at Kimberley caught fire on Thursday. Eight hundred men were entombed. The' wort:of resene `began at ()nee but it is believed tat 500 .pursolls Lave perished, including .Mr Lindsay, the manager of •the c•onpa•ny.Many of the victims intpi isonc 1the mines t'e lrhites. l-ltn«'ickliil, of (-'uIb(n•ne, rtl'1V 011t t110 a. IIL.: 'l c �, Flu ]Dula in the Revelo house, Toronto, ;Fri- day,and the chain1 ermaid noticed r• �• ,asmellnfgaslnthehtlll in tbc.r .., ,nlornulg„ and n.ttt, an alarm, l'anl'Picklin's door was burstap- en and the occupant Bund un-const;.iotls. After, a doctor badworked with hint a (•rntple oaf hours consciousness rutnrned. Ile trill live. „• • . Irl 1'rovideiice, 1l. 1.., the other day they were setting ••orae ver;rtoll poles fur 1he telephone wires 70 -footers. A 'countryman came •tlong and asked the foreman• what his nlen were . doing. Now,. the fore -Men of that particular gang is it mild-mannered ditizon,• arld Ileans t'o be patient and forbear•ing, but he is worried a gond deal with questions, antl gets tired of answering them. In this par- icular 0as0 .he told the country- man that he was building :t wire relle0. "Is lint so:1" said the - farmer, klol:ing aloft; and then added :--"Well, 1 guess you've ggot it bull high, belt I don't be- lieve you ctin lntike it pig tight." That foreman itas been very shy of Rode Island farmers ever since. campaign Tho Omaha World will have on its staff a Republican and ' a Demoeratiaedi tor, eaelt of whom will present his'Side of the quest- ion day by day. Tho readers of the paper expect to have a circus.,Mark Twain, in acknowledging 1 the degree of M. A. conferred up•on him by Yale, whose grave and revernod pundits evidently know a good thing when they sec it, as- sures the university authorities •that he is quite as much gratified over the honor as if he deserved it. r M v 10lidilyhealth 4114TigorPAY bel414'. teinefaa, eap}ly, in the . ea♦i of aumareg•, as in the winter months, if the blood is purified with Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Ev- I ery perspn who has used this remedy hasbeengreatlybeneflted. Take it this month. Farmersdown in Jersey are a - bout instituting"bug day" where- in a concerted effort will bo made to exterminate the insects that just t;ow aro playing havoc with fruit and vegetables. A Toronto dispatch says: The general opinion of the priests of Toronto Diocese appears to be that the vacant archbishopric will bo offered to Bishop Walsh, of London, but that - ho will do - cline owing to ill -health, and• (hat. Dither Bishop Dowling, of Peter- borough, oe Bishop A: Farrell, of Toronto, will be elected. Mrs Joseph .Deeks, of Marsh- ville, leonunitted suicide- by •jump- ing into the Welland•canal fooder last Thursday eight. The lady had boon mentally deranged for some time, but only succeeded in eluding the vigilance of her friends, Thursday night. . She was about 60 years of age, and the family is one of the most highly respected here. A writer in the Century tolls of a Niece of good fortune coining from the somnambulistic habit. A young woman, troubled and •anxious -•about a prize for which she was to compote, involving tho writing of an essay, arose from her- bed in sleep and wrote a pap- er upon a subject upon which she had not inte.ndcd to write when awoke, and this essay secured for her the prise. . At the Norfolk Teachers Con- vention Mr. D. 8. Patterson show- ed that about, 1,500 teachers are annually certificated in the Prov- ince although 1,000 would leo quite enough to supply all the. vacan- cies that could reasonably occur. Thus the. supply of members of the teaching profession is a half greater than the demand. The proposed remedies that fbund most time. at the sleeting worn length- ening of the Model School terns and making all the examinations meso thorough .and searching. Mau 1' Meredith; the wild and headstrong girl knowii in Cali- fornia as the heiress of Oakland, recently escaped front her guardi- ans, who have been trying to make a lady of her since she bo - came wealthy, and were stopping at San Luis Obispo with her. A.fter'a search of' `ten days she was found, clad iii 1 oy's apparel, hoeing •beans on a ranch below - Arroyo Grande. The elan who gave,her employment states that be never hada person who was more. faithful. • c'117st aiieolt3 sanctification" was preached by Rev.J.Coy,a Bap- tist minister of Koswich, N. B. Tho New Brunswick Western Baptist Association took the mat- ter up, pronouneed the doctrine unwarranted, and dropped Mr. (joy's name:fsom the list of min- isters. - • A Montreal despatch says. -1 News of a railway fatality of a peculiarly distressing character' ('one from ,Jacques Cartier Junc- tion, 0 short distance out of Mon- treal. The Canadian Pacific and Of all the balloons sent up in Philadelphia on the Fourth, repre- senting the different States and territories, the one representing Indiana was the only one that bursted. Now there must be some deep hidden political significance in this. It must mean ."busted"- hopee for ono of the candidates, but which one ? It is understood that DT Tache, who has been Deputy 51inister of Agriculture sinceo18.64, has been superannuated on account of ill - health, and that DIr John Lowe, Secretary of the Department, has been promoted to the position of Deputy Minister. Mr Lowe has been in the department for eigh- teen yeath. The 13eaverton hotel -keepers have closed up the hotels and will take holidays until further notice. They have come to the conclusion to close up their houses and sheds, and tied out how the temperance party will like the move. The action is particularly hard Ott voteinereial travellers. A Monster P5rmessau cheese was one i the amusing...features of the I3oloo la Univo•sity fetes held t l: 1 Thestudents C d t..t we it tS presented Iiolognt brothcrn with a cheese weighing 1 )ounds, and entirely covered with atin in- seript.iotIs lrorlced 111 ina 'troll. 'fire was to be washed down 'th a large tun of Berbera wine 'giro by the students of Turin: "There are moments• when the silence prolonged and. unbroken, 'gore expressive may he than all words ever .spoken." Look at the wan and wasted woman,' once the picture of health,noW so palid. She can not begin to tell her ,suffering, but as from day to day she goes through the house, attending to her rnany cares, her attenuated form, her. !white face, her stooping shoulders, her pinched features, all teH that she is a silent martyr to disease. Icer once cheery voice is seldom heard, but her silence tells her suffering more than words could do. 01'ye silent, sorrowing, suf- fering sisters, there is a cure for your troubles; Dr. Pierces Favorite Pro. scription is a sovereign remedy for the derangements and maladies peculiar to your sex. As a powerful, invigorating tonic, it imparts strength to the whole system, and to the womb and its appen- dages in particular. For overworked, "worn out," "run-down," debilliated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seam- stresses, "shop -girls." housekeepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally, "Favorite Prescription" is the greatest earthly boon, being un- equaled as an appetizing cordial and re- storAtiVe tonic. About two year: .Igo inose Waldorf, a 13rookl,)•n merchant. well-known in Jewish mer(•hlt- Grand Trunk Railways meet at tilt circlet, wile welkin, 011 that point. h1 Saturday even - Broadway noticed la young girl of ing last the little slaughter, some 9 years of age, of the Cs P. R. de- pot agent there, was playing on the track, and by some means one of .h6, fact became fastened in,a 'frog,' Ilcr cries brought her father to hoc assistance, but ho could not extricate the foot at once, and meantime a train np- preached at a rapid 1 ate in the near distance. The floor plan ( stale frantic efforts to tear his child from the rail in which her foot was so firmly Incked, and al- so motioning to the tl'a111 to stop, but all was unavailing;►. He was (•ompellerl to rel1ngrni,h the child or lose his own life, and the loco• motive rind tender passed over her, killing her inslatitly crush- ing her head and upper}' Tart of her body in the 1l1H .Horrible manner immediately it Iris 3•ca, Th►tdren Cry for about 18 crying. Ile accosted her and, on being rinestioned as to the' reason of her distress she told hits she Id a:• a stranger and penniless, Having •comp from Vienna