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The Clinton New Era, 1890-05-09, Page 6Jobbing Department is not surpassed in the jaunty )....a.. SHE r that I've gut to go *.-�•- LIFE'S LOOM.HOME DECORATION• stumping around for lite, she may POISONED PILLS. Th wealth of a Rothschild is not foal a disgust. Give me two or d er next are SHE SAW THE LATEST STYLES. • I sit at the wheel of life to spin : e •--• 1• ueceasary /or obtaining an attractive three days more in which to get u "You don't seem to understand which OCCAii An yet o sins A Parisian duel,npI stand at the Gate to enter in, home. Inexpensive decorations flpned a great sentatl0Lt at tho And yet poor sinner am 1. uften more beautiful than the lavish 'time of its occurrence, was one The threads seem tangled and which embellishments seen in the home of the between Henri Delogravu suet to choose, A few ten cent packages of Diamond Dyes and Diamond Paiute will, if used with taste, give the house the refined and aesthetic air of beauty which often- times is not gained with the expendi- ture of thousands of dollars. Faded curtains, lumbrequins, draperies, and furniture coverings can be made some fashionable shade wit:a the proper color of Diamond byes. The door and the woodwork will take an elegant cherry, mahogany, or black walnut color from wood stains made out of different colors of the dyes. Gild the tarnished picture frames with Diamond Gold Paint. Dye mats and rugs with Diamond Dyes, and in litany ways beautify your home by the use of these inexpensive articles. Photographs or engratiugs can be colored most artistically with water colors made from Diamond Dyes. Full directions tor doing this work will be sent free of charge to any address upon application to Wells, Richardstn it Montreal. l'retty frames can be made of rough bark, tacked on a foundation of paste- board or white wood, and gilded with Diamond Paints. Cornices, for a cosy country cottage, are often made in the same way. A pretty conceit is to have panels of embossed plush, striped vel- vet, or silk or satin brocade, marked out by bronzed, stained, or gilded wood. Cheese cloth window draperies may be given a beautiful shade by dipping into a weak solution of Diamond Dyes of any desired tint. Remember that the beauty of decor- ation lies not so much in the variety and costliness of the material employed as it does in simplicity and harmony. Alphonsophonso Riviere, the cause beimillionaire. Who'll guide me as I spin :' m; the success of the former in woo- ing a young lady to whorl they 'were both attached. Riviere in- sulted his successful rival by slap- ping him on the cheek, and it -vas agreed that a duel should take place in which the life of oue should be ended. The details were left to their seconds to ar- range and until they faced each The Gate is shut and bard to loose, Who'll open to let rue in ? Oh! how the beautiful web to flower \Vith beautiful tints who'll tell? Oh ! where shall I find Omnipotent Power To break this sinful spell! The fabric 1 weave must ever endure, For fadeless threads I spin, If the Gate swings open my heart is sure There is Life Eternal within'. other upon the field neither of the Some days at the Loom the thread flys young men knew in what form fast, they were to bravo death. On And slowly they creep some days ; Like the years of Life, some winging the following morning lour men ant met in a quiet wood. They were And so,me on wheels of delays ! Riviere, with Monsieur ~avails, The warp and the whucf are sonietiunee his second, Delegruve, who was blurred accompanied By the spinner's tears who spins ! Roequet. Thhee latter informed t) doctor named The sea of the soul is sometimes stirred By Eurueiyduls of sin! the rivals that Monsieur Savalle and himself had arrived at the Ilut slow or fast, inLstill the dark i or , sun decision that, in order to secure a The web in thAnd rapid or clow, Life's race is run, fatal result to one of the principals i And the hour -glass sand still flows. it would be best to leave out of the My hand that holds the shuttle of Life question swords and pistols, and Must hurry it through and through, to trust to the mote sure action My heart that strives in bitterest strife of a deadly poison. As he spoke i Must carry its bnrdeus, too. he drew front his pocket a little I The human soul must weave its web, box in which lay four black pel- lets, all exactly identical in shape and size. 