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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1889-05-15, Page 31 THE -NEW PRIZE STORY is eagerly sought for, read with pleasure or disappointment is then tossed aside and forgotten. But ladies who read of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, read it again, for they discover in it something to prize -a messenger of joy to those suffering from functional derangements or from any of the painful disorders or weaknesses pe- culiar to their SOX. Periodical pains, in- ternal inflammation and ulceration, leucor- rhea and kindred ailments readily yield to its wonderful curative and healing powers. It is the only medicine for women, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfaction In every case, or money will be refunded. This guarantee has been printed on the bottle -wrappers, and faith- fully carried out for many years. Copyright, 1888, by WORLD'S DI8. Ham A58'N. A DOCTOR 1e \N Cd's PIERCE'S • tOn \e a i nti PELLETS, hitt })tib i• VO 00 Purtabele aidlyyepl- � 8 8 Sormtw. Unequaled as a Liver Pill. Smallest. cheapest, easiest to take. One Pellet a Dose. Does not gripe. Cures Sick Head- ache, Bilious Headache, Constipa- tion, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks and all derangements of the stomach and bowels. Put up in glass vials, hermetically sealed. Always fresh and reliable. Gently laxative or an active cathartic, according to size of (dose. 25 cents, by druggists. The Huron News -Record $1.50 a Y- ,r-$1.25 In Advance. Wedlt estln, 111:t.y 15:.1' 1889 CUP7ENT TOPICS. THE TWIN FLOPPEII, The ',Toronto D1,til is howling every day for the disallowance of the Je,uit; I»tate, .\ and ip•o• pheailes all ni •nn'•' of calumnies to befall this conmtry it r!it Act i, not diwilow,tl>It 010:.'. 011 the 5'h of July la,t, ti some Mail cdnttnined tito fnllhwin„ )n ut.e of its lea•liig e lir'hrut's:--"lr is -•r -ported from Ottiiwe that an 14E11 I, is being made to tecnre the di1441100ltflce of the conlpeuKation hill (.Ie.srtita Estates Act,) which icltµ•t'lst passed third .reading. Btiyond - question, ho v- f34er, the Quebec •Legislarure is well within its rights in papa,si that measure es well 118 111 passing the :ie!,•:it incorporation Act of last year:." The ;flail to -day brands all who hold smell view'3 ns t••sitors. EFF'E'TE 0 111tI'11S. r o probability whatever that toe ;Let l; ill be diealtowt•il. A petition to the (queen has also been prepare ler sig** ture. But Her Majesty's a'.visers will be slow to interfere in a Cauadlau Matter wlti,at our own Le*6islatures, Noviucial Hud Duosii* ion, have deei•led. It stews to us that the first thing to LIP tines 18 10 hu vu the (lues4,100of the cn"st.1101...iou- ality of • the Act settled by the highest judicial authority. Till this i., 1oue, the "rote5taot oppnsiti :n i; %v rkiltg at a .Icstvlvantage. 'puts tuetliiiil iif the opposition to the nut touch bo larwly ,letrrnliue (1 1.y whether the measure is coutilutiun- al or not. \Ire frankly confess w Maher it is declared to be consti, tUt1011al ur U IWOII$ti tutivaal, We deem it inimical to the into, est8 of the vomit ry."— 14e..stiten Ctetetr'll THE "GLOBE" TELLS BETTER 'I't1AN IT KNEW. The fnlluwiwg ex•r.tut is from a letter received by Mr. A. J. Mc- Millan, the agent at Toi•uuto of the Manitoba Government. 