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The Clinton New Era, 1889-08-30, Page 3
,ers�*mr.-•::rte. For the small sum of 35 cents cash, we will send the Clinton New Zra to new subscribers in a.n.y part of Canada or the United States, for the balance of this year. Now is the time to s i.l-bscribe for the largest paper in the county. Send it to your friends, it is better than a letter, and contains a vast amount of home news and general information weekly. Poni WHEN they find how rapidly health is restored by taking Ayer's Sar- saparilla. The reason is that this preparation contains only the purest and most powerful alteratives and tonics. To thousands yearly it proves a veritable elixir of life. Mrs. Jos. Lake, Brockway Centre, Mich., writes : " Liver complaint and indigestion made my Iife a burden and came near ending my existence. For more than four years I suffered un- told agony. I was reduced almost to a skeleton, and hardly had strength to drag myself about. All kinds of food distressed me, and only the most deli- cate could be digested at all. Within the time mentioned several physicians treated me without giving relief. Noth- ing that I took seemed to do any per- manentood until I began the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla, which has pro- duced wonderful results. . Soon after commencing to take the Sarsaparilla I could see an Improvement in my condition, my appetite began to return and with it came the ability to digest all the food taken, my strength improved each dav, and after a few months of faithful attention to your directions, I found myself a well woman, able to attend to all household duties. The medicine has given me a new lease of life, and I cannot thank you too much." "We, the undersigned, citizens of Brockway Centre, Mich., hereby certify that the above statement, made by Mrs. Lake, is true in every particular and entitled to full credence."— 0. P. Chamberlain, G. W. Waring, C. 'A. Wells, Druggist. ' "My brother, in England, was, for a long time, unable to attend to his occu- pation, by reason of sores on his foot. I sent him Ayer's Almanac and the tes- timonials it contained induced him to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla. After using it a little while, he was cured, and is now a well man, working in a sugar mill at Brisbane, Queensland, Australia." - A. Attewell, Sharbot Lake, Ontario. Ayer's Sarsaparilla, /SWEATING THE FARMER. THE DROUGHT. A Plum Creek, Man., settler For about six weeks now we writes to a Brandon paper, that have had continued dry weather, there must be something wrong and only that the greater part of with the Customs department, be- the time the atmosphere has been cause "hey certainly charged me cool the effects would have been more than the 35 per cent. duty very injurious. True, no finer authorized by Parliament upon weather could have been had for certain agricultural implemellts harvesting, and the several crops which I 'recently imported from up to this time have been got in Chicago, and facine,NS is." This in fine condition. But pastures settler does not seem to be aware and root crops have suffered, and that the Customs department water was never scarcer. In wields what is virtually a taxing several parts stock are suffering, power, distinct from that vested and cattle have to be driven for in it by the people's representa- miles for water,, with very little tives. A farmer or an implement good, insomuch as by the time agent imports machines from the the animals are driven a long dis- States.' The Canadian duty, as tance, the fatigue and heat coun- stated above, is 35 per cent., but terbalance the good effects of the Customs officials are author- water. .Everything is so dry that ized to fix the valuation of the farmers are fearing fire in their article, and by adding ten, twenty woods and stubble, and indeed too or thirty per cent. to the invoice much precaution cannot be taken price, they largely augment the in this matter, These dry spells duty paid by the settler.. In this should teach farmers instruotiye way, too, they contrive to harass lessons with regard to making and destroy the import trade,with better provisions for tiding over the result that the settlers are left these dry spells with regard to completely at the mercy of the both water and pasturage. On Canadian makers. In spite of the one hand, by a little expense this system,.however, a consider- every farmer could have an abun- able number of American iinple- dance of water the year round by ments are still brought into Man- having properly constructed re• itoba and the Territories. In a servoirs or tanks in his barnyard, recent report to the Washington and wells and windmill pumps in Government, Mr Taylor, the his fields, Not only would he United States Consul at Winni- have a supply of water, but it