'In one of these,' he said, 'I And the human hand must do, Eternity guides the silvery thread And weaves it through and through. And the delicate fabric woven now Will be a robe immortal ; have placed a sufficient quantity r And the journey we go will lead the soul Of prussic acid to cause the almost I within the city's portal. And the wondrous web I try to till swallows it. Monsieur Savallo With a beautiful golden tilling; - • and I will decide by the toss of tt In trial's hour my heart holds still, And my soul is strong and willing. instantaneous death of him who S;. coin which of you is to havo the first choice, and you shall alter- nately draw and swallow a pill until the poison shows the efi'ectli.' While speaking the last words the doctor spun into the air a plitttering gold piece, and as it fell, Savalle cried 'Tails.' It tell -with the head uppermost, and I sigh sometimes when threads do break: Life's threads will snap asunder ! And the human heart has many an ache, For the human hands will blunder ! letter' how to manage a baby," said a i it at the wheel of life and spin And yet 00 spinner ant 1. I knock at the Gate to enter in, And yet pour sinner alit 1. An unseen Spinner is guiding my hand Saville said : And choosing the threads I spin: 'The Hirst choice iY y um•<, Mon- An unseen friend beside me doth stand ' And open; and lets sic in. tt e. 't t. •Dc,l. ''lit alt Delagrave.' Tho two whose late \was Con— ?fy heart row;. ;lad at the Loom of twined in those innocent looking Life The shuttle doth cheerily go. The surgeon consented and in 1 Union depot official to a young two days the letter carne. Bill man who was holding a six was very nervous and excited, and 1 months' old infant as though it he asked the to read the epistle and give Bins the news. It was - not front hie wife, but fent her sister, and she wrote : 'On the ¢du\• ih• t you \wrote were a bun;h of lath. "1 ain't entered in a baby -hold- ing race by a jugful," replied the young man, wearily. "I d et't aspire to no championship in this Mary that your leg would have line, and it my style of holding to curse off We blurted 10 drive this kid don't suit you, I'll give over to Uncle Ben's. The ',wise it to you ural make you jump it ran away, smashed everything up I awhile." and Mary's left leg was so badly I "Muke rue jump iti Can't do brokers that it was amputate: yestettl. y. She has the best of care and is doing well. She sends black balls, had shown no signs of trepidation, while the doctor ex- plained the awful preparations that ho had made for the death of one of' theist ; and Delaggrave's face was perfectly impassive as he selected and washed down with a glass of' claret one of the globt,es. 'And now, Monsieur Riviere,' said the doctor. Riviere extended his hand and took a pill which he swallowed with as little concern as his op- ponent. A minute passed, two, three, and still the duelists stood motionless. TIIL MEN WHO 1)O NOT LIFT. "It is your choice again, Mon The world is sympathetic. The state- mentsieur Delagrave,' said the doctor, none can doubt ; 'but this time you must swallow When A.'s in trouble don't we think the pill at the same instant as that B. should help him out ? A1or)sieur Riviere swallows the, Of course we haven't time ourselves to 1 feel an end of the weary strife- 1.ife-waters have musical flow. \Vill my fabric suit the Spinner on high? Will it rover my deathless soul? Shall I enter the City beyond the sky, And be crowned at Life's far goal? One clay the woof will all be run ; The warp will all be filled. • One day the journey will all be done, And the noisy wheel be stilled. Life's dusty Loom shall silent stand, Life's busy shuttle stay. - The Pilgrim shall enter the Heavenly Land, And the spinner have resting day. that, you know; I ain't jumping other people's children for my health." love and advises you to have }cur '•`; :r I, either. Perhaps its leg off at once.' mother will get back soon. She's Whoop !" yelled Bill, in a voice been gone an age. I wonder what which aroused the whole ward. her name is?