'L'ite letter `e dated April 10th, and is from Mr. Lang, of Chicago, president of the Harold Smith Co., en.1 also head of the firm of J. Lang S Co., of that city Mr. Lang says :— "I am often up in Wisconsin for a few days at n time and many a talk I give the farmers there about the fertility -of Manitoba. I tell them if they would sell their 140 an acre 1.f',; acres farms, where they cannot de. pend on a crop of wheat, and go up to Manitoba with the money realiz,.d and buy 320 acres with a house and barn and so many acres broken, they would live in more comfort and independence in two years than they will do where they are in twenty; 'bat the climate is no colder ':hen she county of Racine, Wisconsin. I have been there-7(eMiles north of Chicago -,in the winter when the t'ie-mometer was 333 below, and the wind blowing fiercely. I . was there last Saturday and had quite a discussion,in a town 67 miles from Chicago:—Wheat was SOc per bushel, in Winnipeg $1.00; eggs 8c, in Win- nipeg 25c; oats 23c, in Winnipeg 25c. potatoes 25c, in Winnipeg the same. l'hen the average per acre—see the difference:—Wisconsin 10 bushels per acre, ..Manitoba 32 ; oats in lVisconsin about 35 bushels, in Manitoba over 50; hay, in Wis- consin (; 6 • for best timothy, in Winnipeg 3 tl a farm of 110 aces one man told n e his taxes were w•".^ last year. 1 tont '.now what they would be neat nrardon, but don't believe the sure t. ount of acres would be one-half. It astonishes me to see people cn•nirg from Northern Europe to this et, tntry to take up land in Kansas, Arkansas, Southren Dakota and Minnesota,.where they are so subject to blizzards,; cyclones and drougote. •' • If Canadians only knew it, there are better prospects for a working man in Canada or ,Manitoba than there are here.—Globe J UST FO ll 14'U -o7. As 101 t'x,tulpie nl' (he Wiry iii t , wl,iell the Britisher scatters his i lh, ncnnlnla ! BIIPrl au money over ureaiion, ta1.1, lut a i ul!I-f>t511inueel boy on seeing a calf, sin fin pas, there iv the little cow that, gives n of the last 'winner of the Engineering a: 1 Building l ' ),rile can truss l mill(. u reed. Tt tells of a snort:41ga for $2,750,000 w11,! n syndicate of f.muloie'r8 lis j•t,1 nk -; no the I f iel.un river tunnel, the 11)01 ", r., 1, • n .• I In e nnl)'eie the great. illl,li•i-t;tl;iltg. 1. ,;fel0ltrr8 are also arr;tnein:; to pend c:I ),000,00O in a eon, to supply \'iei.,un e it1� pure water, while the \inter cont• patties of Anisterdam and B,'rlin are already principally owned by Englishmen. Not only does the sun nU'er set on the flag of Creat Britain but it never lents down oil the territory in which ITriti:,h gold is not invested. AN AMERICAN STATEsM\N'S VIEWS Look at a neap and you will see that within the latitude of Canada are included, in the ole) +world, Nor- way awl Sweden, J' iropean and Asiatic Russia (excepting only the most southerly projection), Den- mark, Prussia, Holland, Belgium, the northern section of France, and the whole of Great Britain and Ire- land. From these couutrir.3 came the races that succeeded 'tome in bearint,', as they still largely bear, the civilization of the world. And analogy suggests that under laSS,ing climate of Citnaeln, in cen• tarries yet to be, civilization nlRy in the New World find its sturdiest supporters. The new provinces will in a very few years be the re, gal home of prosperous millions. Nature has said it. Canadians need not be anxious about the money spent in opetting up their northwest. Nature is their bonds- men. They have only to standstill and see the salvation of the Lord. • • • I have describe,) the 'territory, resources, linaucial condition, popu, lation and political organization of the new Dominion of Canada. The picture, though faithful, may he somewhat new to Americans. A "REAL CHRISTIAN" (GUARDIAN. 'Some of the papers urge that pressure should be brought to hear upon the Dominion Government to disallow the Act' No doubt, tills ie Still within the power of the Dominion Cabinet. But In view of the overwhelming majority of both parties in the Ilonse of Cont. mons which supported the Governs ment in allowing the Act, there le it --Mr. Jdsoli--i see one of the Cliic eo dime museums has a li%ieig man nli ,'x iii ha i(rtl• \) rs. Jason — There's a ,finance for you, Jrhiel. 