peg, says that nearly 15 per cent. would in the former case be con• of the implement business is donejvenient for both summer and win - with American houses. This off ter. Cows that have a long dis- itself is.an answer to the protec- tance to go for water, whether tionist fable, that the N.P. enables summer or winter, cannot thrive. the Canadian maker to turn out Now, what with scarcity of water a better and a cheaper article and dried up pastures, stock, es - than his competitors. pecially milch cows; cannot ex - The revoluation system is, is 1pect to do well ;M in fact, they are fact, an additional prop to mono -going behind, and being kept at a poly. Some time ago a firm of luss,and taking ten years together, implement manufacturers in eight are dry this month and the Western Ontario wanted five ear beginning of September, Oen loads of nuts and bolts. There both water and feed are scarce. was a combine among a few Cana- As in making provision for water, dian nut and bolt makers, and the every farmer should have a soiling firm wrote to the secretary of it,crop of from five to ten acres to offering to pay the American tide his stock over the short, dry price at Cleveland, 0., plus the pastures that we have at this Canadian duty, for a consignment time of the year. Indeed, ono The secretary refused to accept acre of green crop will supply this figure, whereupon the firm more fend -than five acres of pas - imported the five car loads direct ture, and give better results in from Cleveland. But- on its ar- the yield of milk. There are rival at its destination the ship- severalforage plants that recom- ment was seized for undervalue- mend themselves, such as lucerne, tion by the Customs authorities ; vetches and corn. The latter is and on enquiry the firm found probably the best suited for the that the secretary of the combine ordinary farmer, but the others had'heen in communication with make good return, and are eieel- the Customs department, and had lent feed, and it is somewhat sur- really prompted the seizure. The prising, that the two former aro firm lost nothing in the end by not more generally grown in On - this act of robbery, for of course tario. However, until our farm - the additional price was collected ers make betterprovision for a from the Canadian farmers who water supply, and enter more ex - bought the implements into the tensivoly and systematically into manufacture of which the nuts soiling or green crops, they will and bolts entered. The farmer is always be farming at a great dis- the victim of last resort in all advantage at this time of the year, such transactions, and even the when water is scarce and the pas - monopolists who prey upon him tures dried up. are beginning to ask how much •-es longer he is likely to stand it: NEWS NOTES. PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co:, Lowell, Mass, Price $1; rix bottles, $5, Worth $5 a bottle. CANADA 50 YEARS AGO. Dedicated to the Hon. D. Mills, by W. M. Giffin, Clinton. The writer and the Hon. David Mills were both born and brought up on Talbot street, near Lake Erie, Now, all old men like yon and .me Will sit and tell what used to be, How we went to achool in our bare feet, And drove an ox cart on Talbot street. How the girls did drive their spinning wheel, And they wound their yarn upon a reel. How the women drove a treddle loom, And swept their floors with a hickory broom. The men did chop, and log, and burn,. To clear their land they oft did yearn. Of large, round logs they'd build their hoose, Roof it with troughs as snug as a mouse; Brought in big Logs and made a fire, And piled the wood on higher and higher. Then from the ashes they raked their taters, And, if you please, they had no waiters. They burned their" bread to make their tea, And called it "sin and misery." Burning the bread composed the sin, To drink it is where the misery came in. They did their cooking before the fire, For cook stoves then none did admire. In an iron kettle they baked their bread, With hot coals on it, alive and red. They baked their pies in a nice tin oven, And did it well, as oft was proven. They cooked their dinners in a pot, On top of the fire, where 'twas hot. Sometimes the dinner pot upset, And then you'dsee the women fret, And make • racket now, "you bet." The men wonld say a stove we'll get, Now, don't you cry, my pretty pet, We'll have these things all righted yet. They'd take their mealewith right good will, For Bob, and Sam, and Dan, and Bill, And Tom, and Dick, and Harry .too, Would always think of something new To tell their wives and daughters too. They sang their songs and cracked their jokes, And laughed and talked with all the folks. Their work was hard and their pay was small, I sometimes Wonder they laughed at all. When sickness comes yon need a friend, Then each to each would kindness