HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1890-05-02, Page 7.r.
AL BALM.
A .ain'and speedy cure for
old in the Bead and Catarrh
DJ LN all .its stages.
SOOTHING, CLEANSING,
HEALING.
Instant Relief, Permanent Cure,
Failure Impossible.
a
tW
YA
Islam rat liseases are simply symptoms or
secants lt.al i.ead:.che, partial deafness, losing
sense of:soul foul breath, hawking and spitting,
taueea, ser 1 feeling of debility, etc. If you are
troubled wet. at. v of these or kindred symptoms, you
kayo Catarrh. awl should lose no time in procuring
1~. bottle of ". t. nat.ta. Be warned in time
neglected cr'.d sn bead results in Catarrh, followed
by conctlmpu.n n 1 death. NASAL. BALM is sold by
iaUdruggists, or ir'I be sent, post paid, on receipt o1
' erioe (so cents :.r,J 51.00) by addressing
FYtFORU & CO., BROOKVILLE, ONT.
$eyyat... imitations similar in name.
.11
` MEASURING THE BABY.
We measured the riotous baby
Against the cottage wall
A lily grew near the threshold,
And the boy was jus* as tall—
A royal tiger lily,
With spots of purple and gold,
And the heart a jewelled chalice
The fragrant dew to hold.
Without the bluebirds whistled
High np in the old roof trees,
And to and fro, at the window
The red rose rocked her bees ;
And the wee pink fists of the baby
Were never a moment still,
Reaching at shine and shadow
.;, That danced on the window -sill.
.,11440*
His eyes were as blue as blue•bel],
His mouth like a flower unblown ;
Two little bare feet, like funny white
mics,
Peeped out from his snowy gown
*And we thought, with a thrill of rap-
ture,
That yet had a touch of pain,
When June rolls arotn d with her roses,
We measure the boy again.
Ah, die : Iu a darkened chamber,
With the sunshine shut away,
Through the tears that fell like a bitter
rain
We measured the boy today ;
And the little bare feet that were dim.
pled,
And sweet as a bidding rose,
Lay side by side together
In the hush of a long repose.
lip front the dainty pillow,
\Vhi1Qe as the risen dawn,
The fair little face lav sniping,
With the light of Heaven thereon ;
And the dear ]ittle hands, like rose
leaves
Dropped from a rose, lay still,
Never to catch at' the sunshine
That crept to the shrouded sill.
We measured the sleeping baby,
With ribbons white as snow,
For the shining rosewood casket
That waited for him below,
And out of the darkened chamber
We went with a childless moan ;
To the height of the sinless angels
Our little one had grown.
WO: QJ3' TUa 'WITS.
6ornethin j to be studded --.a
shirt front.
Apin is like a trl3n. It is use-
less when it 1, s':. •ts head.
No one rue ;.e to put out u wo-
man who blazes with diamonds.
A woman's beauty may be "all
in ber eye,'' but it is there just the
same.
'Does it pay to strike?' asks an
exchange. Generally it does not,
especially if the other fellow is
the bigger man of the two.
Mrs-S.—Have we everything
out of the house now ? Mr S.—
Everything but the children.
You know the landlord won't
allow them in the new house.
Shoe factory foreman (in thun-
der tones)—What's the matter
there? Did you slit that leatbsr
wrong ?—Operative (humbly)—
N-o I only cut off my fingers.
'I'm bright. I'm sharp,' ex-
claimed the counterfeiter when he
stood up for sentence. 'Yes,
you're guilt -edged,' observed the
judge, prior to giving him twenty
years for reflection.
O'Flynn (reading a death no-
tice)—Poor Jim ! It says he left a
wife and two children. Mrs
O'Flynn—Och, ye might know
that. Ile was too moan to iver
take thio anywhere wid hint.
Elderly Widower—Mrs Little,I
have just one (tt-estion to ask you.