'fn:it is. if you mulct prove that you are alive. --7'cvo deuces have been giVeit in this'•place during the Inst month— the red Tepper dance and the whisky dance. The former made the peo- ple sneeze, the latter made, them swear. "1'ou never sit and talk to Inc now a5 you did before we were near• tried," Nigher' theyoung wife. " No," replied the husband, who was adruln- user; "the boss always toll me to stop praising the goods as soon as the bargain was struck." —'Speakin' of twine,' said the old man Chumpkins, 'there was taco boys raised in our neighborhood That Tooke I ,just alike till their dyin' day. Len) didn't have, ally teeth and his brother Dave did, but they looked precisely alike all the hams. The only way yon coul l tell them apart was to put your finger in Len's mouth, and if lie 1,i1 yer'twos Dave. —A man viola int, A druggist shop and asked for something to cure a headache. The druggist held a bottle of liartsr,orn to his mire, and he was nearly overpower, cd by its pungency. As soon as he recovered he began t0 rail at tins druggist, and threaten, , to punch his head. 'But didn't it help your headache?' asked the apothecary. 'ITelp my headache !' gas)„ 1 the man ; 'I haven't any 11 Cache. It's my wife that's got the 1, d, ache. —Quite a little fellow found one after loon that the older pupils in the school that he attended were going off for a long tramp in the wOOdbs ire asked to he allow/ 1 , go and wry told he w• v too small, but he boggy h. so earnestly and wr so sure he would not be the I that. he was finally given permission to go, Ile held out bravely, thou h the last t+wo miles were about n much for hint. '• I am not lir 1," lie ii " but )11t , if T only could take off nay logs .and carry them under uiy arms it little while I should be s0g1011!" —A mall once called upon a por- trait painter anti asked him k, paint ihis father. '[Jut where is your father?' asked he of the brush. `Oh, be died ten years ago.' •l'heo how can ! paint hili ?' asked the feet.` "Why,' was the reply, have 'uet soon your portrait Moses. Surely, if you can paint the poi trait of it roan ++ ho died thousands of yearn ago, you can more easily paint the portrait of ray father, who has only been dead ten ...ears.' Seeing the curt of man with whom he had to (teal, the artist undertook the work. When the picture was fiui,hed the new ly- bIr)sauuied artist was called in to see it. tie gazed at it in silence for some til.le, his eyed hiliog 11111 tears, and theft softly and reverent, ly said—'So that is toy father ? Al), how be has changed —Teacher:—'Now, if you stand facing the Nest will the North be to your right or left hand?' New Scholar:-- 'Pea sure I don't know, ma'am; I'm a stranger in these party.' —11.Irs. O'Bull:—rhia.18 the ae• venth ooight you've e•onie home in the morning. 'rha next toime you go out Misther O'B., you'll stay at home and open the door for your. sill.' Sir. B.—My dear Mrs. Cneeus, may 1 not put your name down for tickets to Pref. P;Indit's course of lectures on Buddhism? iMre. by all means. You know how pas- sionately fond I am'of flowers. 'I of —Master Ned (to the Rev. Dr. Trehern:—'Wish 1'd been here Net night when you baptised' the sem, piny. Rev. Dr, 'l'reheru:—'What do you mean; my l:ol.? 1 did not baptize any body.' 'No? Well maimed Raid thet when V•eu carne it last night you threw cold water on everybody.' —A willow called at a sculptor's Audio to see the clay are !e1 of the bust part of her huslettnd. '1 can change it in any particular that you, may desire,' he said. ','he widow looker) at it with tearful eyes. ,The nose is large.' 