The Clinton New Era, 1890-05-23, Page 6•
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)3gFeitI 100. THF.. WRONG KIND OF A ° TO WAIT.
BANK. --=r
nil4s11 seek some burden elfish to
bear T go.? JULIA M'F TR WIDOW.
NMI no a host of nobler souls be there 'What are you playing there ?'
Beaver's willto do? sale M
r Spott, leaning on the gate
etrenger bands, unfailing, unafraid?
0 Silly Boni ! what matters my small aid
DetQre I go
.,tried to find, that I might show to
them,
Before I go,
e path of purer lives; the light was
Niui -
Idonotknow•
had found some footprints of the
way;
Vit, Xs.'toolate their wandering feet to stay,
Before I go.
and watching his children, Dolly
• and little Tom,, at play.
'We're playing bank. Robbie's
papa bas a bank,and he has a load
of money and a nice house, and
Robbie has lots better things, and
more fun than we do. We've
made a bank, lots of banks, here
in the side of the hill ; and we've
put Dolly's pin -cushion, and Bair
ribbon,an' my top, an' my new
cent, and my a ple, all buried up
would have sung the rest some song of in the bank. Bobbie says when
cheer, you put thinks in the bank you
Before I go;
'$Bt stili the cords ring false; somejarof get money on 'em, and that's what
makes folks rich. Is it ?'
'Depends on the bank, whether
it's a good one or a bad one. I
Should say yours was a bad one.
It is damp, and your things will
be spoiled. Then, too, you'll for-
get where you put them, and
you'll lose .them. Better take
them out. That'd no kind of a
bank.'
'Neither is yours any kind of a
bank,' said Dolly, dossly.
'Oh, I haven't any bank. Don't
pretend to,' said her father.
'Yes, you have,' shouted little
Tom. 'Sam Sloan says your bank
is the comer grog -shop. He says
you put all your things in.'
'Hang him for his impudence, I
don't !' cried Mr Spott.
'He said that's where you put
our cow ; did you ?' said Dolly.
'He said you put all your time
in there,' added Tommy.
'He says all your money goes
in there,' spoke up Dolly.
'And all your health,' shouted
Tommy.
Mr Spatt found this a very poor
kind of chorus.
'And he says you won't never,
never, get back what you put in,'
insisted Dolly. 'Say, papa, is it
so? Do you do it ?'
'-He says you'll put your shop
there pretty soon ; and then our
home,' exclaimed Tommy,getting
up and brushing els dusty knees.
'And that then we'll be beggars
without any home,' said Doll with
a great sob. 'Will we, papa ?
Will we, say?'
'No, you won't !' cried out Mr
Spott loudly, '1 say it. No, you
won't,'
Then be left his children and
went behind the house, and sat
down on the saw -horse, and con-
sidered what kind of a bank he
had been dealing with. All that
the children had said and heard
was quite true. And he had put
other things into that bank which
they had not enumerated. His
character he had put there, and
pretty much lost it ! His soul
control, was that all gone ? His
indendence, had he any left? His
ho ne comfort nearly all gone 1
His wi'e's happiness -ah, bow
sad face her *as! Even now he
couldsee her through the window,
was she crying at her work? - His
children's happiness -soon that
would bo all gone. His soul !
'No drunkard shall inherit ,the
kingdom of heaven.' Was his
soul lost, then ? He ran into toe
house. 'Martha! Martha !I must
stop going to 'that grog shori
It's beim, the ru-in of me Help
me, I say, Martha, ask God to help
me, for if 1 don't stop now I'm a
lost man I'
'Lay hold on the strong for
strength, Thomas, and you won't
fail of help,' said his wife. And
never from that day did Thomas
Sl. Itt deal with that bad bank -
the grog shop at the corns .--
Young Crusader.
Some jangling woe,
And at the end I cannot weave one chord
To float into their hearts my last, warm
word,
Before I go,
X would be satisfied if I might tell,
Before I go,
• Tbat one warm word -how have I lov-
ed them well,
Could they but know!
And would have gained for them some
gleam of good!
Have sought it long; still seek -but it I
could
Before I go.
'Tis a child's longing ont he beach at
play;
• "Before I go,"
'Be begs the beckoning mot'her, "Let me
stay
One shell to throw!"