to seek friends in this Conntrs'. Ile invited her to itis home, and being a widower with three children, he hired her es his housekeeper, Three months afterly: rds they Were married and all wont well till one (lay last \once, when illi girl mother arrived front Aiistl'ia on a visit. It turns ul11 that the woman was Waldot'f"s first wife, whom he had deserted nearly twenty rose• ago. alts the girl went by anotl •, nauno there was nothing to cats that she was iii any way re- leted to hint, and he unknowing- ly cohinlittcd the cringe of mari'y- ing his own dangghtcr. The lat (t r heranle a mother a few days ago. • itc Pher'6 Castoria. • , and eriber k,f0 time to take advartage of this low herew Bret, Clinton. - A statue of Giillibotta was un- veiled in Paris on Friday. Mr Dicky, Conservative, is el - opted for Cumberland, N. S., by about 700 majority fiver Mr Casey, Prohibitionist. "'The village of Ripley was swept by fire on Friday. Twenty-six buildings were burned, and only two or three business places are left standing. - Liquor licenses were issued in Halton on Wednesday, ' for the first time since 1882. The num- ber issued is 18, and there will bo a few additions to the list, Ieorty were issued before the Scott Act was adopted. ' • Ebenezer Stanyerci,,theYoungss- town Murderer, with - killed his sweetheart, Alice Hansoock, in 1887, was hanged at Columbus, O.,• on Friday morning. He play- ed his accordion before going to the scaffold, and. appeared. at. his. ease, talking a groat deal and meeting his tato with more nerve than many -supposed ho would. At Brantford, on Friday, a teamster named Wm hunter im- bibed too freely and instead of sticking to the ordinary roads, drove down the Grand Trunk -truck to the bridge ever Clarence 'street, whore one horse fell over to tho•stroet below and the other got fast between the ties, while the driver,it is supposod,lay down 1L1 rho waggon. About midnight a freight train struck the renuun- ing horse and waggon an(.1throw the driver down the embankment. Ho was badly bruised and uncon- scious; for some tines, but it is thought that his injuries are not very serious. ' ' A Now York lespateh says - - Mrs .Now Carleton, a dotermin- ed-looking woman of 40 years was eoneicted before Pecorder Smith in General Sessions on Friday of whipping Albert 13ow- ker, aged 14 years, with a shawl strap, on , Jane the lith. She tied his legs together and whipped hint with the strap Until the boy was covered with rod welts an inch broad. In_..some places the skin was broken. The boy declar- ed that the, defendant beat him for 15 minutes without ceasing. Tho jury found her guilty c'f'es- sault in the third degree, the punishment for which. is not more The men engaged in sawing, the iu111be1' for Mr.• D.:1. White, near Car n i ng, l3len h ei mTownsh ip, have had an experience not com- mon to mill men: About two weeks ago they sawed through an iron the size of a harrow tooth, hien ruined the saw and occas- io td much loss of time. This wee oy ran on a file which bent the tee and stopped t110 saw under a fu sad of steam. After replacing the - w, the handle part of the file was gt • ed in another lob,. Suspicion mita upon a alae who was heard to say that Mr. Dishes would have troub - before he finished the work.' The ftoe list clauses of the Mills tariff bill here been passed by the United States House of' Repre- sentatives and discussion on the dutiblo list is now in progress. With respect to salt, tho bill pro- vides that that article shall bo free "when importedfronl tiny country which does not charge an import duty upon salt exported from the United States." Here the princi- ple and practicability of unre- strictor eeiprocity aro distinctly admitted. The Americans Say to Canada, "when you admitour salt free we will admit your salt free," and they appear to take very .lit- tlo stock in tho theory that the llrodttets of countries which do levy duties on American goods will find their way into the Unit. cd States by way of those which do not. The fact that tho onus of proving that his goods aro entit- 4od to feces entry rests with the importer precludes any possibit. ity of that kind. If the Dominion government desire to secure free access to the American market for the salt producers of western Ontario they mnsttherefore place salt on the free list, and give up the revenue hitherto collected on that article. But possibly the Tories witI refuse the offer of urn• restricted reciprocity in salt, lest they should insert "the thinrage of the wedge," rind prove that such a policy is not only possible but profitable. 