'A large nose is a Hip of goodness,' said the. artist. The willow wipe 1 away her tears, duel snbhe,l---'\Nell, then, make it a little larger.' —A neat story is told of a Catho tic priest in Victoria whose Sermons are usually of a practical kind. On entering the pulpit one Sunday Ire took witil hint a walnut to illus- trate the character of the variou • Christian churches. He told the people tine shell was tasteless and valueless—that was the Wesiova church. The skin was nauseoes, disagreeable and +eorthless—that was the 1'resbyterian church, He then said he would show then) the FIoly Roman Apostolic Church He cracked the nut for the kernel and—found,it rotten ! Then his reverence cughed violently and prenonnee 1 the benediction. +vi•sturn aueu happened • meet one clay, and from stories which tii�•v expected pent le to hle:ievr, about the uuurher of hush cls of wheat and cora their taut produced to the acre, they gradually p•Ia5er�1 to soma which they doul-)t revs expected their hearers to re :rive with a grain nt >el1�+m�uncu `L I,el! .1•01;+yhnt !' said the ulHu frau Dakota, 'a \ nrh+rglau woman ont.ral;iug mei binding ane,ur'cnler> awl dropped hull a dozen darllin;, needles. And what do you thick 1'hr, next year there was a large crap of knitting needles come up all over that part of flip • fiAld ! Oh, 1 can believe that,' said the iwut from (,'unadian territory, 'but is nothing to the richness of the and over in our country. Why, a year ago last summer a German woman dropped some darning needles in a field nut there, alit last summer the field was �rowirig thick with' a crap of— Guess what.' 11'ivr, it up,' 'Nice, luuld�linit stockings, all ready to put oil 1' —An eminent jurist, whose name would be recognised by every mem- ber of the bar in Chicago, is being quietly laughed et just now by the members of his immediate fancily. Recently his wife has had a goon deal of trouble with her cook—a leg, hearty girl, who finds scrubbing and washing child's play, but whose natural clinusineii has broken half of the dishes in the pantry. F:Wally her ncistreis told .her one day that if she broke anything else she shouhl compel her to replace it out of her own money, thinking that this might slake the girl more care, ful. She tried eery hard to be gentle with the crockery, but one fatal morning, while laying the breakfast table, she broke the judge's pet moustache cup. It was a cup of Sevres china, ,'nil he pr'z,•1 it highly, invariably drinking his coffee from it. ,phe poor girl was broken -he , but site said not a word. In the afternoon she asked perm' ion ') go out, and she went down ' e one of the big department start , whe e she purchased the large t and grand! -t mustache cup they he 1 I stock. She sprung this on the unsuspecting judge at break, fast theu' ext morning,and he woe aR astounded. Printed on one side of the Cu ill glaring p g , letters of gilt was 111e inscription: "Love the (river." The laugh was on "his honor," and "the giver" wee forgiven. She had made an unconscious bit. to A 1 t went r ? 1 it l t r R wool- en he Iier Oeea9 Is Published Every Day of the Year, and is the LEADING REPUBLICAN PAPER OF TIIE NORTHWEST. Price. exclusive of Sunday, by mail, postpaid $8.00 per year Price, Sunday included, by mail, poetraiz . 10.00 per year TE -1E SEMI-WEEKLY IN7•r.;l. OCEAN. Is published on IILONDAYS and THURSDAYS, and besides the n"VS condensed from the Daily, it contains malty special f+aturus of great value to tliose so situated that they can m t secure the Daily every day. The Monday issue contains the By retools :•ri:eteil in The Daily later Ocean of the same date. ,b THE \VEEI'CL t' INTI N OCIi.aN. Is the Most Popular Family Newspaper pubtisIi t tVust or t11e:.:leg:1,121y ains. 11 owes Its popularity to the fact that it is the BEST EDITED and hast.. , i .!.. - EST LITERARY CHARACTER of any Western Publication. It is CLLt.:i BRIGHT, and is the able exponent of IDEAS and PRINCIPLES dear to the Amy rI ...i people. While it Is broad in its philanthropy. it is FOIL AMERICA AGAIN-:': Ti 1 r: WORLD, and broadly claims that Dia beat service that can be done FOR MANKIND 1 TO INCREASE AND MAKE: PERMANENT TIIE PitO5PI1:t11TY OF OUR /::.::.L _ LICIT *110. Conscientious service in this patriotic line of duly has given it an unus•u.il hold upou the American people. Besides, no paper excels it as a uisseminntor of news. TILE MARKET REPORTS ARE RELIABLE AND COMPLETE. Tat., NEWS OF THE WOULD Is found condensed iu its columns, and the very b. ' stories and literary'productions THAT MONEY CAN PURCHASE aro regularly found 1n its columns. Among the special family features aro the departments -2'111•.