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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1889-10-25, Page 4•, areesemeesen:., :. m. . ,^., +, les ire atw'G'Werrees,'SIIrG'e4T.r".'✓rner..::,: 3f1F. F7 ,4#,"7 4 -.•-•.--....-.- Ff1.::! Fr.lf.. r or the small sum of 150 cash, we wilt sen. d the. Clinton Clinto : Era bsc A c s r Canada or the baited States, for the ��l�1�� �this year 1890 i 11".c,:) d e ':oe oribe for tholargest paper in the county. Send it to your fried: , LL;61-,o)..- than a latter, and contains a vast amount of home news and general information weekl.. • . A Fact WORTH knowing is that blood dies fir' v eases which all other remedies fail to cure, yield to Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Fresh confirms - tion of this state- ment comes to hand daily. Even such deep-seated and stubborn com- plaints as Rheu- matism, Rheuma- tic Gout, and the like, are thorough. ly eradicated by the use of thiswon- derful alterative. Mrs. R. Irving Dedge, 110 West =es 125th street, New York, certifies :- " About two years ago, after Buffering for nearly two years from rheumatic gout, being able to walk only with great discomfort, and having tried various remedies, including mineral waters, without relief, I saw by an advertise- ment in a Chicago paper that a man had been relieved of this distressing com- plaint, after long suffering, by taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I then decided to make a trial of this medicine, and tools; it regularly for eight months. I am leased to say that it effected a eom- ete cure, and that I have since had no return of the disease." Mrs. L. A. Stark, Nashua, N. H. .writes:•."Ono, year ago Leas-taken..ill with rheumatism, being confined to my house six months. I came out of the sickness very much debilitated, with no appetite, and my System disordered in every way. I commenced to use Ayer's Sarsaparilla and began to improve at once, gaining in .strength and soon re- covering my usual health. I cannot say too Mitch in praise of this well-known medicine." "I have taken a great deal of medi- cine, but nothing has done me so much good as Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I felt its beneficial effects before I had quite finished one bottle, and I can freely testify that it is the best blood - medicine I know of." -L. W. Ward, Sr., Woodland, Texas. Ayer's Sarsaparilla, PREPARED BT • C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mau. Prion $1 i six bottles, a1, Worth $5 a bottle. The Clinton New Era published every Friday Morning by the proprietor, ROBT. HOLl1ES, at his printing establishment, Isaac St., Clin• .on, Out TERMS. -51.50 per annum, paid in ad vance JOB PRINTING In every style and of every description executed with neatness and dispatch, and at -reasonable rates. NEWSPAPER DECISIONS. 1. Any person or persons who take a `ilfpitper regularly from a post office, whether directed in his name or an- other's, or whether he has subscribed or not, is responsible for payment. 2. If a person orders his paper dis• continued he most pay all arrears, or the publisher may continue to send it until payment . is made, and then col: eat the whole amount whether the'pa. er is taken or note. 3. The Courts have decided that re- fusing to take newsptCpers or periodicals from the post office or removing and leaving them uncalled Pori prima facie evidence of intentional fraud ADVERTISING RAMS. Local, Nortess-At head of local column, 10 cents per line or portion thereof, each insertion. Articles lost or found, girls wanted, &e., not exceeding three lines, 25 cents each ipserton. Five lines, 50 cents for one insertion, and 25 centsfor each sub- sequent insertion. Houses to let or for sale,_ farms to rent or for sale, stray cattle and all similar advertisements not exceeding eight lines $1 for onemonth, and 50 cents for each subsequent month. Advertisements without specific in- structions, inserted till forbid. Special contract arrangements with business men. General advertising rate for unclassi- fied advertisements and legal- adver- tising, 10 cents per line for first inser- tion, and 8 cents per line for each sub- sequent insertion. Changes for contracted advertise- ments must be handed in as early in the week as possible to insure a change that week. RAILROAD TIME TABLE Issued May lit. The departure of trains at the several stations named, is accordiig