'Tie coming night; the great sea climbs
the shore -
"Ob, let me toss one little pebble more,
Before I go!"
a
GOD HOLDS US ALL.
"Take me, papa," said my darling,
As we stood within the hall;
So I bore him up the stairway,
Scarcely felt the burden small.
in my other hand I carried
Books I wished to scan that night
And the elfin begged me to let him
• Take them in his arms so slight.
Step by step to top we mounted;
Then he said with childish pride,
"Baby carried books for papa, -
Didn't he?" "Yes," I replied.
Little innocent! ne'er dreaming,
As he bore the asked for load,
That his father's strength upheld him,
Double -burdened on the road.
God is sometimes pleased to give us
Work for wondrous skill and thought;
Gleefully we don the laurels,
When his hand the triumph wrought.
HE LEADS US ON.
He leads us on
By paths we do not know,
Upward He leads us. Tho' our steps be
slow,
Tho' oft we faint and falter by the way,
Tho' storms and darkness oft obscure
the day,
Yet when the clouds are gone,
We know he leads us on.
He leads us on
Though all the unquiet years :
Past all our dreamland hopes and doubts
and -fears ;
Es guides our steps. Though all the
• tangled maze
Of sin and sorrow, and o'er clouded
days-
We know bis will is done;
And still He leads us on.
And He at last,
After the weary strife,
After the resistless fever we call life,
After the dreariness, the aching pain,
The wayward struggles which have
proved in vain -
After our toils are past,
Will give us rest at last,
HARD '1'O FIND.
The right kind of a fellow is modest and
mellow,
And generous and brave and benign;
file nature's, apparent and clear and
transparent,
Like yours, gentle reader, and mine.
Be has no verbosity, no tongue tor-
tuosity,
And never is boastful and loud;
He is gentle and quiet and plain in his
diet,
And never gets mad in a crowd.
Ile is grand and majestic; yet meek and
-domestic,
And spends his spare evenings at
home,
.He's a tireless searcher for all kinds of
virtue,
Like the perpetrator of this "pome."
Be don't play the fiddle, part his hair
in the middle,
Nor dress like an angelic dude;
When he goes to a party with Meigs or
McCarty
He never is noisy and rude.
Ile lives with frugality and sweet hos-
pitality,
And wants pie but two times a day,
Be never eats onions, nor treads on your
bunions,
Nor growls•when you get in his way.
Be is wise and •he's' wity, persevering
and gritty,
And has a magnificent head;
-ale's alt light and sweetnese,he's through
completeness;
He's perfection -in short -but he's
dead, A
,see.er.
Patrick Crowley, of Niagara Falls,
4111arged with the murder of a young
Colored lad named Detts at Niagara
Falls, was found guilty of manslaught-
or in the high court of justice at Wel-
land the other day, and sentenced by
Judge hose to six years in the Kingston
enitontiary. Crowley was a store-
keeper wqo had beon the victim of Hal-
loween pranks, and finally becoming
Ozasperated fired a Load of buckshot
,into the crowd of tormentors, with
14a1 results to the boy Detts.
i;a; inard'slLitliment is used by physicians
Denominational Grants.
The following information appears
in the Ottawa correspondence of The
Empire of Tuesday: -
A return brought down to -day shows
the total number of Indian schools un-
der the control of different religious de.
nominations to be as follows:
Church of England 84, of which 21
are in the Western Territories, 27 in
Manitoba, 3 in British Columbia, 32 in
Ontario and in Quebec.
Roman Catholic 80, of which 19 are
in the Territories, 10 in Manitoba, 6 in
British Columbia, 19 in Ontario, 14 in
Quebec, 6 in Nova Scotia, 5 in New
Brunswick and 1 in Prince Edward Is-
land.
Methodist 33, of which. 9 are in the
Territories, 3 in Manitoba, 4 in British
Columbia, 13 in Ontario and 4 in Que-
bec. .
Presbyterian 10, all' of which are
situated in the Territories.
The undenominational schools num-
ber 16, of which 10 are in Ontario and
6 in Manitoba.