- FARM AND HOME, WOMAN'S KINGDOM, and OUR CURIOSITY SHOP. On whole. It is A MODEL AMERICAN NEWSPAPER. and richly deserves what it. has. THE LARGEST C IRCULATION of any publication of the kind in America. It i:, ths best paper for the home and for the workshop. The price of The Weekly is $1 UO perye:, r The price of The Semi -Weekly is $2,00 p;: r ye r For the accommodation of its patrons the management of THE; INTIK It OC,:.i lug s made arrangements to club both these editions with THAT BRILLIANT AND st;r - CESSFUL PUBLICATION, SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE, Ono of the best Li torary Monthlies in America, and which compares favorably with any of the older Magazines in illustrations and literary matter. THE PRICE OF• THE 111.1G.1 - ZINE IS 463, but we will send THE WEEKLY INTER OCEAN and SCLII:NEIt•S MAGAZINE, both one year, for THREE DOLLARS. Both publications for tlo, price of ono. TIIE SEMI-WEEKLY INTER OCEAN and SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE, both one year, for FOUR DOLLARS. In the political campaign that ended in the election of HARRISON and MORTON and THE TIHU11IPHOFPROTECTION PRINCIPLES, nopaper bad more inthienee than THE INTER OCEAN. It has boon first, last, tutu always Republican. and !t uN n:; the campaign came to be recognized as the LEADING REPUBLICAN PAPER OF TI *1: WEST. It will maintain this position, and will give special attention to governmental ao.l political affairs. • Remittances maybe made at our risk, either by draft, express,postomce order, express Won, or registered letter. Address THE INTER OCEAN, Chicago. 11LACKSI'c)NE .;UNI011. IIOW RISING Y'1LNG LAWi•EIRS OVERWORK THEIR GIGANTIC 13n t z. Nobody can possibly''have any idea how young lawyers, particular- ly young lawyars In the city courts, overwork their brains, unless Ito goes to the 1 cross -exam inn tiou of a witness by a young member of the bar. It is worth paying adarissio 1 to hear. The witness, says the Detroit Commercial Advertiser, has given in his testinronov, and is turned over like a lamb to the slaughter, or 0 rabbit to the tender mercies of an anaconda. Titers is hushed stillness a.; the anaconda prepares to throw its voluminous folds around the trembling victim, crush its bones, and then swallow the shapeles mass. It is perfectly awful. The brow becomes corrugated • with deep thought : !' ,,liti :n- ace js bent on the guilty wretch of a witness who seems eurscious of his approaelr- wing doors. Slowly. and solemnly, lilts the Supremo head of the, church promulgating officially some entire• ly new dogma, tho'words reverberat- ing like minute guns at sea, the coming Blackstone says : "1)id—y'O;—not -,..swear . i 1 -.• direct Tea' iilnttion—tb;•t--your - uaute_was—?.Tete Snooks 1" '1'lle witness aa111 lie did. Tiled the lawyer buries his mass- ive brow in ]lis hands aril thinks, and t',i'rks. Suddenly running his fi1'gors tl'I'ongh hislrair, he fixed his glittering orbs as if they could see the buckle on the hick of the witness's vest, and halts : "Now, sir, 1 will ask you • on your oath t i tell this court at.djury, without any hoiu lliug or hawing, giving a categorical answer to a cate- goricaly question—I ask you now whether your name is rot Peter Snooks, instead of fete Snooks, a8 you swore it .ids d 0•01110nt ago?" Witness—"My range—•', "Halt 1 May it please yout 1:.)uor the witness is trifling with this court and