Will you marry • ..ms? Elderly
Widow—Mr Biggs, I have just
one question to ask before I can
auswer, Do you snore?
Fine night,' said Smith to Jones
as they came out of the club.
'Yes,' answered Jones as the clock
began striking the hour of 12, 'it
is a fine night, but I expect it will
storm when I get home.'
Mattie—Dot, what is a zebra ?
Dot (who has been looking into
natural hietoty for the last hour)
--A zebwa? Why Mattie, it's
nothing but a funny little
horse that wears stipped stock-
ings all over—clear np to bis ears.
Papa—It no use talking,Emma;
Ithet-e Sunday evening meotingr
have got to be shortened. My
latest gas bill was enormous.
Emma—It's not my fault. It
wouldn't be half as big if mamma
didn't corse. into the parlor so
often.
'Tell Inc. Charley,' said young
Mrs Tucker to her husband, 'is
that man a cannibal?' .'Certainly
not. What makes you ask such a
question ?"Because I heard him
say just now• that he was going
around the corner and swallow
two fingers.'
4Mo,' said Gus De Jay i 'I don't
care much foh these temperance
people, you know, but I should
nevah think of putting an enemy
into my mouth to steal away my
gerains.' 'And if you did,' said a
friend of his, 'it would be a good
jdke on the enemy.'
For hun.day Rcadn
YOUR CHANCE IN LIFE.
Are you n farmer ? Go to the near
Northwest and secure lana in the most •
fertile region in the world, close to the
great markets of St. Paul, Minneapolis'
and Duluth, where there is a ready
market dor all the products of the farm.;
In one ‘5 -ear you .can save enough in.
railway freights alone to pay fora farm'
in a thickly settled district where exist'
all the.advantageo of schools, churches,]
and genera] civilization. You can pro-•
cure for sixty cents an acre. as a first
instalment balance on long time at law
interest a farm in the most flourishi.ag
State on the continent, described by the
clebrated English officer, Col. Butler, as
"Fertile beyond description." Remem-
ber that 400 mites from a shipping .port
means 15 -cents a bushel for freight and
elevator charges, all of which your can
save by settling on the lands here of-
fered. Are you a Mechanic ? Ycu are
certain of employment at high wages in
Minnesota. Yactory hands and skilled
laborers of every kind who want to bet-
ter their fottnnes should go to the pro.
greseive State of Minnesota. Remem-
ber &tat less than twenty dollars will
carry you to the great cities and rising
towns of Minnesota which are growing
faster than any others in the world, St.
Paul and MYIinneapolis are practically'
one Erect city with a combined popwla-
tion of half a million. The great lead
grant of the St. Paul. Minneapolis ata
Manitoba Railway much of it withheld
•from settlentent for years --is now
thrown wide open and population is
dowing in amain, but there is room for
all. Special excursions at rates which
are practically one fare for the round
trip good for return within 30 days
from date a,f ,a'.e,wl'll leave ail Canadian
points for .Minnesota, April 22nd and
May 2dth, 15e0. Special inducements
to honteseekers accompanying May Ex-
cursion. Further particulars on ap-
plication to J. P,00kwalter, land Com-
missioner Great Northern Railway, St.
Paul, Minnesota, or to the Travelling
Land Agent of the Company, George
Purvis, Alasouic Temple, I,ondon, On-
tario, ('ands.
Ladies who are troubled with roughness
of the skin or cracked, should keep a
bottle of Parisian Balm in the house.
It is delightfully perfumed and softens
heals and beautifies the skin.