lend. Some kind, good neighbor would come with her teas, And it's just surprising what pain she'd ease. To tell a lie men were as (oath As men are now to -•break their :oath. • They worshipped. Clod in a log meeting house, And drove their cattle to the woods to brouse. In an old stage coach they drove to town, Some stuck in the mud and some broke down, And some went over a corduroy road, An empty waggon was always a load. For a mile you'd hear it rattle-te-bang, And then you'd listen to Tony—he sang. He was always as full of mirth and glee As any driver ever could be. They often went by the blaze on trees, Through mud and water up to their knees. With a wooden plow the ground they'd tickle, - And cut their grain with an old hand sickle. They threshed it out with a common flail, And once a month -they'd get their mail. Shall I go on thus ever so? But echo answers never, no. • "The women tell me every day That all my bloom has passed away." But they could no longer chide you with loss of bloom and beauty if you made use of the great res. torative, Lr Pierce's Favorite Pro- scription. All female weaknesses and derangements vanish before this excellent remedy. Thin,palo and emaciated women, who find existence burdensome, on account of their ailments, should in once KILLING RABBITS William Mathiews was a victim -- of a serious accident Friday after - Tho rabbits are as "great a pest noon, Aug. 9. while working for to the orchards of California as Geo. Graves, of Langton. A the are in Australia. But instead swarm of bees belonging to Mr of inoculating them with disease, Graves alighted on a largo elm a la Pasteur, the people have inn -"tree in Mr Cowan's field, just stituted "rabbit drives," one of north of the village. The- limb which took place the other day at on which they rested was fifty Rialta, a "boom town" near San feet from the ground. Mathiews Bernardino. There were about climbed the tree, cut down the 1,500 men, women and children limb and was descending, when a in attendance ; on fbot, horse,mule loose please of bark ceased him to and buerre,in carriages, carts and fall to the ground, a distance of buggies. The method pursued in thirty-five feet. One arm was this sport is to build a V-shaped broken and his hip seriously in - corral out of wire fencing at some jured. suitable spot on:the plains. The In an interview, Hon. William drivers then form a line as long MacDougall expresses his doubt as possible with the ends carved of •the power of the Manitoba Leg - towards the ends of the wire fence. islature to' abolish the Separate A noisy march then ensues, the Schools. The Provincial Legis - country being thoroughly beaten. 'attire; he says, cannot alter the I'he fence wings stretchedout fundamental law. The Dominion about two miles, coming together law is also under the same disabil- at a point at which was built a ity. Tho second point is that slaughter pen, covering about an the P.,,7incial Legislatures are acre. At least a thousand mon, inhabited by the 93rd section of women and boys took part is the the B. N. A. Act, 1867, viz., by drive, yelling, whooping and start- the Constitution •fro.m passing ing the 'bunnies' from thoir .hole any law which shall prejudicially ter. When the crowd finally affect any right or privilege with. arrived at tho gap between the respect to denominational schools wings of the fence, the excitement which any class of persons have grew intense. It was whack, by law. At the Union Manitoba whack, whack; mon and women had, he said, a constitutional guar - wildly rushed around pounding nteo against a prejudical logisla- the poor creatures to death. The tion in this respect. scene can hardly bo imagined, the While a circus com an ng weather was very hot, the mer- unloading its paraphrenaliatafrom cury being up in the nineties, but a small steamboat at Metropolis, that made no difference. The O one of the two elephants show - thousand people were mad with ' p the lust of killing, and so well °d a great disinclination to go was their work done that at the pito pole ashore. Several employees seized close, wbon the hist Animal had s and began a systematic been smashed to piecos,the ground course of prodding which throw inside the wings for a distance of the boast into a •terrible raga. two miles was strewn with dead rabbits. However, from a non - sentimental point of view, the re- sult was satisfactory, for the end desired was accomplished. . Sufferers from indigestion, loss of appetite, livor or kidney com- plaints, rheumatism or neuralgia, would do well to give Ayer's Sarsaparilla a trial. For all suchlwas quieted, and the two marched disorders, no medicine is so effec-,ashore without accident. The have recourse to this unrivaledticc as this, when faithfully and man, who was unhurt, swam specifies perseveringly used. aihnre. n His trunk was soddenly twisted around the body of his nearest tormentor. The man was raised nigh in the nit• and flung uncoro- mopiously 30 feet into the Ohio River. 