jury. Ile is evidently trying to lug in hearsay evidence. According to second Greenleaf, page 236—" • "Tho witness will proceed," said the court, yawning. "Your honor, during the whole course of lily long and extensive practice—" "The witness will proceed." "Your honor will,ploaso nota my exception. I intend that the Su- preme Court shall pass on this case." Witness—"Yea." "Are you a resident of this city ?" Witness—"Yes." "The city of Dei:roit" Witness—" Yes." Then Blackstone, Jr., walks backwards and forward, his brow as lumpy with thought as an old wash- board. The anaconda is about to spring again. "County of Wayne?" • "Yes." "State of Aiichigan ?" "Yes.,' "We rest the case, may it please your honor." And the planets keep right on around the sun as if nothing had happened. "Death must' be.e w N P .t Said Mary Skinner, of Chicago, as she tumbled into the river off a draw. bridge. "You must be a good deal of a fool!" observed the old sailor who pulled her out, "to try this way when pizen is 60 cheap. A SOCK; OF SPIIIGG. Achoo 1 acboo, I've such a cold 'l'ltat I cad scarcely sigg ; I felt just like a three year. old Udtil this beastly sprigg • Add dow my dose is red and sore,' By head )s achigg too ; By eyes with tears are bribbigg o'er Aclioo, I say, achoo. It does'et sects to batter buch ITow barfly I bay feel, By fredds all laugh at be at such A twist of Fortude's wheel By heart feels like ad ebty shell Pilled up with gloob and glue ; Just why 1 1 eally caddot tell- Achoo, _ say, achoo. —The 11'lrnhor of immigrants reported :It Winnipeg last month was 5,015, 1,433 more than for April, 18S BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENT. .. COi: iCESrONDEN(1L. .We will al all tpleased io receive iterus of new., from, our sub- sir'iber,,. We want a • good cur,'es- 0ontic,tt in every 10(30Jil,,, not already represented, to saran 71.8 RELIABLE news. SUBSCRIBERS. Patrons who Ito nut rece'i e their Paper regularly from the ec,•rie,• or tler)ayh their local pw,•t rice,,• will confer ct furor lbr repoel cg at this office at ociee. Sui. cri,t-,,.', may g1M11111'nee at any lime. ADVERTISERS. Atlee) f(3erswill please bear in mind that ctrl "changes" of advertisements, fo erlertre aetdt'rtion, 814021111 lie, handed in not Toler than MONDAY NOON of e sett week. • CIRCULATION. THE NEWS -RECORD has a larger cirevtlativat than any 0111er• paper in this section, and ae• an advertising medium has few wools an Ontario. ur books are open lo those who can business. JOB PRINTING. The Job Department of this. jour- nal is one of the best erquip)pred in Western Ontario, arid a sr,)er•ior class of work is ;ptnranleeel at very tont prices. • 2. -- iVEWSPAPER LAWS We call the special attention of Post 'tasters and subscribers to the following synopsis of the newspaper laws :- 1—A postmaster is rep:ire:1 to give notice BY ricers It (returning a paper does not answer the law) when a subscriber does not take his paper out of the office, and *tate the reason for its not being taken. Any neglect to do so makes the postmaster responsible to the publishers for payment. fa—If any person orders his paper dis- soutinued, he must pay all arrearrges, D1 the publisher may continue to send it until payment is made, and collect Olt whole amount, whetiser it be talcen freer the office or not. There can be no legal 'ontinuance until the payment is made 3—Any person who takes a paper from the post -office, whether directed to lit. name or another, or whether he has sub. scribed or not, is responsible for the pay, e4—If a subscriber orders his papor tole stopped at a certain time, and the publish er continues to send, 11 the subscriber 1 bound to pay fol -it if he t;tkes It out of the post -office. This proceeds upon theground that a man must pay for what lie uses 0 11"In the Division Court in Godorich at the November sitting a newspaper