Nm. 1:, Jackson, a well-known law•-
,yer, At Augusta, has perfected rnechan•
:teal appliances for malting bagging for
cotton from the cotton stalk. Experts
say the new bagging is in every respect
equal to cotton Or jute bagging. it is
estimated that in making bagging
from cotton stalks '5'2,000,000 will go
into the farmers' pocket annnally for
what is now cleared from fields at an
expense.
iRE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY
OF PURELY VEGETABLE INGREDIENTS
AND WITHOUT MERCURY, USED BY
THE ENGLISii PEOPLE FOR
OVER 120 YEARS, . IB
ckie'
001001/ND
ANTI U!O43
These PIM consist of a careful end peeallar admit-
ture of the best and mfidest vegetable aperients and
the pnre extract of Flowers of Chamomile, They will
1* found a most eAicacioue remedy for derangements
of the digestive organs, end for obstructions and tor-
pid action -of the liver and bowers which produce itt-
digestion and the several "finales of bilious and liver
eenneelnte. field bi all Chemists.
wnotreatz aefallTe :
EVANS AND SONS, LIMITED.
MONTREAL,
"A ROARING FARCE."
is the term we often hear applied
to a modern trial -by -jury. The
trial of' Dr Pierce's Favorite Pres-
cription, thy a jury of thousands
of women afflicted with female
•complaints, has been ne farce, fob
it has established that this eeneedy
is a specific for all chronic weak-
neeses.peculiar to the sex. The
only medicine for women, sold
by druggists under a positive
guarantee,from the manufacturers
tbat it will give satisfaction in
everycae-1, nr money will be re-
funded. This guarantee has been
printed on the bottle -wrapper
and faithfully carried out fel
many years.
POWER OF HUMBUG.
An individual who opened a
small tavern near the field of
Waterloo was frequently question
ed as to whether he did or did not
possess some relics of the battle
and he as invariably and honestly
answered in the negative.
But he was very poor, and one
day while lamenting to a neigh-
bor not only his poverty, but the
annoyance to which travelers sub;
jetted hirn, his friend cut him
short with :
'Well, make one help the other;
make some relics.'
'But what can 1 dor inquired
the poor man.
'Tell them that. Napoleon or
Wellington entered the shop dur-
ing
the
battle, and sat down in
n in
that chair,'
Not long after, an English
tourist entered the tavern, and,
inquiring for relics, was told the
chair story. The chair was
bought at an incredible price.
The next comer was informed
that Wellington had taken a drink
and the 'Wellington tumbler' was
accordingly sold. The third ar-
rival gazed with breathless wonder
at the nail on which Bonaparte
had hung hits hat ; the fourth pur-
chased the doorposts between
which
he
had 'a
nter•ed, and this
fifth became the happy purchaser
of the floor on which ho had trod-
den.
At the last advices the unfor-
tunate tasernkeeper had not a
roof to cover his head, and was
sitting on a bag of gold in the
center of a deep pit formed by
selling tho earth on which the
hones had stood.
Toanks to Mr Mowat, we have
the host scho,ls in the world and
nota dollar of Peovineial debt.
;11UZUi iUNU.
No blessing comas to the mur-
muring, cow pldltling,disconten ted
heart. When once this: evil of
discontent has entered into the
soul, nothing is right. Even the
"angels food' was not good enough
for the murmuring Israelites, and
"the corn of Heaven" could not
satisfy those whose souls were fill-
ed with the discontent of earth.—
But when once the heart bas found
rest in God,and all its murmurings
are bushed in sweet submission to
His will, there is peace in believ-
ing, and joy in the Holy Ghost,
and a hallowed confidence in the
kind providence of Him wbo hath
done all things well. "Let your
conduct be without oonvetousness,
and be content with such things
as ye have; for He hath said, I
will never leave thee, nor forsake
thee. So that we may boldly say,
the Lord is my helper, and I will
not fear what man can do unto
me.''
PRAISE AND BLAME.
If we have succes in an under-
taking, we deserve credit for it.