to the last official time card: CLINTON Grand Trunk Division Going East Going West 7.43 a.m. - 10.05 a.m, 2.25 p.m. 1.20 p.m. 4.55 p.m. 6.55 p.m. 9.27 p.m. London,. Huron and Bruce Division Going. North Going South a.m. p.m a.m. p.m. Wingham , .11.00 7.45 6.50 8.40 Belgrave ..10.42 7.27 7.05 4.00 B lyth -10.28 7.12 7.18 4.13 jLondesboro 10.19 7.03 7.26 4.25 Clinton 10.00 6.45 7.55 4.45 Brucefield0.42 6.26 8.15 5.04 Kippen 9.34 6.17 8.24 5.12 Hensall9.28 6.09 8.32 5.19 Exeter 9.16 5.57 8.50 5.33 London8.05 4.25 10.15 6.45 Necessary information can always be secured from the company's agents. - The early morning train south on the London, Huron and Bruce, and the one east on the Grand Trunk, connect at Clinton, as do also the morning trains west and north, the 4.45 p.m. trains east and south, and tho 6.45 p.m. train north and 6.55 p.m. train west. A calculation just mad© shows that Canadians pay $7.25 a head per annum for liquor and tobacco and five cents per head for missions. It cannot bo truthfully said that we aro over -zealous in the matter of laying the Gospel he. fore the heathen. The greatest power in North Carolina at present, politically and socially, is the Farmers' Alliance,, and it showed its earnestness on Tuesday at a unique wedding ceremony. Tho principals were William William W. Bateman, secretary of the Farmers' Allianco,.and Miss Josephine Knowlton. To show they hate to the jute trust,tho bride and groom, bridesmaids and groomsmen were all dressec1 in costumes made )! catton batgin(;. THE EVOLUTION OF LOVE, In Irour Dletiuot Woes. WOR TUB FIRST. Ob, deep In the sea, in the dspa gone by. An Atotnio Molecule chanced to spy F .. A fair young Barnacle floating by. Ah, mel Ab, mel None so fair had bo seen since be was evoly. ed, And instantly, inwardly, he resolved This Barnacle m.' Iden should be his bride; But the haughty beauty his suit denied; So he shattered his microscopic bead Against the rock that the Barnacle wed, And when they discovered him, life bad fled. Ab. me! Ah, me! WOB TUE MCCORD. Ie,q years to .3 past lived s Barbary Ape, Who to see=?t sighed tora lovely shape. ( from Lovve's prrowslthero a no escape1) ,Put t 1 eve belonged too en old, proud tribe, 4u a all Die pleadings did jeer and gibe, Ano said no Gorilla by any chance ' Would countenance such a mesalllanoel @o 1eeWrapped his tall round his neck, VI 1}n4 bung himself to a neighboring tree, end soon was as dead as an Ape could bei Oh, my t. Oh, my l WOli THE THIRD. Now, It chanced in the present centureo A youth loved a maiden of high degree, hon happened on Deacon street to Pee. el Alas! Ser ancestors bpd in the "Mayflower" come, And tbelr sons grew rich on New England wD l emtir youth, whose equal one seldom me6ts, Simply peddled Onions about the streets 6o when he bewailed hie unhappy lot To his love, a glanoo from her proud eyes shot, And she simply remarked, "Giti" and he soil Alas! Alas! WOE THE LAST AND WORST. Which. ar despit bis caistened in lling; hstrabismic ad e'er been dry; 8t111 be did not linger to make reply. Oh, dears Oh, dear! But, murmuring softly ger name, be went And be climbed up Bunker Hill monument:. Then threw himself off, with a wild, weird yell; Falling just on the spot where Warren fell, And all those who gathered around him said: For u humble youth ho makes quite a spread." But he never knew it, for he was dead! Oh, dear! Oh dear -Puck. TIIE KING OF GREECE. A CHAT WITH HIS MAJESTY IN HIS MARBLE PALACE. An Unpretentious Monarch Who `s a Pop- nlar King -Tiro Queen and Royal Fam. fly. In a recent letter to the Cleveland Leader Frank G. Carpenter thus de' scribes a visit to the royal palace in Athena: I mounted the marble steps and found a drum -major in skirts ready to receive me at the door. I passed through a great vestibule in which liveried ser- vant stood,and was taken into to a recep- tion -room which was then occupied by two German barons, a etatuo of Apollo and by the aide-de-camp of the King. This last gentleman shook me cordially by the hand and told me that His Majes- ty would receive me in a few moments. In the mean timo I watched the young baroni. They were in the full dress of the army officers of Germany. They worn high caps with tassels upon them. Their oliva -green coats covered with gold taco and each leaded as he stood upon a silver -handled sword In a silver scabbard. Their presentation occurred before