The total payments to schools in
Manitoba and the Territories, from
1882 to 1889, were as follows: -
Church of England $186,761
Roman Catholic 257,600
Methodist 21,641
Presbyteripan 56,439
Non -den d'M ination al 51,941
As the Conservative workers read the
above they must have sighed and
thought, If
g " only ly the Ontario Govern-
ment bad made those grants, what a
fine campaign document the despatoh
would have been."
Three German officers have beon sent
to thlit,penitentiary for receiving bribes
from` contractors. There is no Ruch
luck in that country as to got off with
a censure from a Parliamentary com-
mittee.
Minard's 1• inimerrt-luniberman's friend
'Tis woreaa'e happy lot to wait,
To wait will,, gla4 expectancy '
And•broyan'sheart lifted elate,
The folded future's mystery.
Whatever joy may come to bless,
Howe'er love sends his messenger,
No word nor any half caress
May ever be forestalled by her.
And though her heart yearn overmuch,
Its tenderest song is never sung;
She may not raise with lightest touch
The ourtain e'er the future hung,
If love come soon or love come late,
Or, saddest, never come at all,
'Tis woman's patient lot to wait
Through all the lengthening interval.
NEWS NOTES
The remains of the girl, Ida Torrance,
a Toronto prostitute, who committed
suicide by laudanum on Saturday, were
buried in Mount Pleasant Cemetery on
Wednesday. The remains, in a hand-
some rosewood casket, covered with
flowers, were lowered into the grave in
the presence of Frank Moore, the young
man with whom the girl had been liv-
ing. There was no burial service.
Is it not a fact that Mr Meredith
wrote to a dignitary of the Catholic
church not long ago expressing strong
disapproval of the anti-Catholic tone of
some Tory organs and promising that
if returned to power he would do no-
thing to disturb the status quo with re-
spect to Separate schools and other
matters in which Catholics are speci-
ally interested? -Ottawa Free Press.
At Portsmouth, N. H., on Thursday,
Mrs Chas. Frost, during a fit of tem-
porary insanity, threw her 4•months-
old baby into the river and jumped in
afterwards. A tramp named James
Conton, who was on the opposite side
of the wharf, leaped into 'the water,
caught the woman and held her until
help arrived, and then brought the
child to the surface safely.
At De Bruce, N. Y., last week,a young
man named Asa Bishop jumped into a
vat of boiling acid at a factory, and
was so badly scalded that he soon died
in great agony. Before committing
the act Bishop said: "Good bye, boys:
see me dive." He instantly plunged
into one of the boiling cauldrons. Bis-
hop was industrious, and seemed devot-
ed to his wife and three Children, but
among his fellow -workmen he was un-
sociable and eccentric, and they were
in the habit of chaffing him. It was
thought this unbalanced his mind.
Prohibition of the manufacture and
sale of intoxicating liquor is to be sub-
mitted to the test of a popular vote in
the State of New York. It will be pre-
sented in the form of a question of
placing a prohibitory enactment in
the Constitution of the State. This
question will be decided by a special
election to bo held next April, when the
ballot will be for cr against prohibition.
Neither party took sides for or against
the proposition in the Legislature and
it will probably go to the people unen-
cumbered with other issues. Outside
New York city the temperance move-
ment is very strong and there is a pro-
bability that the State will go dry.
The effect on the trade of the city in
such a case would he enormous' and
would probably lead to an agitation for
its separation from the State.
L iszie Cunningham, a young shop -
girl, was found unconscious in bed at
her home, No. 200 Eighth avenue, New
York, on the morning of Jan. 6. Be-
side her lay her friend Mary Fallen, a
seamstress, dead. The unlighted gas -
jet was wide open, and the room was
full of gas. Mise Cunningham was
taken in a comatose condition to the
New York Hospital. She failed to ral-
ly after receiving the usual treatment,
so her physician decided to try . the
transfusion of blood. Amos A. Lincoln,
a big, healthy telegraph lineman, under
treatment for a muscular affection of
the arms, volunteered to give the blood
needed to fill her veins. About 25 ounces
was drawn from his right arm and in-
fused into Miss Cunningham. Miss
Cunningham improved wonderfully and
was sent home with only a little stiff -
nese in her movements. This is one
of the most successful operations of the
kind ever performed in this city.