13y the time the elephant was ready for another man all had scampered out of danger. The regular keeper having come to the rescue, tho maddened animal NEWS NOTES. One of Barnum&Bailey's circus trains was wrecked near Potsdam, N. Y. on Thursday night, thirty horses and two camels being kill- ed. Rev. Mr McKenzie, a Presby- terian misssionary in Labrador, writes that there is great desti- tution there, and urges that a movement bo made to transport the inhabitance to the North-west While hunting near Eldora, Iowa, banker L. F. Wisner was accidentally shot and ki;led by his only son George, aged 22. Mr Wisner was the wealthiest man in central Iowa, being very popu- lar and widely known. On the evening of August 23rd a lad named Robert John Chesley, aged about 15 years, living near the Polson yards, Owen Sound, while putting a revolver together, was accidentally shot, the ball entering the region of the heart, death being instantaneous. The steamer from Alaska brings news that the Great Bears' Neat gold mines, recently purchased by the Duke of Sutherland and an English syndicate have turned out to be worthless. .The buildings and machinery have been aban- doned, and the Duke's agent has returned to Portland. The syn- dicate lose about 82,000,000. Miss Helen S. Freame, aged 28 years, died suddenly at her resi- dence, Galt, Friday morning last. She went out driving on Thursday and retired at night in good spl- its, tier .mother asked her at half past six next morning how sho was, and immediately after sho replied that she felt first rate she began coughing and died with- in three minutes. Mr Samuel Ayers announces through the New York papers,for the benefit of whom it may con- cern, that the world will come to an end on the 7th of October next, and that consequently no mundane business will be transacted after that date. This is a cheerful piede of intelligence for business men who have notes coming due on or after Oct. 8 and are unable to meet them. It is reported that a professor in the California State University at Berkeley has made a discovery which, will°revolutionize the loa- ther industry. It is said that ex- periments have determined that certain combinations of fat oils with sulphur compounds, when used for tanning, have the effect of rendering leather impervious to water, and so pliable as to render it almost indestructible. The assertion is made that boots and shoes manufactured of leath- er thus prepared will last five times as long as the foot weal now on the market, with little additional Dost. Leathermen think such a discovery impossible, but say if the professor secures such a patent, they might as well shut up their business. HUMOROUS. What is a fool -killer, ma? asked little Johnny. Go and ask your father, my dear; ho knows every- body. A fool-kill©r, my boy, re- turned Mr Brown, is a little thing called a cigarette. The lyre has resumed a place in music, I see. What do you mean? Why there' is Jaysmith singing ' I've fifteen dollars in my inside pocket,' when the fact is he hasn't a dime. Young man (to wealthy parent) —Can I marry your daughter? Wea.thy parent --Well, I— Young man—Is it agreed ? Oh, tell me, is it agreed ? Wealthy' parent— Yes, I should say it was a greed, and a thundering big one on your pai't. Call again, young man. A Terrible Burden — Clara — What a terrible noise that wag- gon makes. George—Yes ; its dreadful, isn't it? What ,makes it groan so, George ? Why, it is filled with green apples. It is seriously stated that it takes a fly a two billionth part,of a second to wink, If a man's wink was as sudden, as a fly's he would never get anything but plain soda at the fountain in the drug store. Tho only way to solve the pro- blem, "Is marriage a failure ?" is to try it. It reminds us of a story anent the toadstool and tho mush- room. How can you toll a toad- stool from a mushroom ? By eat- ing it. If it is a toadstool you will div; it it is a .mttshrooM you will not. Uncle Sam's bounty is not an "unmixed blessing." • Tho New York Herald mentions the case of James McCluskey, a laborer em- ployed in Belleville, N. J., who about a year 'ago received .