mine, and 1 cannot describe the twisting of the mustaches, the strutting and the smiling that they performed as they bowed themsolvea back into , the room. •At this moment the aide-de- camp took me in charge and I followed him through one room after another until we reached an office -like study. I (Intoned and after a word the aide-de- camp left and I stood alone with a tall, straight, fine-looking man of apparently not thorn theft thirty-five years of age. He ',oro a suit much lino the undress uniform of a gepporal of our army. His coat buttoned high M the neck, had but alittle gold on its collar and there was nothing about his costume to make that divinity which le supposed to surround a king. 'Still this was Georgios I. who for the past twenty-six years has ruled Greece and who, though a foreigner, is oxo -day one of the most. popular monarchs of Europe. The son of the King of Denmark, he was only eighteen years of 'ago when France, Great Britain and !Russia, as the Grecian protectorate, put him upon the throne, and he then knew but little of Greeco.and'ite people. He !took the oath to the Greek constitution 'in the presence of the high Greek offi- cials, the, synod of the Greek Church and the Parliament and he has reigned well from that day to this. ilo has made himself a part of the Greek people and under him his kingdom has advanced etoadily in civilization and power, Ho ham seen life capital spring from a village , Into a city with the mansion, museums, schools and fine streets of the modern capitals of Europe. He has seen the railroad and the telegraph cover the busiest parts of his country, and has 'watched the Greek flag spread Bei+eo that it now covers a great part o1 the shipping of the Mediterranean Sea. He bas seen his people grow in wealth, and has seen Greek credit so raieed that his natlenal bonds stand well in the stock THE KING OS' GREECE. markets of the world. Ring George is one of the finest look- ing monarchs of Europe. He is about 5 feet 10 inches In height, 1s straight, well formed and slender, and his blond head is well set on a pair ttf broad shoulders. He has a high forehead, bright, open, honest eyes and a long blond mustache shows out over a well - cut mouth. He is forty-four years old, but he looks ten years younger. The Greeks pride themselves upon being the most democratic people in Europe, and there is no more democratic ruler than their Ring. He extended his hand to mo with cordiality and he put me thoroughly at my ease. His first question showed me that he keeps himself well posted on American politics and American matters. He asked me 11 I had attended the Wash- ington Centennial celebration at New York, and expressed some surprise that an American could miss such a stirring occasion. He referred to the American school which is now in existence in Athena and complimented it highly. He told me that nothing had as yet been de- coded as to the excavations at Delphi, and said that Minister Fearn was very anxious that they be made by Ameri- cans. Upon my referring to Mycenae and the wonderful excavations of - Dr. Schliemann, he replied that there was still much room for excavation at that point, and told me that it was impossi- ble to appreciate the ruins that are still buried throughout Greece. I spoke of the new railroads and of the Isthmus of Corinth, 'and the Ring seemed to think there would be no doubt of their com- pletion, and d that the march of Greece would bo steadily onward. He spoke highly of the patriotism of the Greeks, and told me that most of the fine build- ings of modern Athens had been built from the donations of wealthy Greek citizens in Athens and other parts of the world,. • THE QUEEN OF 'GREECE. The audience throughout wee of this same democratic nature and the man- ners of His Majesty aro simple in the extreme. As one of his friends said to me to -day, "Ring George is what would be considered a good club man any- where. Ho is a man of more than or- dinary ability and ho is as cultured as any Ring of Europe. He speaks En- glish French, German and Danish with equal facility, and he talks modern Greek like a Greeks" Aconversation was carried on in En- glish, which His Majesty spoke with a slight German accent. I am told that English is the Ianguage of hls family. and it is said that tho Ring looks like his sister, who, as the Princess of Wales, may one day bo Qtieen of. England. His