„ 'It's her left and my right. Two "Why ain't that your kid?" wooden pins to go clattering up and down 1 Two legs to hang up- on the wall when we turn to at `•I should say nut. I can't in- dulge in no stn -h luxuries on S9 a week." Charles T. Wright, formerly president of the Otter Creek Lum- ber Company at Benzonia, Mich , whose wealth is estimated at $O0, 000, has been convicted of murder and sentenced to States prison forlife. The criwo was the outcome of a dispute u, •. r some logs, and Wright ambushed and shot Frank E. Thurder and a mart named Marshall. The wealth ic; t convict who ever wore strips at Juliett was dis- ehat•ged on 'Thursday and left for New York to sail to Switzerland. He carried a roll of bills amount- ing to $1,090, after giving away several hundred dollars to convict associates. Ile has fallen heir to over half a million dollars in Switzerland. Ile was sent up from Rock Island for forgery; On Wednesday evening a very sad accident occurred which result- ed in a lady named Isabel Scott losing her life. The lady lived in the township of Iseppell and was returning home from Owen Sound in :. waggon driven by a farmer named Ritchie, when from some unknown cause she fell backward and gut entangled between the box and the weels. In this posi- tion she was dragged several hun- dred yards. • When extracted from the position life was extinct. night 1 One of you ililt•ses go "Did its mother give it to you and tell old Sawbones to come in 1 to hold?" here and open his butcher shop as "Yes; said she'd step into the soon as he pleases, and some of ( restaurant and eat a bite. Had you boys write to Mary that we'll ridden three days and nights on be the happiest couple in the 'I the cars, and was almost beat out." whole Buckeye Mate'.'' ?'---New The-Neho railway official took a York Sun. - squint into the restaurant. It. was SAFE -BLOWING EXHIBITION Captain William A. Pinkerton, the noted detective, having seen that two burglars of his profes- sional acquaintance were adver- tised to blow open a safe on the stage -thio Is the realistic drama with a veugeuce-in rive minutes, went to the theatre one night in Chicago recently :aid told them that they could not d.) in live. They declared they could. There- upon he put $50e lit the safe; they did the saute, and he loeked it with his own eoml.,ivatiou. "1f you get the safe open in five minutes,"ire said, ''the money is ane you leave for him.' 1)elagrave paused for a moment looking in silence at the two balls that lay before him. Tho closest scrutiny showed not the slightest difference between then ; ono was harmless, but in the other rested the,pall of eternity -the silence and peace of that sleep that knows no awakening in this world. With a start he drew his eyes from the box, and• puttipg finger and thumb into it, drew forth one of the remaining pills. Rivieve took the solitary one retraining, and both men simultaneously gulped down their fate. A few seconds .passed without any per- ceptible movement on the part of either of thein, and then Riviere threw up his hands, and, without a sound, fell flat upon the geese. He turned half round, gave .one convuisive shudder, and, as his rival bent over him; he breathed his last. The fair cause of this awful tragedy was so horrified care for anyone. Ilut yet we hope that other folks will see that it is done. We want the grief and penury of earth to be relieved— We'd have the battle grandly fought, the victories achieved - We <lo not care to take the lead and surd the brush and brunt— At lifting we're a failure, but we're splendid on the grunt. And there are others, so we find, as on our way we jog. Who want to do their lifting on the small end of the log, They do a lot of blowing, and .they strive to make it known. That were there no one else to help they'd lift it all alone. yours. 