If we fail, the blame rests outside
of ourselves. This is the way we
incline to look at our course in
life. Yet, as a tnatter of fact, our
successes are largely due to
others, and our failures to our-
selves. It is because others have
given us prompting,or counsel, or
ingipiration, or material aid, that
we have done as well as we have,
at every favorable turn in ourca-
reer. It is because we have not
avaiica-,ourselves as we might
have of de proffered help of
others, or have netVect.ed to use
aright our opportunities and p.iw-
ers, that in so many cased we
have failed of accomplishing that
to which we had set ourselves.—
But it is so much easier to see the
good side of our own course and
the defects or lack in the course
of others, that it is to see our own
faults and the superiority of our
fellows,that our constant tendency
is to shift blame from ourselves
to others, and to make a similar
misapplication of praise. This is
as true in our treatment of God
as in our treatment ofourfellows.
We are far more likely to think
that our special trials are from
God than we are to think that our
ordinary comforts are His gift.—
And so we are readier to ask God's
help when we seem to lack it than
to acknowledge that help when it
is given to us. What a shame
that this is our course!
Make life a ministry of love,and
it will always bo worth living.—
[Robert Browning.
Men weave in their own lives
the garments which dies must
wear in the world to come.-- [Lucy
Larcom.
The talent of success is nohting
more than doing what you can
well, withowta thought of fame.—
[Longfellow.
Failure after long perseverance
is much grandee than never to
have a striving good enough to be
called a failure, -[Geo. Eliot.
Be good, sweet maid, and let who will
be clever,
Do noble things, not dream them all
day long;
And so make life, death and that vast
forever
One grand, sweet song.
Charles Kingsley.
W hen•you stake a nlistake,don't
I ook back at it long. Take the
reason of the thin; into your
own mind and then look forward.
Mistakes are lessons of wisdom.—
The past cannot be e .tnged. The
future is yet in your power.—
[May Riley Smith.
Watch thy tongue; out of it are
the issues of life! Speak not till
thy thought has silently matured
, itself. Speech is human; silence
is divine. No idle, word thou
speakest but is a seed cast into
time and grows through all oter-
nity.— [Thos. Carlyle.
One person may not succeed in
dispelling all the miasmas of the
earth. but if lie ?an only cleanse
one little corner of it, if he can
but send though the murky air
one cool, bracing, healthy gale,he
will do much better than to sit
under his vine appalled by the
greatness of the evil.— (Gail Ham-
ilton.
WOOLEN MANUFACTURERS
COMBINE.
in pronouncing Nasal Balm the
rn remedy s09Qr elg, I e y for catarrh.
Mr Horatio Collier, Woolen Man-
u factuadt, Cameron town, Ont.,
states : Nasal Balm is the only
positive
p e remedy for catnrrh,thut T
ever used.
GE11S OP THOUGiiT.
:elan in solitude is an iucem-
pleto being; he needs companion-
ship for happi-,ess.
Purchase not friends by gifts:
when thou ceasest t e give, such
will cease to love.
To subdue passion and to re-
gulate desire is the greatest task
of man as a moral agent.
There is a time fur everything,
and the secret of success in life
lies in doing things at just the
right minute.
It is the man who determines
the dignity of the occupation ;
not the occupation that measures
the dignity of the man.
It• is not calculable what may be
accomplished in everything in life
by moderate beginnings and ,judi-,
111
THE THREE STARS
HEALTH 1 HApp,
WfI absolutely and per-
manently euro the most
NO�. aggravated Case of
• CATARRH,
Hay Fever or Catarrhal Deafness.
This is not a snuff or ointment, both of
whioh are discarded by reputable physi-
cians as wholly worthless and generally
injurious. Ask for Hospital Remedy
for Catarrh.
(SM.—This Is tho only Catarrh PAWN
Remedy on the market whioh
manateefromeoientiecsourcea,
HOPE
119 > Thfa ie an incompar-
able
remedy for
Nervous Debility
It fe truly lite Itself. IIee it and live agate. Ask ter
HOSPITAL REMEOYfor GENERAL ODIUM PBicC$1.00.