People fonder
WHEN they find how rapidly health
is restored by taking Ayer's Sar-
saparilla. The reason is that this
preparation contains only the purest
and most powerful alteratives and
tonics. To thousands yearly it proves a
veritable elixir of life. .
Mrs. Jos. Lake, Brockway Centre,
Mich„ Awrites : "Liver complaint and
indigestion made my life a burden
and came near ending my existence.
For more than four years I suffered un-
told agony. I was reduced almost to
a skeleton, and hardly had strength to
drag myself about. All -kinds of food
distressed me, and only the most dell-
cate could be digested at all. Within
the time mentioned several physicians
treated me without giving relief. Noth-
ing that I took seemed to do any per-
manentood until I began the use of
Ayer's Sarsaparilla, which has pro-
duced wonderful results. Soon after
commencing to take the Sarsaparilla I
could see an
Improvement •
in my condition, my appetite began to
return and with it came the ability to
digest all the food taken, my strength
improved each day, and after a few
months of faithful attention to your
direction , I found myself a well
woman, able to attend to all household
dutie- The medicine has given me a
new lease of lifd, and I cannot thunk
you too much." .
' We, the undersigned, citizens of
Brockway Centre, Mich., hereby certify
that the above statement, made by
Mrs. Lake, is true in every particular
and entitled to full credence." -O. P.
Chamberlain, G. W. Waring, C. A.
Yells, Druggist.
My brother, in England, was; for a
long time, unable to attend to hie' occu-
patiotl, by reason of sores on his foot.
I sent hits Ayer's Almanac and the tes-
timonials it contained induced him to
try Ayer's Sarsaparilla. =After using it
a little while, he was cured, and'is now
a well pian, working in a sutJggar mill
at Brisbane, Queensland Anst%lia." -
A. Attewell, Sherbet Lake, Ontario.
Ayer's Sarsaparillas
PREPARED ITV
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Nlass.
Price g1; all bottles, $5. WCrth 55 o bottle.
UNT,A.RIO'�St,� GP4NA Of10
ATAW.
.
15 AO WILL LEAD TWA LIBERALS TO
V1VTORY QN" JUNE 5---Q BRIEF
SRErCH of 4 LONG AND
USEFUL LIFE, DEVOT•
ED TO TSE INTER-
EST OF CAN -
A DA.
Hon. Oliver Mowat, remarks
the Brockville Recorder, is the
central figure in the political
struggle now going on in Ontario,
which there is not the remotest
reason to doubt will end in his
being again triumphantly r:
turned at the polls on the 5th of
Juno. He is a man against whom
the breath of suspicion has never
been directed. Honorable, just
and upr•ight,•he has brought into
public life in this Pr•ovin,ie those
qualities w bih challenge admira-
tion, and have kept the politics of
the Province free from stain or
scandal during the eighteen years
'he bas been at the bead of its
affairs. He ie a leader whom any
man may be proud to follow, and
under whose banner it is an
honor to serve. Hon. Oliver.
Mowat is in his 70th hear. He
was born in Kingston, and was
educated for and studied law, and
was called to the bar at the age of
21. At the age of'36 his excep-
tional ability won for him the
distinction of Queen's Counsel. In
1857 he entered political life and
from that until 1864 he repre-
sented bouth Ontario in the
old Parliament of Canada.
He had scarcely entered public'
life when his abilities were recog-
nized, and in 1858 he was Provin-
cial' Secretary in the short-lived
Brown -Dorian Administration. -
From May, 1863, till March, 1864,
he held the portfolia of Postmaster
General in the Sandfield Macdon-
ald -Dorian Government, and held
the same office in the coalition
Government which followed
He is ono of the fathers of Con-
federation and took a Prominent
part in the nnion conference at
Quebec in ] 864. On retiring
from public life in 1864 he was
appointed Vice -Chancellor of Up-
per Canada. This post he resign-
ed in 1872 and formed a new Ad-
ministration in Ontario, becoming
Premier and Attorney -General,
which offices he has since continu-
ously filled. On rc-entering'poli-
tics it 1872 he was elected by
aJclamation for North Oxford,
and has been re-elected for the
same constituency at each election
since, by large 'majorities, that in
the last contest being 833. That
he has beon a shrewd, careful and
efficient leader even his strongest
political opponents aro forced to
admit, and under his guidance the
affairs of the Province have been
administered with singular abili-
ty. Mr Mowat has also a knack
of attracting able men to his side,
and man for man his Cabinet pos-
sesses very much greater ability
than that which to day rules over
the affa" w of the Dominion, On-
tario can make no mistake in giv-
ing such a leader and such.a patty
a renewed lease of power.