1f unrestricted recipreeity in salt is practicahle and ,.good for the Otultry, why not extend the Ilrinciple to other artielcs? Children Cry for '_tirowak�axd.J.• ..a:. It is said that the Dominion Government intend • to appeal against tho decision of the Su- premo Court in the Ayers case. Ladies Only The complexion is often retdered un. sightly by Pimples, Liver Spots and Yel- owness. These it is well known are caused from an inactive Liver and bad blood. DI' Chase's Liver Cure purifies the blood and whole system. See recipe book for toilet recipes, hints and suggestions on how to preserve the complexion. By all druggists -...•- GRASS HOPPERTRAPS. - METHODS OF DESTROYING 'THESE DE- STRUCTIVE INSECTS. There are three principal methods of destroying the insects. Where thelandlrad been ploughed for wheat none hatched out, as inverting the soil destro yed the eggv, and no hop- pers were found in the fields of. growing wheat. But from adjoining fields, especially those where- wheat was grown last yea► and then abandoned without ploughing, they came in armies,s weeping the fieldsbe- fore theut.ln:traveling this way a line of march is formed before which every groen thingdisappears. When Dr, Lugger left on Thursday semi) fields were eaten into several rods. The method adopted prior to the arrival of kerosene and tar was to dig a ditch two feet deep and two feet wide just in advance of the tip• preaching host. A few inches cf straw is then placed in the bottom se and the locusts are driven into it by walking slowly along behind them. They cannot jump out and are burned; .or, if straw is not to he had, they are killed by drawing a log through the ditch. The tar is used by placing it:in a shallow'sbeest iron pan two feet wide and eight feet long, with a wide board fastened to one side. This is drawn sidewise across the field, the ltoppe's jumping against, the board and falling into the tar, where tll'ey polish. But the handi- er, Ings(' rapid, and niost complete method is to use kerosene on canvas against which the pests jump: Strong muslin, or canvas, a yard wide and fifteen feet • long is stret- ched on a haute and carried on a sled -like arrangement pulled by a team. The canvas slants back, and is constantly sat ul5tedlWith kerosen(� Every one that hops against thi,i and touches his body to the oil dies instantly. Ona barrel of kerosene will go over abont 120 acres, and than $500 fine and a • year's im- I will kill 200 bushels or More. Each prisonment. 4 farmer is given one barrel of oil, and 'nniliSi% to use it only lot tles- tIoyiile iusocls • Cattle are starving at Pittsburg, Frontonac. Tho pasture lands are dried up and vegetation is impossible. Farmers have been 1 kept busy building fences knock-! cd down by the cattle in their citgorness to get into the grain field .backs In the countrypa s• turago is good, plenty orain havipg lulled), and some farmers are, considering the advisability of sending their cattle hurl: to remain until the snow !lies, 1.1 is said that at 0 -ei erifl'•s salad at. Enterprise, sonle,days ago,' cattle were auctioned off et from $2 to $4 per head. Ttlere is very general sorrow in town, says the•Tilsonbtu•g Obser- ver, over tho alinost sudden death apse late W. E. Conn, the well- known tin and;; hardware dealer. He had been iibusinoss in•Tilson- burg onlyafire or sis years, blit in that short time he.had gained,tho good will of everyone in town,and hie death is deeply' regretted by all the townspeople and hundreds in the surrounding country. He Wa3 situ:=only a few days, having takondown with inflammation Of t lungs,which quickly spread to tho mach end kidneys. Ho died abon , 'vo o'clock on Sunday evening, •lr esing away very pea.eefully. I funeral on Tues. day morning 'Wee olyattended. The United Stator 1 avornlnent