N°1V
Wfll mum All
troubles of the
LIVER AND KIDNEYS,
dill permanently cure Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Cori•
stipatfon, Bright's Disease of the Kidneys, Catarrh
of the Stomach and Bladder. This is a marvellous
medicine. It rapidly des
GOOD BLOOD AND LOTS OF IT
MID i mEB,x= 25 LITE. There isnot a blood nledi.
Cine in the market as good as this. It is peerless.
It tinned Izi the Hospitals of Europe, and pre-
scribed by the most eminent Physicians in
the world. Suitable for old or young.
ASK POR 8o8PITAL BENDY Pon
LIVED AND EID17ETB.
PRICE $L00.
this extract from the scientific papers of Great Britain and Europe
The four greatest medical centres of the world are i.ondon, Paris. Berlin and V(Onna. These cities had !MOM
hospitals teeming with suffering humanity. . Crowds of students throng the wards studying under the Professors in
oharye. The most renowned physicians of the world teach and practice here, and the institutions are storehouses of
medical knowledge and experience. With a view of making this experience available to the public the Hospital
Remedy Co. at great expense secured the prescriptions of these hospitals, prepared the >speoifres, and although it
would cost from $26 to $100 to .secure the attention of their distinguished originators, yet in this way their pre-
pared specifics are offered at the price of the quack patent medicines that flood the market and absurdly clpim to cure
every ill from a single bottle.
TO Iia LAD OF ALL DRUGGISTS OR OFTHE
HOSPITAL REMEDY COMPIi Y. Sale Proprietors, •• • TORONTO, CANADA.
CIBCULAB$ DE5CB1'EIRG Tuggg.y.ESTODIES SENT ON APPLICATION'.
eious perseverance.
The worthiest people are the
most injured by Blonder, as we
usually find that to be the bust
fruit which the birds have been
continually pecking at.
It is idleness that creates im;
possibilities, and where men care
not to do a thing, they shelter
themselves under a persuasion
that it cannot be done.
Never do anything which if you
should see in anothor you should
count a just occasion to despise
him for, or to think any way more
meanly of him.
Habit in a child iv at first liken
spider's web; if neglected, it be-
comes a thread of twine ; next a
cord or rope; finally, a cable, and
then who can break it?
It is great prudence to gain as
many friends as we honestly can,
especially when it can be done at
so easy a rate as a good word ; it
is a great folly to make an enemy
by ill cords.
Without the fr•iei.dly exchange
of kindly words and deeds, with-
out the sunshine of loving looks
and smiles of welcome and encour-
agement, a house may be a habit-
ation, but never truly a home.
Blessed is that man wh", to his
age, has preserved the freshness,
the simplicity, and the purity of
youth. If upon earth there Is
one sight more 1ccfreshing 11100
another, it is the beholding or a
good, great mail.
True resignation, which always
brings with it the confidence that
unchangeable goodness will stake
even the disappointments of our
hopes and the contradictions
of life conclusive to some benefit,
cast a grave but tranquil! light.
over the prospects of even a toil-
some and troubled life.
We are very apt to divide
human life into the pleasant and
the unpleasant, the sweet and the
bitter, joy- and sorrow, good and
evil, and to suppose that out of
the former springs all our Hap-
piness and welfare—out of' the
latter,' all our misery incl failure.
In so doing, however, we entirely
ignore the faet that contrast is a
necessary and valuable element in
life and happiness.
The value
of a r'tn'.Y
t, ccl 1 u I
1 ud
be estimated by its curative prop-
erties. According to this sten-
dam', Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the
best and most economical blood
medicine in the market.; because
the most, pure and concentrated.
Price $1. Worth $5 a bottle.
in connection with the duty on corn
for feeding purposes in Canada, which
the Dominion Government declines to
remove on the ground that it would
lower the price of coarse grains, such
as oats, which many farmers persist in
selling, the Canadian Live Stock .four -
nal rubs in
the point that
the constant
selling of grains, etc,, instead of convert-
ing them into animal products, is a
shortsighted and ruinous farm policy -
The Journal nrges the Government to
give the farmers free corn for nee in the
production of beef. pork and dairy pro-
ducts.