Majesty is vera fond, of archwological studies. He is well ersed in the his- tory and the antiquities of Greece, and when the archaic etatuea were found at' the Parthenon, nor long ago, the Ring was present and washed them with his own hands. Ho is a very hospitable man and his social entertainments aro many. Ho is fond of Americans and he has entertained at his family table e, number of the American naval officers, among whom aro Admiral Franklin and others. Tho absence of formality is observed by all members of the royal family. Both the Ring and Queen often walk the streets of Athens, and Hie Majesty now and then stops and " chats with his friends. The Queen of Greece is said to bo the flneet looking Queen in Europe. She is the eldest daughter of Grand Dukeone n nof C to ti e Russia, brother of Alexander II. She is tall and stately and looks like a queen. She is a blonde with brown hair, regular features, and with beautiful nock and shoulders. She dresses very simply, except on state oc- casions, and often goes about Athens without even a maid with her. She wears a hat and jacket, and her costume upon such occasions is not different from that of the other Athenian ladies. At state receptions she is gorgeous in earls anddiamonds. Her earls are p di p r noted, and she wore last winter ono dress tbo bodice of which waa covered with pearls, while four strands of large pearls encircled het neck. She is very popular among the ladies of Athens, and one of these who knows her well tolls me thn the Queen never meets her without inn ringabout her family and children. ' le ueen is a woman of fine culture, She speaks Russian, Ital- ian, German, French, Greek and En- glish perfectly well and she is now studying Albanian. She is fond of painting and her friends say she paints very well. She is very charitable trod does a great deal of good. She is Presi- dent of the Queen's Hospital in Athens, avd she visits it nearly every day, going through the wards and talking to the patients. 'She is a stanch Russian and when Russian sailors are in the hospital she always takes flowers to them. She has another hospital at the Pirseus which she frequently visits, and she has found- ed an industrial school in Athens where all sorts of weaving, lace -making and embroidery are carried on by Greek girls. The Queen of Greece is very domes- tic, and she is fond of her studies and her children. She is well posted in En- glish literature and Hawthorne is one of her favorites. She reads the American authors and the leading American mag- azines are taken at the palace. She is a very good woman and her chapel is one of the prettiest little churches in Greeco. It is a brown -stone structure with a bell - tower of stone rising a few feet away from it. It is a Russian church and the services are performed by Greek priests in gowns of stiff cloth of gold and with hats blazing with jewels covering their heads. The music consists of a choir of four men, and travelers say that you will find no finer church music in the world than in this little Russian church. 'The King and Queen have been bless- ed with seven children, and the young- est is a baby about a year old. Prince Andreas is seven and Princess Maria, who 1 a n s very bright blonde, is thirteen. Next comes the Princess A exr'ndra, a very pretty girl o1 nineteen, and then Prince George, who is twenty; and last and most important of all tie Crown Prince, Konstantinos, the heir apparent. , who was born Aug. 2, 1868, and wh& was at eighteen declared heir apparent to the throne. All of these children, save the year-old baby, speak French, English, Greek and Russian, and the home life of the palace ie, I am told, very charming. COMANCHE, A U. S. PENSIONER. Story of • Brave Horse -Only Survivor of the Coster Massacre. The United States Government has earned the reputation of caring in the most liberal manner for all its soldiers who have In any way suffered in sus- taining it. The most unique of all its warrior pensioners, however, is the brave horse that is the subject of this sketch. Comanche is the only horse in the country, probably, that leads a life of entire leisure and has servants to see that he wants for nothing. He is fed on the choicest hay and oats, with fre- quent lumps of sugar to sweeten his de- clining days. His portrait, which is print- ed herewith, is engraved from a photo- graph taken a short time ago by