have now . $482,433,91 in ' the national treasury for which they have no use, and the .amount is constantly inc'r'easing. Tho sat ional debt of rho United States was reduced by $1.1,429,503 dur- ing the month of June, and ..for the fiscal year the total reduction Was ;;4113,84.4,080. Notwithstand- ing the purchase of outstanding 'bonds at a premium b3• the Gov - eminent, with the vies of work- ing off the extra revenues, the surplus in the treasury continues to grow. Tho total interest bear- ing debt of the United States is now $ 1,021,693,:250, trpon which the 3 early interest is $41,780,519. Tho debt 11er head of population has decreased from 807 10 in 1886 to $19 58'in 1888, and the inter- est charge per head hag fitllen from $3 48 to 7() cents (.luring the twenty years. ,1n the Mlle pet'iod the Dominion's debt (esti- mating the population of Canada 3,500,000 in 1868 and 4,800,000 in 1888) had increased from $27 54 to $S7 per head, lvhile the annual interest charge has ineroaserd from $1 28 to $2 11 per head. 'filus while the Alll01•It•a11y have been reducing their national burdenp, Cannsla has been adding to hers. Where will it nil end? Pitcher's Castoria: 'aine9s eLery ompound For The Nervous The Debilitated The Aged. ' URNS Nervous Prostration,Nervous Head, ache,Neuralgia, NervousWeakneav, Stomach and. Liver Diseases, and ad Affections of the Kidneys. A NERVE TONIC. theorem W. BOUTo%. STAMBonD, (0 01., says: ' For two -ears I was&sufferer front nervous de, pllity. and I thank Sod and the discoverer of th valuable remedy that PAINE'S CELERY COMPOVN, Dared me. it is a valuable remedy. Long may if live. Let any one write to me for advice," AN ALTERATIVE. itLOR20 ABBOTT, WINDSOR, V•t., says 'I believe PAVNE%CELERY COMPOUND saved ing. IIxfa. my trouble seemed to beau internal humon neforel used it I was covered with en eruption from a head to heel." The eruption is rapidly heallnpi lard lent ave hundred per cent. better-e#ery way.'. A LAXATIVE. ft. 0. Drai, Wun 1lzv n JuecrION, VT., says: For two years past I have been a great aua'eret from kidney and liver troubles attended with dye, peon" and constipation. Before I began to tilt( 1 *LEBY COMPOUND it seemed as though .c.ryth(n:1 Riled me. Now I can say nothing ells we. A DIURETIC. DEoaoz ABBoTJ. Stone CITY, Iowa, says: I have been using PAINE'a CELERY CO)IOr'I' pad it has done me more good for kidneys and lam, track than any other medicine I have ever taken. Httndreda of testimonials have been received from eons who have used this remedy with romarkaht, meat. Send for circular. -Klee 81.00. Sold bp Vrugsista. WELL RICHARDSON & Proprietors ontreal, P. O. Tho renl:S' s of Sixteen dead Chinamen pec.,d in till ' foxes were shipped by the National Ex- press from ...New -York, on hrid?ty, file Cathay, China, A firm of Celestial philanthropists assenlbl- ed together some time ago and made a tou r of the States to solleet the bones (11' (11011' sweetlse(1 com- patriots and shipped them back to Chinn. They started from San FI'an•Iseo some 11)(11111 is ago in searell of the heathen dead. They went to los Angeles, to le -ewer, lituesis t'il,y,Whehliltg,Pittsbtlrg, Beaver hails, Philadelphia and New York, and ('inletted in all 215 remains. In cavil city they first loetted the graves of their friends, and carefully exhumed then. .Buried as the bodios.wero in ordinary ('.astasias (0111ne the ddlldenito' of transporting them deemed large, anti the expense '1p• appalling. Soma prrtpns)l irl t+hi ll al the l,oiled fie h 1n nnc ha; Fels and 111(1 Lumley !n :1 h:gg packing eclat,. 