1t' you don't, it's mule." Ile then stationed himself at the wings, watch in hand, and waited for the burglary wells. The cue given, they jumped vigorously through the window and set to work. In two miuutes the dia- mond drill had bored through the steel door. chert the powder blower was inserted, the bellows set to going, the crevices around the door puttied, and the crank drill was cutting the hinges. The fuse was inserted, a wet blanket hung over the door and the match was struck. As Pinkerton's watch showed the passage of three minutes and forty-eight seconds there was a flash from the safe, a cloudlet of smoke, tt heavy ,jai', and the massive door fell on .the stage. The detective remarked : 'Tye been chasing safe-blowers around the country for thirty years and I thought I knew some- thing about the business. But this is the first time I ever heard of a safe being blown open inside of four minutes. The lesson is worth $500." ',%inard's Liniment is used by 1.hysicians YOUIt CHANCE IN LIFT:. Are you a farmer ? Go to the near Northwest and secure land 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 for all the prottuets of the farm. Its one year you can save enough in railway freights alone to pay for a farm in a thickly settled district where exist all the advantages of schools, churches, and general civilization. You oar pro- cure for sixty cents an acre, as a first instalment balance on long time at lo interest a farm in the most flourishing State on the continent, described by the clebrated English officer, Col. Butler, as -Fertile beyond description." Remem- ber that 400 miles from a shipping port menus 15 cents a bushel for freight and elevator charges, all of which you can ,ave by settling on the lands here of - Von are a Mechanic•u Are o of- fered. you certa ii off utployittcut at high wages in Minne'siita- factory hands and skilled laborers of every kind who want to bet- ter their fortunes should go to the pro. gree-ive State of Minnesota. Remem- ber that 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 Minneapolis :.;e practically .oneereat city with a cxto,bined popula- tion of half a million. The great land grant of the -:t. Paul. Minneapolis t& Manitoba Railway much of it withheld from settlement for years—is now thrown wide open and population is flowing 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 of sale,will leave all Canadian points for Minnesota, April 22nd and May '20t11, 1840. Special inducements to homeseekers accompanying May Ex- eursion. Further particulars on ap- plication to J. Bookwalter, land Com- missioner Great Northern Railway, St. Panl, 'Minnesota, or to the Travelling Land Agent of the Company, George Purvis, Masonic Temple, London, On- tario, Ganda. If talking were effective, there are scores and scores of them Who'd move a mountain off its base and move it back again. But as a class, to state it plain, in language true and blunt, They're never worth a cent to lift, for • all they do is grunt, \I.\VOYS SUNRISE SOME- WHERE." over it that she refused to see • Delagt•ave agaitl, and the memory There is always sunrise somewhere! night the h t be round thae of those few minutes weighed so Though g heavily upon him that he followed drawn, Somewhere still the East is bright'ning Revicr•e to the grave in a few With the rosy thud -1.d dawn, • months' lasgow Star. \Vhat though near the bat is bitting, Ott t ItOOt Compound And the raven croaks his lay, •.f CottaA Pont 'l . av tend Somewhere still the sten-bird's greeting PruorMral—pn•pnred by on Rent, 7,h rnirinn. hails the rising of the day _S S('C(. g$$}•17.LY I'SRD M(1 TH1.1' h♦ rho,. Ramis of women, nod lma been pre- ' r,•nt ;tit rears. I'nrv, l6l son) ers ern' mni%d ti any ndnreas 11 (`Hondo nuc 1•. sl fall -like clothe thy stricken heart, I t' 1 7t tl and i to � Uieeax- . wr,l,ed I;,s I1rs<II I Should bereavement's heavy shadow, ]b,PtO a- moo a tan ,n„rP, e•- of women treated snip. Nenled pnrtirularA. two And the very stars above thee PAN a. tadien only. addraaa PONVu tin.Y ac's I Cense their lesson to impart. PAN yo, "1-kher 11,. k. 11) woad*A,i ovrnue, r• r..,t. Dnrhigt„• .Anne zs I Think the dear one, whole departure Round thy soul such darkness east, Last Thurielay evening as the I Somewhere finds the heavenly sunning three -year -Old daughter of :lir That may glee on thee a; last. Thomas Squares, of Strat troy, was playing with some compare- 1 (;rnpest thou in failure's valley, ions at, the residence of Ms 1). , Sad, disheartened, and dismayed. Lest as in the past thy footsteps Davis, fourth lime, the little. girl ` Mav be yet again betrayed. fell into a cistern. Iter compan- Fix thine eyes upon the Orient, ions aL once gave the alarm, and a Turn thee from the sorrow's feast, lad