Mr. J. C. H. Grabill, of Deadwood, D. T. At the time the photograph was taken Comanche was sleek and happy, and a recent dispatch from Colonel James For- sythe of Fort Riley, Kan., where Coman-- che now is, says that he is still in good condition. Comanche first entered the govern- ment service about twenty-two years ago. He was a caviar), horse in Kansas. Ile smelt powder there in several bloody fights between the government troops and the Indians, and in one of these he received a painful but not serious wound. Comanche was evidently a horse intend- ed for warfare, for his courage made slim a,great favorite at the outset of his career. From Kansas he went to Ne- braska, and thence to Dakota. • • 7\see. �.; e1� d t"c COMANCHE. His present enviable condition is due ito the excellent showing he made in the Custer massacre. His master at that time was Captain Keogh, one of Custer'e offi- cers, and he had carried him through many a desperate brush with the Indians. At the battle of Little Big Horn, the one iu which Custer and his command was surrounded and killed, Keogh was shot early in the fight and tell from Com- anche's saddle. It was impossible for any of the soldiers or even their horses to get through the surrounding ring of savagest When the latter withdrew they supposed that horses and men were all dead. This was true of all but Com- anche. , Ile was wounded by many bullets and bleeding profusely, but die managed to , reach a brook, and here ho was found by' Major Reno's men some time later. Ho was standing in the water, looking mournfully over the battleground. His lege were swollen to three times their normal size, and bis sufferings were so intense that orders were given to shoot him and end his misery, The orders were rescinded, however, and every ef- fort was mado to save him. He was treated with the utmost kindness, 'and slowly his wounds healed.' Ho was the onlf survivor of the terrible fight. After his return to Dakota, Colonel Sturgis, of the Seventh.U. S. Cavalry, famed this order: HEADQUARTEI1S SEVENTH U.S, CAVAL. RV, FORT ABRAHAM LINCOLN, D. T., April 10, 1878. -General Orders No. 7. 1. The horse known as "Comanche," betng the only living representative of the bloody tragedy of. the LIttlo Big Horn, Juno 25, 1876, lils.kind treatment and comfort should bo a matter of spe- cial pride and sollgltude on the part of every member of the Seventh Cavalry, to the end that his life be prolonged to the .utmost limit. Wounded and scarred as he le, his very existence speaks in terms more eloquent than words of the desperate struggle against overwhelming numbers; of the hopeless conflict, and of the heroic manner in which all went down that fa&jt1 day. 2. The cammanding officer of Com- pany I will see that a special and com- fortable stall is fitted up for him, and he will not be ridden by any person what- ever under any circumstances, nor will ho be put to any kind of work. 8. Hereafter upon all occasions of ceremony(of mounted regimental forma- tion) Comanche, seethed, bridled, drap- ed in mourning, and led by a mounted trooper of Company I, will b'b paraded with the regiment. Although there are many scars on hie body he does not appear to be suffering. Tho orders regarding his care are faith- fully followed. and no r,"o is allowed to mount hint. Fe, for' '"ung :it Fort Riley be was etatiohcd at I• ort Meade, D. T.- A-clo York ,q:, .'_ _ HOW ONE MAY BECOME TALL. An Ingenious Device That eau Be Reed by the Short People. Hollow cheeks and wrinkles are awk- ward things, writes Miss Mantaliui in the Pall Mali Budget. Ladies do their best to prevent their appearance. ,The clever ones seem to be able to warn off the wrinkles, but hollow cheeks com- pletely baffle their skill. A gentleman who lives at Islington is providing ladies whose cheeks are hollow with' small pads. These pads are attached to nat- ural or artificial teeth by means of tiny gold springs. The price of a face pad is a trifle heavy, like everything else guaranteed to improve the personal ap- pearspee. A pair of pads cost some- thing like £5. The maker of the face pad said that gentlemen as well as ladies are wearing them. Ono gentteman had never looked anything 'but can-, daverous until he took to the pad. Now his cheeks are rounded like a cherub's, and he looks ten years younger. The curious thing about the face pad is its inflexibility It 1a made of the same material as the case of a set of artificial teetb. m There is no need for the smell person to be overlooked on account of want of stature., It is pooeible to add as much as four inches to your stature by the Cremerian boot, designed for the eleva- tion of the lowly. The invention is an odd and ingenious one. Instead of tack- ing six inches on to a person's-heels,a pair S!eillee,S Oohs I s PI t • ei Boo' H.0 Dal) Apo,' 9 at! It.v.I.rr 7,.