NEWS NOTES,
Nathan Harvey, of Topeka,
Kan., has in his possession his
wedding suit, which was made at
Richmond, Ind., in 1835, in a
shop in which Schuyler Colfax,
General Burnside and ex -Con-
gressman Shrvock were journey•
men. The suit consists of white
duck trousers, a buff vest with
brass buttons and blue swallow-
tail coat, also trimmed with brass
buttons. The clot h for these gar-
ments cost $4 and the making $8.
Mr Harvey also has a bat, par -
chased for the same occasion,
which was m" to by- Olivcr P.
Mos -ton.
An officer of one of the Atlantic
steamships tells a New York Sun
man he had an interview with
Stanley just before leaving Eng-
land last week, and was much
shocked by the change in the ex-
plorer's manner. "I don't know
that it is exactly a change, eith-
er," said he, thoughtfully, "as all
of Stanley's friends were impress-
ed by his utter indifference to
i general long n g n before'he
started on his last African tour,
but I think few of us expected to
find him so thoroughly hardened
and hopelessly indifferent. Abso-
lutely nothing interests him ex-
cept the heart of Africa. He
does not complain of ill health,
but the elasticity of his nature
has departed. Ho never laughs,
and when he Smiles itis appar-
ently with a painful effort. His
thorough mastery of everything
that relates to Africa makes 'him
interesting when ho cares to talk
of his hobby. But it is like pull-
ing teeth to try to interest him in
anything else. He is emphatically
a man of one idea to -day. There
Is no question about his coming
visit. America. He speaks of it
as a holiday. He needs the trip,
for, to my mind, there is no doubt
that ho is out of humor with
everybody and everything in
London."
The Clinton New Era
Is published every Friday Morning by
the proprietor, RM. gOLI4E13, at his
printing establishment, Isaao.13t., C1in-
ton, Out •
TERMS. -01.50 per annum, paid in ad
vane .
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
paper 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 die.
continued he mast pay all 'arrears, or
the publisher may oontinae to Bend it
until payment is made, and then vQl-
eot the whole amount whether the pe-
er is taken or not.
3. The Courts have decided that re-
fusing to take newspapers or periodicals
from the post office or removing and
leaving them uncalled for prima facie
evidence of intentional fraud
ADVERTISING RATES.
Loon NOTICES -At head of local
column, 10 cents per line or portion
.thereof, each insertion.
'Articles lost or found, girls wanted,
&o., not exceeding three lines, 25 cents
each inserton. Five lines, 50 cents for
one insertion, and 25 cents for each sub-
sequent insertion.
Houses to let or for sale, farms to
rent or for sale, stray, cattle and ell
sin.ilar advertisements not exceeding
eight lines $1 for one month, 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 3 cents per line for each sub-
sequent insertion.
••••••11.•••--..
Y
. -.-
YOUR CHANCE IN LIFE.
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 reedy
market for all the products of the farm.
In one year yon 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 can pro-
cure for sixty cents an acre, as a first
instalment balance on long time at low
interest A farm in the most flourishing
State on the continent, described by the
olebrated English officer, Col. Butler, as
"Fertile beyond description." Remem-
ber that 400 miles from a shipping port
means 15 cents a bushel for freight and
elevator charges, all of which you can
save by settling on the lands here of-
fered. Are yon a Mechanic ? Ycn are
oertain of employment at high wages in
Minnesota. Factory bands and skilled
laborers of every kind who want to bet-
ter their fortunes should go to the pru.
gressive 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 are practically
on e great city with a combined popula-
tion of half a million. The great land
grant of the St. Paul, Minneapolis &
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 20th, 1890. Special inducements
to homeseekers accompanying May Ex-
cursion. Further particulars on ap-
plication to J. Bookwalter, land Com-
missioner Great Northern Railway, St.