named Every decended into Till the never -failing sunrise Glorifies the darkened East: the cistern, and on recovering the , Let ns lay to heart the comfort In this sweet reflection found, That, however dense our darkness, Somewhere still the world around Dews are glistening, flowers uplifting, Wild birds warbling, as reborn. child found it black in the face and apparently lifeless ; but on be- ing taken to the house blood was 1 spurting from her nose and oars. Restoratives were at once applied and in a short time the little girl seemed to be not much the worse a very cold bathealthough it was for her close call, and had there been more water in the tank noth- ing could have saved her. Ladies who are troubled with roughness of the skin or cracked, should keep a bottle of Pariaian Balm in the house. It is delightfully perfumed and softens beat's and beautifies the akin. empty. He reported to the young man, whose knees began immedi- atelylto knock together. A further hunt for the mother proved fruit- less. Lady passengers gathered around ccm►niseratingly. They tootsic-wootsied the baby, and at one time a wild light came into the young man's eyes as though he were meditating a break for liberty. An hour passed. The youth considered hs.s doom sealed. The mother appeared in the room, somewhat flushed, but profuse in apologies. "Yee," she explained, "after eating 1 just ran up town to look at the spring hats and summer goods combinations in the shop windows. Iiaven't had a chance in four days. Stayed too long, but I'm a thousand tithes obliged to you, sir." "Don't mention it," replied the young man, with a kind of "List- en to my tale of woe" inflection in his voice_ 'S. WILSON, GENERAL DEALER IN TINWARE. CONSUMPTION CURED. An old physican, retired from pray t:ce, having had placed in his hands by' an East India missionary the forumla of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of consump- tion. Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and all throat and Lung Affections, also a positive and radical cure for Nervous Debility and Nervous Complaints, after having tested its wonderful curative powers in thousands of cases, ]las felt it his duty to make it known to his suf- fering fellows. Actuated by this mot- ive and a desire to relieve human suf- fering, I will send free of charge, to all who desire it, this receipt, in German, French or English, with full directions for preparing and using. Sant by mail by addressing with stamp, naming this paper, W. A. NoYES, 820 Power's Block, Rochester, N. Y. 1:3012-y.e.o.w. Lakes and streams aid woods and mountains Melting in the kiss of morn! Ne'er was night, however dismal, But withdrew its wings of gloom, i back on me or not. Ne'er was sorrow, but a day -star 'lint she won't, of eotu se.' was Hinted of the morrow's bloom 1 Ne'er wawoe, but in its bosom ,you don't know about that. Was the seed of hope impearled : i Women is cures. When she b Therein atilt a sunrise somewhere, 1 gins to think of me clattering u Speeding, speeding round the world! ! and (town with a wooden pin an A REALISTIC VIE\V OP A 13.1TTL1_,l'1 ELI). This is how the battlefield of Tel-el-Kebir looked to a scrgent of the 79th Highlanders.--. The sights of the battlefield were grueeomo, no one looked at them in cold blood. The artillery had wrought fearful havoc. I re- member ono heap of twenty-four corpses, some blown absolutely into fragments, others headless, others with limbs lopped off. - Some of the the dead Egyptians were roasting slowly as they lay; their clothing had been ignited and was still smouldering.' A man of the Rifles came along,drow his pipe from his pocket, and lit it at one of those bodies, remark- ing, somowhat brutally it struck me: "By—, I never thought I should live to use a dead Egyptian for a light to my pipe!" in the outer trench eur dead and wound- ed lay more thickly than those of the enemy; but in the inner trenches and 01) the spaces be- tween, for ono man of ours thorn were certainly ten Egyptians. In the redoubts the black gunners lay dead or wounded almost to a man ; for they had been fastened to the gene and to each other by small chains attached to ankle -fet- ters, so as to leave them free ,to work the guns but hindering them from t -timing away. AN