(. t wa,'rr (,., - (tt..vp,r ki TO MAKE THE SHORT TALI.. of entirely false feet blade t5 cork are put into the shoes. When the wearer gets into them ho or she is raised ac- cording to the inches of cork. Of course, in this invention the original foot is made to combine with the cork one un- der the leather in such a manner the the line of demarkation is not percepti- ble. The size of the foot is sacrifled, i is trite, and a larger boot is necessary with the cork "elevator" than would b the case naturally; but fancy haviu four inches added to your heightl s Of course, even with those who aro most ambitious to increase their height, it is impossible that they should add several inches to it in a day. So they are advised by Mr. Cremes to grow half an inch ata time. Even this would be sure to occasion a little surprise, tor some of laur acquaintances are bound to notice such untoward growth. But the invention. offers a large field for,spec- ulation. You can take off your shoes with these "elevators" and no one be any the wiser, for the cork additions to the feet are hidden in the stockings. This principle is applied to the clubfoot - 'ed with great ingenuity, for instead of a huge ugly cork sole a cork foot is made, on the top of which the deformed foot rests. So when the trouser of the skirt falls ove; the concealed foot the cork one, clothed in the same s:ze as the perfect foot, and the toes imitated with pade and springs, does not betray itself. People with flat feet may have their in- step raised, and those Who only desire a slight elevation gRtj have it put in the heels of their dishes, only, instead of be- ing put outside, te cork is put inside can t understand all this fuse about using e:ectricity for executions," re- marked Judge Lynch of Kansas reflect- ively. Out in our section we have used the telegraph pole for years•" -Life. 66 Like lila lc 91 THETE effect produced by Ayer's CTi ray I factored, (.;obis, Coughs, ('roup, and Sore TLuNta't are, in most eases, im- mediately rri ('\.-.I by the use of , ivontlerful rats,:,' ,t It strengthen. t:.. Deal organs, i itation, and • In e- vents the union''': of Consumption • le every 4tage nf' dread disenr•', Ayer's Cherry rtoral relieves r'o-::'i r Ing and indt',er•° refreshing rest,, "I havo used Ayer's Cherry 1'(• I'.r i in my family for thirty years and ba I' always fon nil it the best reined 1.'' croup, to which complaint my cliedr' have been subject," -Capt. U. Cu: Brooklyn, N. Y. "Froin an experience of over thirty years in the sale of proprietary medi- cines, I feel justified in recommending Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. One of the best recommendations of the Pectoral is the enduring quality of its popularity, it being more 'salable now nett it was twenty-five 3 -ears ago, when its great success was considerer) marvelous."- R. S. Drake; M. D., Beliot, Kans. "My littlo sister, four years of ago, was so ill from bronchitis that we had almost given up hope of her recovery. Our family physician, a akilful man and of large experience, pronounced it use- less to give her any more medicine ; saying that he had clone all it was pos- sible to do, and we must prepare for the worst. As a last resort, we determined to try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and I can truly "say, with the most happy results. After taking a few doses she seemed to Wreathe easier, and, within a week, tvn,9 ottt of danger. We continued giving the Pectoral n)ttil satisfied she was entirely well. This has given me, unbounded falx in the preparation, and I recommend !t confidently to iffy cult niers."- (', O. Lepper,J)rngai9t, Fort Wayne, 1 ;M. For'Cold'; and Coughs take Ayir' s CherryPctora 9 1 :..:' .ru.n + v Dr. .1. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Trice $1 ; els t,olt1. ^, F). ..'k,r:h -. a bottle. t t 0 8 THE LADIES! A New and Dltln sot Form of Diseaae which is afflicting Canadian Women. How some of Them Regained Fresh Complexion, Perfect Health and superb Physical Beauty. A great London Physician says that he notes a new and distinct form of nervous disease pro- duced in Canadian women by worry about servants and overwork in caring for the home. This is only too true. It is why we see so many ladies pale, weak, languid, and suffering from headaches and innumerable weak- nesses. They cannot stand the strain upon their nervous system. Many of them have found the means to sustain their failing strength, to give color to the cheeks, and new life and vigor to the body, in Paine's Celery Compound. This pure andscientitk remedy is especially adapted to the needs of woman, and is daily making the most remarkable cures. Mrs. W. E. Cooper, 6o St. liypolite St., Montreal, was for a long time troubled with nervous headaches, loss of appetite, low spirits, etc. After using the' Compound, her heartaches dis- appeared, appetite was good, and ger spirits revived. Angie Gourley, of River Beaodette, P. Q., found the Compound a certain cure for weakness, and now feels as well as she ever did. Many a Canadian lady has the same reason to be grateful. t Paine's 'Celery • Compound can be pur- e atsany druggists for oneldolar a bot;l If he should not have it on hand, oriar:direct from WELLS, RICHARDSON &n Col;' Moe ant. PIANOS °...wmiommeznams 3 YEARS 6BYSTEM A n^_nlar 1(1Pnt,110, quarter': ,.r baIf-cea•ly pny- Mt01, (i'tht 1(lV4nce oi. t 1411) l:ui•' the instrunn nt. Any pie0:, , f f ,nrt•s'get ut asaertment . 4 1'Priiil ('. semi, 4. ami Ornnd', un• surpassed ut .0.4' ( aid .,.im•. t.l'. I -tura, Teach- ers, Government (5P.ic•r•'. :l t!I..o�i 1 nceil.t of ��'nlll h..,, t . t. , t tt ad- vantageous me 4 and t•antageous nio le for .e.•0rl"5 a first o tto'instru- ment. 11•bet. the io'Irumc',:t • 1'. d for ,,n.ctic', our Soft fit, ppr i'r.,e 6••• P..1, I ., + u ,,r on the nerves, us well as pr' tem e•' 0 e 1 elm ' 1 the Piano. Our Patent F,.ut Pot; aitt.r'mu.t hit l'u,nnv.ty invaluable t, "rt•;.n! ',, ,tmtt' to ;.n'1 riathers. Prices on applle„lion ;1' e. ion 'm i'r.l. OCTAVIOUS i'!EVICOPI1Bg CO. wareronms-107 and :09 C'icrrh Toronto, Factory. the fineio e.;trl,mente ui, i 11 4:mote in the city, bIt A,4! - The meet Saeaeaaf's Remedy ever dla- Covered, as 1t is certain 1n Its effects and does not blister. Read proof below. SraaETeviLi$ P. Q., May 3, ISM i Dn.13. 3.5'nsna L Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vt. Gentlemen .-I have need Ken. • dates Spavin Cure tor spavins and also In acase of lameness and 8ttft-J clots and found Ita euro cure in every respect. I cordially recommend it to all horsemen. Very rcapectf�tilly CRLRUAAJ, DLACRALL. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. Sr. Tito ass, P. Q. April 22, M. Da. D. J. Ka0DALL Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vt. Gents ri have used a few pottles of your iren- dan's Spavin Cure on my colt, r1'twhich was sufferingfrom Influ- enza in a very bail frm, and eon say that your Rendall's Spavin Cure made complete and rapid cure. I can recommend Has the best and most effective liniment I have ever handled. Kindly send me one o your valuable books entitled "A Trea- tise on the Horse." Yoars respectfully, -+t I. F. Wuarntsox. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. FORT ELLtcO, MAN„ May 10 1889. Dn. D. I. KENDALLCo,, Enosburgh Falls t. Gentlemen:- I always keep your K\ondaii's Spdvin Cure and Blister on hand and they have never faded In what you state they will do. I ancured sfngbodalsowoaseoof otyears stand ing onmares whieh I bought to breed from, and havo not seen any signs of disease In their offspring. Tours truly, J. O'Earpym. Price e1 per bottle, or six bottles for WI. All druggists have It or can get It for you, or It will bo sent to any address on receipt of price by the DDD1 praetors R, D. J. irENDALL CO., Enosburgh Falls, Vt. SOLD BY ALL DRUIGGISTS. `Ya. ,k443'.tl: 4i s � t. gni rii:to- co> tf p' DU BUJ C,r FT mt�r .1 ''fey C 4 C Q ri rti mup•po.. x t7 •Ey " u�` F� 6414 m'c eF P''o�L''Fy ( ��aIEgNOrord.'Nn`.a res Okla wceir 'O�' �F�r 7��g�pa"°�m o roatia�e� a ;; a Ec FJroCxm� A CoeY �>'t^41.s'...r 0 '-REE By marl to any ,a,ly scndI tt'44 iter post of i( 1 address. Well;, Richr.r;'ton & Co , Montreal. rwm cD z toni •=m;i • imzx3 O ift;•' � a s-4 P=w- zr] C� ! CD besse - o earl e -waffle weed FFid CD anftwoul ikerersui ia•aysll � 7�7-•�� Fual Q1 �eU'< crg g •wetd s ovid `te▪ d 1 • r