$1,500 back pension money. Ho quit work, went on a spree, scattered money on the streets for tho ur- chins to scramble for and within ono month was a perfect specimen of the vagrant. Tho other night ho was arrested in Nowark and sunt to jail for thirty days fife gen- eral worthIessness, sl' ALL 18 FAIR AT BUFFALO. THE QUEEN CITY NOT IN THE SULKS AT LOSING THE CONVENTION. ♦ Tremendous Crowd of Visitors Ex- pected Next Meath and Ample Prepara- tions Being Made for Their Entertain- ment—An Advance Peep at some Fair Wonders. [From Our Special Correspondent.] BUFFALO, Aug. 20 -The Queen City having lost the much coveted Republican State convention through siren Sara - toga's sumptuous charm@, is much dis- appointed, but is not exhibiting the slightest tendency towards the sulks. Everybody who lives in Buffalo seems to feel a gentle pity for the men whose poor tastes led them into the error of prefer- ing for the convention, a watering place out of season to a bright wideawake and hospitable city whose September climate is unsurpassed. They say " very well, if the wise politicians choose to make their own bed let them lie in it " a figure of speech which seems peculiarly appro- priate when it is remembered that cham- ber -maids and other attendants are not generally over abundant at any fashion- able watering place towards the end of September. No doubt the brilliant prospects of the International Fair do much towards fur- nishing balm for Buffalo's wounded vanity. The Fair (which opens two weeks from to -day) is literally over- shadowing all other interests. Nobody TUE OXFORD DOWN CUP. talks of anything else, and people who never before dreamed of the possibility of consenting to take strangers into their. homes, are making up their minds to be- come amateur boarding-house keepers, for the time being. • President Harrison has not yetdecided whether he will or will not be able to open the Exposition. I do not see how he can fail to realize that this Exposition is actually what it claims to be an inter- national affair. The supurb piece of silver, an Rlna- tration of which accompanies this letter, shows beyond any doubt that some of the most tmportaat agricultural or breeding associations of Great Britain BREEDING TROTTERS. — The average man loves a speedy horse. It is natural. With human nature constituted as at present it is, it always will be so. However much the farm- er prizes strehgth and size he also delights to draw the reign across a nag that can "get over the road:" This is a big world and no one style of horses can monopolize the whole field. G kl of trotters, w intend speaking ottoly, a intend nothing- derogatory to the grand heavy classes of horses that are making such progress in Canada, nor does the Advertiser counsel farmers to turn their premises into trotting establishments. We believe that would be the height of folly. At the same time it is well to keep one's eyes open to what is going on in the world. In the United States the trotting horse is engaging more and more attention. The events of the turf season are especially note- worthy. - On the question of breeding trotters the American Cultivator, of Boston, which devotes special attention to that subject, says : "Breeders who have kept a sharp eye on the trotting so far this season must have observed that the Morgan-Hambletonian com- bination, long noted for producing superior roadsters, is proving one of the very best for producing first-class turf performers." (Then follows a long list of trotters that have come prominently forward in the East this season.) "Breed- ers can profit greatly by these ex- amples. The lesson they teach, in language too plain to be mis- taken, is, breed the best mares of Morgan descent to the best Ham- blotonian stallions that can be found, and vice versa. This is what the Cultivator has been ad- vocating forseveral years, and right here we will predict that ten years hence the Morgan cross in a trotting pedigree will be one of the most fashionable that'can be found. Mares by General Knox, Daniel Lambert, Winthropcr- rill and Fearnaught, and those bye their,-best'"sons, as well as those by other sires of Morgan descent, will bo sought after at high prices by the most enterprising breeders of trotting stock in all sections of the country. The merits of the Morgans are so well known that it is impossible for their en- emies to deceive the public con - are fully alive to its international am- cerning them. Thosewho hold portance. The splendid Oxford Down on to the best of their Morgancup, valued at several hundred dollars, Ie as its inscripti•u declares, "given by stock and breed it judiciously will the Oxford Down Sheep Breeders' Asso- find in le.s than ten yeafrj tl at elation of Great Britain for the best flock they made no mistake by declin- of Oxford Down Sheep in America." ing to follow the advice of others; There is an international ring about that which sets the blogd of all sheep breeders a -tingle - The Shropshire Cup, which is offered by the Shropshire Society of England for who have advocated throwing the Morgans aside and filling their places with animals bled inInore the best floc of one ram and ve of his fashionable lines. Watch the get under two ears old, is alio a ma summaries, young breeders 1 nificent specimen of silver ware ands Study the blood lines of the win - valued at V...50. Hors, throw theories