EVEN THING. I had a big chunk of load from a Confederate cavalryearbino driven into my shoulder at Brandy Sta- tion, and was in a hospital atWash' ingtou for treatment, when an Ohio infantryman ryas placed 011 I.110 cot next on the left. Ile had been shot in the leg about two months before, and after every effort had been made to save the limb he had been brought hero to havo it amputated. A surgeon came one day to notify him that the operation would be performed the next day, and Bill, as we cal- led him, listened and then replied: 'Say,l)oc.I'm waiting for a letter from the old woman. I wrote to her that the leg would probably have to come off, and I want to hear what she has to say.' 'But that can't snake any differ- ence.' iffer- ence.' 'Well, perhaps not, but 1 kind o' want her opinion. She's always been clown on one -legged mon,and I want to see whether she's going HURON STREET, CLINTON. Repairing of all kinds promptly attended to reasons/Au rate,. A trial • dieited. t'ARM NOTES. Annual shipment of cattle to Englane n ow exceede 6'00,000, head. The farmers of New York state have lately organised a State league and alliance for toe purpose of securing more equitable taxa- tion of personal property. The bust way to increase the appetite of a home, if such a thing be necessary, is to change his diet frequently. In the spring horses often lose their appetites when hard worked. Bran plashes, chop feed, etc., make good substitutes for grain ration at such times. One or two mere in Livingston county, N. ,Y.. havo engaged the business of skunk farming, growing the skunk for their fur and oil. The buisness has deen so profitable that they are enlarging their farms, which they keep well fenced so as to prevent the skunks from disturbing the neighbors, except by the smell, against which no fence is a barrier. w • Vi tat to • Z cal ci2 ;14 r-+ r.-1 U1 • V) CA JD 1-. 01 5;' • ▪ teat w y :ra O 0 c t 0 h ell 1.••• els CO O v 1 en E-4 ,W 0 Oc: xQ 4P- � Enjoy Good Health cir^; • , - Then he clailped her with emotion, Drew rho maiden to his breast, Whispered vows of true devotion, The old, old tale,—youms know the rest. FroWithha teaaried sheaturned away ial5, IAnd her voice with sorrow ringing, 1.2'11441i not see my bridal day." This dramatic speech broke him up badly; but when she explained that her apprehen- sions were founded on the fact of an inher- ited predisposition to conemuption in her family, he calmed her fears, bought a bottle of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery for her, and site is now the incarnation of health, whileConsuoau consciousofstens its bold i to on lapproacts h. they are he "Gol " has cured en cove thousandsdof caeesiofithissmost fatal of mala- dies. But it )suet be taken before the disease is too far advanced in order to be effective. if taken in time, and given a fair trial, ft will cure, or money paid for it will be reloaded. For Weak Lungs, Sp1tting'oI Blood, Shortness or Breath Bronchitis Asthtiomne,, See ran efficientCCoughs, and kindredaffec? Copyright, 1858, by WORLD'S n15. ]IED. ASS'S.. $5QQft 1_. for an incurable case of Ca. . .•rr tarrh in the Head by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. By its mild, soothing and healing properties, it cures \ the Gt druggists, 5no 0cents. how long standing.By CASES Sarsaparilla BITTERS Cares every kink of Unhealthy Humor and Disease caused from Impurity of the Blood. In any good farming section the low places that are too wet for cropping can be underdraiued more cheaply and effectually than is possible by trying to draw dirt to till them up. Usually dirt that can be procured will not be so rich as that which it will cover up,and the labor of filling up a holo, even when dirt has to be carried only a short distance, is much greater than those not having experience in such work would supposo. The drain will, at smelt expense, dry the wet spot much bettor than filling it could do. PURIFY This valuable compound cures Kidney and Liver Complaints, Pimples, Erup- tions of the skin, Boils, Constipation, Bilionsness, Dyspepsia Sick Stomach, Loss of Sleep, Neuralgia, Pains in the Bones and Back, Loss of Appetite, Lan- gour, Female \Veakness,Dizziness,Gen- eral Debility. There are in nearly every litter of pigs one