H. A. Long, an actor, who wag pro-
fessedly converted at Hunter and
Crossley's revival meeting, in Hamil-
ton some mouths ago, and who has
since been doing evangelistic work in
thio city, ha, skipped out, leaving a
five months' board bill Unpaid and tak-
ing an overcoat, two suits of undercloth-
ing, tht'ee,pairs Of °die and other mister-
inl with nim, all of which was the pro-
pertyof Jas. Reid, flunterstreet, where
be boarded.
MESSRS. C. C RICHARDS & CO.
Gents.—Having used MINARD'S
LINIMENT for several years in my sta-
ble, I attest to its being the best thing I
know for horse flesh. In the family,
we have used it for every purpose that
a liniment is adapted for, it being re-
commended to ns by the late Pr J. L.
R. Webster. Personally I find it the
best allayer of neuralgic pain I have
ever used.
B. Trus,
Proprietor Yarmouth Livery Stable.
In some quarters it is regarded as
more probable that Mr Stanley will be-
come the governor of the Congo Free
State than that he will enter the Bri-
tish service. As governor of the Congo
country he would exercise more power rIs undei•si sed desires to intimate to his former atro
than in any capacity to which the gp
British could assign him, and he would that he has remit't•hased his former business, and will co
be able to govern with an absolutely the old stand,
free hand. Mr Stanley recognizes the
fact that King Leopold has the first Corner of Albert and Ontario Street ,
claim upon him, and the implicit con-
fidence which that monarch bestows
upon him is a sufficient guarantee that
no interference with his government
would be offered. It is, therefore, be-
lieved that Mr Stanley will receive his
commission before he leaves Brussels,
if he desires it.
Minard's Liniment cures Distemper.
The General Assemby of the Pres-
byterian Church of America meets
next month at Saratoga. The most
important question then to be decided
is the proposed revision of the West -
minister Confession. Advocates of re-
vision base their hopes of success on
the fact that eighty-two out of the one
hundred and twenty-two Presbyteries
which have so far voted on the question
are in favor of revision. There are two
hundred and twelve Presbyteries in the
Presbyterian Chnrch in the United
States. This leaves ninety Presbyter-
ies still to vote, and it is expected that
the majority of these will favor the pro-
s
aiposeds.
d amendments to the church stand -
_
1 nZ,•.
vq11 svREVt
'TO THE EDIIkrrat
Please in5;rm your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named
disease. By its timely u thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall
be glad to send two bottle?; remedy f my remedy FREE to any of your readers who have con.
sumption if they will send me etYlr Express and Post Office Address. Respectfully,
T. A. BL.00UM, M.C., r66 West edetaido St.. TORONTO. ONTARIO.
The Peopled Grocery
Business Ch
,nget,
s and fries
tinue it'
sufferers
i,oM Stomach and Liver derange-
n;ents—Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Sok-
11.' datLe,and Coiitt pin ,t— f id a safe
and certain relief in
Ayer's Pills. 111'21i
cases where a ea-
thartie is needed,
these P11 Itt are retain -
1 by leading
i hysirian.¢.
Dr. T. E. Iiastinl?s,
cf Baltimore, says.:
'•Actr's tills ave thy
tryst cat hal ti,• and
;Lptt' '11t v:itl:;n the
r,:•h or a,y profess
lir. John W. ITr, w 1. of flryana, W.
Vit., writes ; " 1 bare lir, •, ril,. el Aycrit
Pills in n v 1 n:yti, e.::u,? find Iheut ex-
cellent.
tlL•ir };rurr.tl use in
f:uu]t]es."
"For a itetele,rof ye::rs I was afFicted
with bili,utsn w t,•th•h diems, destroyed
my health. 1 tri, d various rynie,lies,
but nothing oll,•),it ,l tut any relief until
1 began io rdko Ayer's fills."- (I. S.