to the dogs, Although e Seventh regiment and be guided in your breeding band is to makkee the chief and most de formidable rival in the shape of the enterprises by your own eencso; lightful music at the Fair, he is to have a Continental Drum Co of Sardinia, N. Y. This Continental Drum Corps is com- poeed of ten extremely patriotic indi- videais whose ages average rather more than that of the ordinary man's grand- father. In the first place, as president and leader of the band, is Mr. S. H. Nott, who is '10 years of age, and who is in poeeessien of a canteen carried by his grandfather in the Revolution and again 1 1b his father in the war of 1812. Mr. ott plays upon a drum that was used in a stirring fashion at the battle of York- town. All his "boyish" companions in the Continental Drum Corps are gentle- men of Revolutionary descent and of decided musical proclivities. Ma_j. N than E a u��inipphreyy, Ma'.. E. Fiske and Capt. NeCa rady •are fifers of the corps. The snare drums are played re- spectivel7 by Mr. E. Rowley, who car- ries his light weight of 83 summers ocu- larly; Mr. Frank Hadley and Mr. jocu- larly; Smith, the two last mentioned gen- tlemen having arrived at the middle per- iod of life. The standard bearer, Mr: William Smith, is 72 years old and the standard from which floats the flag is composed of a gun seven feet in height which as captured by Ma,]'. Nott'. grandfather at the battle of Yorktown. I have been permitted to take a peep in advance into the Palace of Illusions, which is just completed. It is going to be one of the most attractive features of the Fair. There are to be a dozen dif- ferent illusions simultaneously exhibited in this immense building, but I have space to describe only two of them. In a georgeously upholstered and beautifully illuminated apartment rises a splendid white and gold staircase with brilliant lamps burning upon pillasters on either side. Festooned from these lamps is an enormous cobweb, in the centre of which reposes a spider two feet across. The peculiarity of this spider is that its head is that of a living, breathing and beauti- ful woman. You see the spider; you look through the web to the gorgeous staircase beyond but aught of the woman's "bod you are unable to perceive. The other illusion to which I refer con- sists of an iron -fountain which stands in the centre of a booth hung with peacock blue draperies. The bowl of this foun- tain is twenty-six inches in diameter and seven inches deep. Two jets of water arise from the fountain and splash into the •verbrimming howl, and in this bowl, in full sight of every spectator, with every recess of the gorgeously deco- rated booth in perfect view, floats Lur- line, to all outward appearances, a living, breathing mermaid. One of the most fascinating exhibits in the lire stock department of the Fair will be without any question a little horse not yet six weeks old, which at three weeks of age weighed only t• ventuy-three pounds. This wiDn er comes from Rochester, a fact wliiclf loads Buffalo erlitors to re- mark with a malicious grin that Roches- ter has always been fainous fol• little things.Vis DEx rather than bythe advice of theor- ists, or young men who can write fluently, but know nothing of the science of breeding trotters." A number of West McGillivray farmers have threshed. The most of wheat has turned out very poor, trom 10 to 15 bushels being "the average. ANY A LIFE HAS been saved by the prompt use of Ayer's Pills. Travelers by land or sea are liable to constipation or other derangements of the stomach and bowels which, if neglected, lead to serious and often fatal consequences. The most sure means of correcting these evils is the use of Ayer's Cathartic Pills. The pru- dent sailing -master would as soon go to sea without his chronometer as without a supply of these Pills. Though prompt and energetic in operation, Ayer's Pills leave no ill effects ; they are purely vegetable and sugar-coated ; the safest medicine for old and young, at home or abroad. "For eight years I was afflicted with ebnstipation, which at last became so bad that the doctors could do no more for me. Then I began to take Ayer's Pills, and soon the bowels recovered their natural and regular action, so that now I am in Excellent health," -Mrs. C. E. Clark, Tewksbury, Massachusetts. "I regard Ayer's Pills as one of the most reliable general remedies of our times. The have been in use in my family for affections requiring a purga- tive, and have given unvarying satisfac- tion. We have found them an excellent remedy for colds and light fevers," - W. R. 