1lut the illCit was yernl1811 m Ilr•r•nn111 •'1• thth•it would attend tho division of the material among mourning rola- tivea .at bottle, , So it was agreed to stew every man separate! y,and to boil, him down to the smallest possible space imaginable so as to set in jelly whoa cold. Square tins suitable for holding one boiled body each Were obtained, and the remains were corked so as to fit exactly. It was found that a Chinaman's corpse could be boiled down so as to average about 35 pounds, and that is,$what was done with all of them, big and little alike. Dr. Washington's , Throw t NEXT VISIT find Lung Surgeon, OF TORONTO Will boat the ERattollbury House WEDNESDAY .JULY 18, .After arrival of noon Odin from (ioderieh Until sll.111 Chronic Bronchitis Cured. An English Church Clergyman spook.., Rectory, Corm, Ont, Da WAa1nNO'lrox,— DEAa Sin,—1 ata glad to bo able to inform y ou that mydaughter is quite well again. As this is the second time she has boon cured of grave broncb'nl troubles under you ^ trait 1111101, when the usual remedies failed. I write to express my gratitude. Please accept my sincere thanks, Yours truly, C. 11 PEWIT.. Dist:mots TIIKA ED,—Catarrh of the head and Throat, Catarrh Deafness, Chronic Bronchitis, Asthma and Consumption. Also loss of voice, sore throat, enlarged tonsils. Polypus of the none rtnnoted. Come early, Consultation free. A few of the many cured by Dr Witshingtoi ,s' new method, II if Storey, of Store • .ft Son, manufacturers, Acton, Out, also i'rc d) Manufacturing Ass., of Canada. permanently enrol of Catarrh, by Dr Washington, I1y,na'uunced incurable by noted specialists 111 this country and Europe, Write him for particulars. Mrs Jo1,, )Iel(e:vy, Kingston, Cut, Catarrh and Consumption. John McKelry, Kingstu, , Ont, Catarrh. Mrs A Hopping,Kingston, Ont, Broncho Con- sumption. Mt U Scott, Kingston, eau, Catarrh, head and throat. 11rs John Beltran, Ilairoww,ith, Obt, cud tarrlt, head and throat. • Miss Mary A liombomg, Centro ille, Ont. 'Catarrh, head and throat. Jtuues Mathews, P blaster, itet on Out. A f. Fish, Gents Furnishings, Belleville, Out cured of Catarrh, throat. John Phippin, Sandhurst P 0, Onus (near xa- pauoe) of Catarrh Head tluvat and head office 215 Yutige rUrect•, Toronto. Com +nitation Free. McKillop Mutual Insurance Co. T: NEILANS, 'HARO.00K (11;N1ia.tL AGENT. (.401;11011 (so(11 0 1 town and village property, as well as farts buildings and stock, insured. thaw - emcee effected against stock that may be killed by lightning, If you want insurance dlt'opa card to tbo above address. MULLOY & FERGUSON. \n•..lauw4 Ferguson 11ns entered into pnrt- narship with ,lir. D. dlulloy 81 the Pump making business. They aro both practieal and well experienced men, and are prepared to do alt kinds of work in their line, Suclt as Pinup Making, Well Digging and Sinking Cisterns, on the shortest notice end 111011 twas0ntii)e terms Orders solicited 0 All f.L01 ('liut.m. •lnue 7. JAS, i Clef l'SON'. NEW PA7NT SHOP. KAISER, & WILSON. Desire to tu11LOuliC0 that they '11814 0 'oponcd a • a11op on Albert Street, Clinton, next to (las— low's store. Being practical workmen they believe they can give satisfaction to all who entrust their work. PATER HANGING, HAL- 40StININQ PAINTING, GRAINING, AND CEILING DECORATloxs, Ito„ executed on the shortest (101 ice. Orders rdspectfullysolicited. r. Chase ltas't worldwide reputation nit a physician 1(111(1 author. His Mandrake Dandelion Liver Care is triumph of mttlleal skill. coring all discuses u 1 the I(,ey and 1,181,). 5}tnptul1 of KI IIN BY ('OM Pi.A INT. ftish•c••hig aches and mins in the buck; a doll pain or weight In the irladde) mid base of 1 he sidemen; scalding urine reten u1 1reettd: frequent desire to urinate, espec I )Ily at nu ht aiming aged per- sons: hot, dry skin, pale compktinn, red and white deposits, ilretetleiv,leess,sour,b'nei. h,en i. stipnlium, pile•, liver Alval swelline-, at r, 5Y)i1'TOyl5 OF L1'i'ERCOMPLAIN'r. Pim the shoulder binde9. J tnnd(.'c 8a111,8 m'nupl, \run. SI weary, tired feeling, no life or enu•:y, in:miaow dyspep-la, indlgestnn, stints, pimple., Au. • IIOW CuftED. Mandrake and Daudclion are nature's Liver mires end when combined with t( Miley remedies• ns In' Dr. Chase's Diver Curo, will most positively cure S1f'1(idneyLiver troubles. It nota like a charm, stimulating the cloe,ged liver, st•a 1ielberfing the kidneys, sad Invigorating the holo body. Sold by all dealers at vl, a ith Iteecipt Mid, Which a lone is worth the money. KID EY LIN/Fit FILLS. Or.rhsae'a Pills are the only I(Idnoy-Liver Pill. made, May lie takoh dnrink any employ men t. They cure I(idneyLlver troubles, hueadache, bill{nusnesa costiveness, .te. One Pill a /hem. soil by an dealers. price 53 conte. T. 1:D I1ANOOK at C0.. Minutiae? tirerIlrndferd, Ontario. z H a r `SGN E[IU E