\t'tutderli, b, Scranton, Pa.
" 1 lint, used dyer's Pills for the lust
thirty yetis, and ani satisfied i should
not Le id: ve'to-clay if it hail not been
for 1hrni. They eared me of ,I�st,e tsia
when all other retttedII'S failed, an,I their
occll'iontih use hay kept me ill a
healthy
enttt111 on ct•t•t :tics."— T. 1', Brown,
(lies ter, 1'a.
" lin, tug been snbjeet, for Sears, to
rm .: is:ohm, without being able to find
mush relief, 1 at last tried Ayer's Pills,
alDi 1 tit it t tL linty anden
a pleasure
sure
to testify that I have derived great ben-
efit front their use. For over two years
past I have taken one of these Pills
every night before retiring. I would not
willingly he without 1•hem,"—G. W.
Bowman, '241 East, ;Wain st., Carlisle, Pa.
"Ayer's Pills have been used in my
family upwards of twenty years, and
have completely verified all that is
claimed for them. In attacks of piles,
frosn which I suffered ni.,••v years, they
afforded me greater relief than any med-
icine I ever tried,"—Tbomae F. Adams,
Holly Springs, Texas.
Ayer's Pills,
PRSFAnaa 8Y'
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Masa
Bold by all Druggist* and Dealers In Medicine
He intends to go out of the Crockery and Glassware lino entirely,
balance of whioh will be sold cheap, and will devote himself exclu-
sively to -
GROCERIES, Fine Fruits, Confectionary &c.
Of which he will keep nothing but first-class goods. The busineeti.s:.s,
will be conducted on a strictly cash basis, and prices will be fixed ac-
cordingly. By giving close personal attention to the business he •;.
hopes to merit and receive the same liberal patronage that he enjoyed. ?i
hitherto. ry";
JOHN CUNINGHAME• - - CLINTON
s
OU$�CeQpflgSeaso11
SPECIAL � CUTS
In BROOMS, BRUSHES and SOAPS, BED-
ROOM SETS, CROCKERY & GLASSWAR
I.N.
J. W. IRWIN, The Times Tea Warehouse
Cooper's Old Stand, Cor. Sear•le's Block, CLINTON
ADAMS' EMPORIUf
SPRING GOODS'
Last week we reet•rvi-d and opened 1111 a large quantity of new goods fol
the spring tirade. Lovely PRINTS, Fine DRESS (;GODS, Extra•'
Good 1 WEEDS, and cheap. ' CARPETS in 'Tapestry, Hemp and Oil .'"
TIC'KING'S, SHIRTINGS and BUTi:HF.RS LINEN, KENTUCKY
J EAN, something new in dress lining. Full supply of small wares.'''':
MILLiNRRY, as 1181131 the very best.. GROCERIES' of best quality.
WALL PAPER &Rzc, 1"ield and Garden SFE 1)5. All are cordially in• its+,:
vited to see the goods and be convinced that this is the right place.
R. ADAMS.
LONDESBORO
we Is es M
D'A vignou's Cream of Witch -Hazel,
THE NEW TOILET LOTION,
Softens the skin, removes roughness, eruptions and irritation fromthe face an
hands, and gives freshness and tone to the complexion.
invaluable a lication after shaving. is an pp Don'
t mistake thisanperior 1)t'e4'
pasation for any paints, enamels or injurious cosmetics or inferior oomplextell;.
otions. It prevents eruptions, abrasions, roughness, redness, chapping, troll.'
sores, and pain resulting to sensitive skin from exposure to wind and cold. t'h'
short D'AvieNON's CREAM of Wt•rcn•Hs,anis at once a remedy and a preventMti:;'
for every form of surface inflammation or irritation. Prise 211 cents per. both'
Manufactured by
JAMFtii; H. CA. >MX I E,
OIWIEMIST AND DRVVOOIST, OLl . TON, ONT.