'Woodson, Fort Worth, Texas, • "For several years I haveq, relied more upon Ayer's Pills than updn anything else in the medicine chest, to regulate my bowels and those of the ship's crew. These Pills are not severe in their ac- tion, but do their work thoroughly. I have used them with good effect for the cure of rheumatism, kidney trou- Steamship Fnd elicia, New lrork Citt. y. eller, " I have found Ayer's Cathartic Pills to be a better family medicine for com- mon use than any other pills within my knowledge. They aro not only very effective, but safe and pleasant to take -qualities which must niake them valued by the public." - Jules Ilauel, Perfumer, Philadelphia, Pa. !.dyer's Pills, PREPARED BY Dr. J. OSAyer & Co,, Lowell, Mass. •' &lol.1 by all Dealers in Medicines. It Made riMother Strong \';,‚', S''Fl L ir il 1-ral "My mother has been nine I'm NE'B CELERY COMPOUND for nervous prostration. aceompan- itd by mrlancholla, ere , an 1 it has done L ••r a world of good. it Li ticonly medi- cite: that strength. ec:.; the nerves.' (i. II. BEERS, Orblsonla, Pa "I am In my 04th year. II are been afflictedtr several ways—could 1 of sleep. 11.,d 1) appetite, no courage, low s•pii.i cuing Paine•s Celery compound, a:,r1 (telt rr11 •t from the third day after usui,. t. i 1."w h.0 a good appetite and can s:v�;, i e;:. \,y spit Its and courage are alunost 11F: 1L ; e ,t a young b. C.'Usu til', L. 11.. Gonzales, La, Pai e's Celery Compound Strengthens end builds up the ori, anti cures their Infirmities, ithr•,umu-isu:, In !1gr;,tI on and nervousness ::i.l l quud:ly 1• the ,-ti tiv:.powor Of Paiue's Cels:, l A Perfoct mac:.: and tr,v'gprator, It civ M=,! Lirt . "I am now r y:. t '::v • tried several remedies. Inr...;1 !..•; :,..•t until 1 used Palue•s Celery l u..a .r,..d r -4.; entirely dif- ferent for t;!c• ;r r'. ::::e 1 ! used 11. i can walk near!.* >C.;i 'r. •:ees .0 ; ni :.id well, and feel as thou::l /!u•n• w .s li r lite and energy coming into my v 11. Mvt.ir?. (•lavuluud, Tenn. Paine's Celery Colt:pound Is of unequaled.• value to woolen. It :it!' •:: rihens the nerves, regulates the 11,i le:: s and 11.,s wuudertul power In cur.Lg the painful (Ilse „s wiLi which wo- men so utten silently suffer. 11 per bottle. Six for Si". At Druggists. WELLS, RICHARDSON t CO t10Kul reL, DIAMOND DYES True to Name and Color.. �bthiny cart Egtta6 Then., YGUR BABY willbe rasa, plump and merit ((;iau LACTATED FOOD.. O THti 3 YEARS SYSTEM A regultr monthly, quarterly or half -yearly pay- ment (a slight advance on the rental rate) buys the, instrument. Any piano may be chosen • out of a magnificent assortment of Uprights. Squares and Grand., un- surpassed in quality and value. Ministers, Teach- ers; Government Officers, and those in receipt of regular incomes will find this a convenient and ad- vantageous mode for securing a first class instru- ment. When the instrument 18 used for practice, our Soft Stop or Practice Pedal saves wear on the nerves, as well as preserves the tone of the Piano, Our Patent Foot Pedat attachment for Pianos is invaluable to organists, students and teachers. Prices on application. Inspection invited. OCTAVIOUS NEWCOMB & CO. warerooms-107 and 100 Church St., Toronto. Factory, the finest in its equipments and appliances in the city, 50 to 07 Bellwnods Ave. The Meet Suecessfsl Uemedy ever die. covered, aa is U certain n ata effects and does not blister. Read proof below. BrasinsvILLs. p. Q,, Maj :.less. MLR J. Rums Co.. Enoeburgh Fane, vt Gentlemen; Ihave used Sen. deN's spavin Cure for Spavins and also in &ease of lameness and Stiff Joint, and found fta Bare cure Inevery respect. I cordially recotmtiead It to an horsemen. _ Very respectfully yours, Cassis J. BLACZALre KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. sr. anomia, P. Q. April DN. B. • J. EERDALL Co., Enosburab Falls, Vt. Gents -I have used a fever potties of your Ken- . dell's Spavin Cure on my colt. T: which was Buffering from Influ- enza in a very bad Corm, and can say that your Kendall's Spavin Cure made complete and rapid cure. I can recommend it as the best and most effective liniment I have ever handled. Elndly send meone o your valuable books entitled "A Trea- tise on the Horse." Tours respe t fully, F.KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE, Foal ELCIcs, Mex., May 10, 1889. DR. B. J. ESIIDALL Co., Enosburgb Falls tt. Gentlemen:— f always keep your Falls. Spavin Cure and Buster on hand and they have never failed In what you' state they will do. I have cured a herd case of Spavin and also two oases of Ringbono otyearestanding on mares which I bought to breed from, and have not seen any signs of disease fn their offspring. . Yours trul ii. J. o'Erev're. Price 41 per bottle, or six bottles for 156. Ail druggists have 1t or can get 't for you, or It will bo sent to any address on receipt of price by the pproprietors iii H. J. tceNDALL CO., EnosIlurgh Falls, Vt. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. „.1 • A COo it;" BOOK F F' : E By.ma : In nnv ady s -e us ler post office address. Woiis, Rk!..• San & Cs , Mentroal. "t?