and sometimes more that the litter would be worth more were it fed from thorn than it is with them. The "titmnn" as it is sometimes called may by extra feeding be matte to grow nearly but never quite 50 large as the others. But divide this ex- tra feed among the remainder of the litter and there will bo a largo product of pork six or eight months hence. Yet we know some farmers who not only keep these runt pigs, i)ut who r ak breeders of them if sows. No won- der their pigs soon become worthless. YOUR It is a gentle regulating purgative, as well as 8 tonic, possessing the peculiar merit of acting as a powerfuf agent in relieving Congestion and Chronic In- flammation of the Liver and all the Visceral Organs. BLOOD 4mctm,aa0c0-40270l0="1 a12W 3 Bermuda Bottled. 1 "You must go to Bermuda. If i )err d(1 11111 1 wits nt)t be respetl'a- i hie for 11)0 eonsettut•nc'ex:' " But, doctor, 1 can afford neither the ; time nor t'te money." ...Well, it • i titat. is its;::: -ac, try i 1 1cW 1 ,.k), Sit •;a �' r?l �+,; t , ION1 OF PURE NOiRW'ECIAN COD LIVER OIL. 1 sometimes call it Bermuda Bot- tled, and many cases of CONSUMPTION Bronchitis, Cough . or Severe Cold �* 1 have CURED with It; and the 1 sensi- tiveadvantage is stomach can take it o Antr thing which commends it is tite stimulating properties of the lis. popho,phitea which it contains. You wilt Mad It for sale at your Druggist's, in Salmon wrapper. Be sure you get the genuine.' >+COTT .fi B0 \E, Benevtlie. aforThis valuable preparation excites the whole system to a new and vigor- ous action, giving tone and strength to the system debilitated by disease, and affords a great protection from attacks that originate in changes of the seasons, of climate, and of life. The best spring medicine Bold. Full Directions with Each Ilottle. Price 50c: and 81 per Bottle. REFUSE ALt, SUBSTITUTES. Prepared by Minard'e Liniment cures Distemper. At midnight on Wednesday the saloons all over South Dakota were closed, and now the liquor drinkers will have to got their fluids from their own cellars. There is scarcely a town in the State where prohibition will not be an forced, and the saloonists have accepted the situation. Mill- bank saloonists sent their fixtures into Minnesota. Mitchell was a farewell feast in all the saloons before the hour of closing. The fact that druggists can secure no licenses before June 1st leaves the State almost absolutely "dry." In Pierre the chief saloon -keeper draped his establishment in black TI. SPENCER, CASE. Hamilton, Otlt. Sold by J. H. COMBE, THE WONDER OF THE AGE I t:.:; •/• it .1. b,wtttbt! _Iq NEW IMPROVED DYE FOR HOME DYEING. Only Water required in Using. 1 p■`i■ `Y a package. For sale everywhere. 13 your dealer tines not keen them, send direct to the manufacturers, COTTiNGHAM, ROBERTSON & CO. MONTREAL. Tho Negro settlement in Okla- homa aro slifforing severely from want of food. Several Chinamen who en- deavored to find their way into the States from Lower California got lost in the desert, and ono of them died from privation. The Manitoba & Northwestern Railway Campany has sold its land grant, about 400,000 acres to a syudica of English and Sc tch capitalists'. who will inaugurate a gigantic colonisation schome. ) FALL GOODS Just Arrived NV -A. rCEE S, (JLOCi Si-1v(erwfre. It's easy to dye with Diamond Dyes Because so simple. It's safe to dye with Diamoi1d Dyes Because always reliable. It's economy to dye with Diamomd Dyes Because the strongest. It's pleasant to dye with Diamond Dyes , Because they never fail.. You ought to dye with Diamond Dyes. Because they are best. Our new book `• Succe+.fur Home Dyeing " giving full direction.. f.,r all um, of I namond 1)yec, cent fr ee ..n up;; licati m. i )iamond I)yra are •.,1d everywhere, or :a.v color mailed on receipt of pri.r, to rxnta. ,;., l?u:una.r.,v F (••,., A(untrrsi, <1ur. _ .. — S E EDS! STEEP'S Seed Store. Subscriber has on hand a quantity of fresh and choice seeds, such as Clover,Timothy, Field and Garden Seeds. These seeds were purchased before the rise in price,and will be sold accordingly Turnip and Mangold Seeds at 16 eta. per Ib. Also Oatmeal, Cornmeal, Cured Meats, c&c. Try a sample. JAS. STEEP, Packer, Seed and Feed dealer J. BIDDLECOMBE, , Rith' Old Stand, Albert fit„ ChM())