put - hailer sued for pay of paper. The defend• ant objected paying on the ground that he had ordood a former proprietor of the paper to discontinue it. The Judge held that that was not a valid de,^ ence. 111e plaintiff, the present proprietor, had no noti!e to discontinue and eenseleelltly could collect, although it was not denied that defendant had notified former pro- prietor to discontinue. In any event defenant was bound to pay for the time he had received the p: per and until be had 1 a:d ./1 F. .P P. s dote for subscription. CURE. FITS! When I say CURE I do not mean merely t ;top them for a time, and then have them r0 I nave made the dl ea RADICAL CURL FITS, EPILEPSY or ''ALLING SICKNESS, Outhe st.seecuaohesaKas wreas BatrL failed! s no reason for not now receiving a cure Bend at once for a treatise and &Flute Boma DI my INFA LIABLE REMEDY. Give Exprelt nd rest Oface. It costs yousoothing for 8 irla', and it will cure you. .Address Dr H. G. ROHT. 37 Yong» 43t., Toronto, Oat. 5f, .51111 ( 1: •i l , t :t'• I itqfLy .+.r^ -•n.. :..' )t ::D, f` . e. - tet.. n•.••7). E'er C. : , . t , r• Cllcufro;ir 0: i.,. , •': L_-,,,,..._-_ BIi L HEADS, NOTE ileads, Letter Heads, Tags Statements, Circulars, Business Cards, Envelopes, Programmes. etc., eta., printei in a workman like manner and at low rates, a THE NEWS-Itl';CORD Office. L]t47S4 L1C,A+:'S CARRIAGE AND WAGON FACTORY, Corner Huron and Orange Streets, Clinton. FIRST - CLASS MATERIAL and UNSURPASSED IRON WOPX, Repairing and Repainting, Lsi'ALL, WORK WAItRAN'TEB.'5%9 521.y TO THE FARMERS. Study your own interest and go where - yen :n get Reliable Wtartess. I manufacture none but rue BGSTOF STOCK. Beware of shops that sell cheap, as they have got to live. 5C5l^ (Jail and get prices. Orders by snail proniply attended to troHN TJ,.'. •CAIR.T fit, HARNESS EMPORIUM, nut' Tit, ONT. DR. WASHINGTON } Throat and Llu». Surgeon, of Toronto. !1•'i1 be nt the RRa((efjbary (louse CLINTON. APR I L I ITN All Day. A few of the 1 1reds cared by DR , WASHINGTON'S Nese Method • of 1r,Fl"1ar:ou W. If. Storey. of Storey & Son, prominent glove manufacturers of Acton, tont., cured by Dr. Washington of eater' It of the th'oat, bad form, and pronounced incurable by eueinen specialists in Canada and Fughtnd. write hie, for partteula rs, Cluouie B1.o11ebilis111111Asih1111111 Cured An Enghs) Clinch Clerg3111an speaks, Rectory, Cornwall. not Da. WA8IIis01o4.- DiAa 010, -1 tun glad to be able to inform you that our daughter Is quite well again. .Is this', the second time she has been cured of grave bronchial troubles under your treatment, when the usual remedies failed, I write to express uiy gratitude. Please accept my sincere thinks. Yours truly, C. B. Perm. Mrs .Jno Mclielvy, Kingston, Ont., Catarrh and Consumption. John Mcti:etvy, Kingston, Ont, Cntar:h. Mr A flopping, Kin; sten, Out, Broncho Consnmp• Hon, Mr. E. Scott, Kingston, Ont, Catarrh, head and throat. Mrs Jno nertrnm, Ilat•rowsmith, Ont, near rang - stun, Catarrh throat, Miss Mary A Itombourg, Centreville, On(,..atarih head and throat. James Mathews, P. Mester, Acton. Ont. A FiFish, Cents Furn'slih•g, Belie+•.Ile,Catarrh throat, .,oh h 1'htppee, P. 0. Sane iv et, Ont, (Hear Napa• nee), Cata'•.n bend a e, throat. St a rake 'SOUND ADVICE. -'inose 111)) lg 01105 D' any 111,1 should consider tint it is just its important to have their posters properly ukph: Ye. and r;' :.tr neat nn/l nttrnuteyer as 0 is to ,,rte it ••Doll auctioneer. Ti a News -1. -,cone 1eal(es a specialty of this Osseo? work, they have the material and e patience to • 've you 0,111 you want nt +•e, ..f reasonable niices L'1'CAY STOCK AD\ r.'• ►► �� TiStOIENTS inset tau fn g NRws 1' .r•OR» Itt 1011 rates. '1'.i0 caw makes it compulsory to novel se et it, ••a•' . it yon want any kind of advertisIIv• yoe • nt o better than call on 'ews-Cern. . W I t =lo -O i -z4 a•