Paul, Minnesota, or to the Travelling
Land Agent of. the Company, George
Purvis, Masonic Temple, London, On-
to iio, Canda.
CLINTON
RAILROAD TIME TABLE
Issued May let.
The departure of trains at the several
stations named, is according 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
a.h.1. p.m
•Wingham ..11.00 7.45
Belgrave ..10.42 7.27'
Blyth 10.28 -7.12
Londesboro 10.19 7.03
Clinton . , 10.00 6.45
Brucefield9.42 6.26
Kippen 9.34 6.1'.
Hensall9.28 6.09
Exeter 9.16 5.57
London8.05 4.25
Going Soo ill
a.m.
6.50 3.40
7.05 4.00
7.18 4.15
7.26 4.25
7.55 4.15
8.15 6.04
8.24 5.12
8.32 5.19
8.50 5.33
10.10 6.45
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YorOnk'tot1IeLiverpool the steam8hips
B-airania and City of.Rome sailed
across the Atlantic almost tilde by
side, never being more than a few
miles apart, and always in sight
of each other. There are, few
cases of diyastur to passenger ves-
sels on the high seas, and not
a great loss of life 'when we con-
sider the enormous traf}lc that is
constantly taking place; but every
now and again vessels break
down,and passengers have to take
to'the small boats,and are not al-
ways rescued. Theease which the
two giants of the ocean kept com•
pany on the passage across sug-
gests the idea of dispatching
steamers, of similar capacity, in
couples, so as to enable one to lend
assistance to the other••in case • of
disaster. It seems to us that
ocean travel conducted in shat
manner would be robbed of the
last vestige of alarm for even the
most timid.
Shipments for the California orange
season are about to close, and it seems
that southern California has shipped
for the season about 5,300 car -loads,
the greater part of which have been
sent to the eastern market. The prices
realized for oranges have been very
satisfactory, and as a whole the,season
has been a vel7 successful one. The
result is that hundreds of acres in the
foothills are being planted to orrnges,
and that the demand for young trees
is greater than ever before.
Henry Smith, convicted of wife
murder at London, bas made full
confession of his crime.
At Columbia, texas, a funeral
procession was obliged to go to
the cemetery in boats, the whole
district being flooded.
otton Root Compound.
Compdunded of Cotton Root, Tansy and
Pennyroyal -nrer •ed by an old physician.
iS SUCCESSFULLY USED MONTRLY by
thotsands of women, and has been prr•
scribed in a practice of 30 ear,. Price $1
Will be mailed to any address in Canada and U'. A.
Doctor's consolation hours, 9 to 11 and 1 to 4 Dino -
es of women treated only. Sealed particulars, two
stamps, Ladies only, address POND LILY 005,-
PANY. No. 3 Fisher Block. 131 Woodward avenne,D
rod. Mich Igen. June 28
BUSINESS CHP NGE.
Eureka Bakery and Restaurant.
Sub! criber 3esiree to iniimate to tLe people
of Clinton and viclniLy that he has bought
out the Baking end Restaurant business of
Mr Kingand will continue the same w t tLe
old st .nd, OPPOSITE THE PvST OFFICE
Being a practical man his customers may
rely on getting a good article,
BREAD, BUNS, CAKES, &c:
always on hand. Oysters, Ice
Cream, &o. in season.
Socials supplied on shortest notice. WED:
DING CAKES a specialty.
W. 11, BOYD.
FALL •GOODS
Just Arrived
WA'TCHEs,
'ilverwa re.
J. BIDDLECQ MBE.
Enjoy Good Health
CASES Sarsaparilla BITTERS
Cures every Link'of Unhealthy Humor
and Disease caused from Imparity of
the Elood.
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 Weakness,Dizziness,Gen-
eral Debility.
YOUR
It is a gentle regulating purgative, as
well as a tonic, possessing the peculiar
merit of acting as a powerfuf agent in
relieving Congestion and Chronic In-
flammation of the Liver and all the
Visceral1Organs.
BLOOD
)This valuable preparation excites
the whole system to a new and vigor-
ous action, giving tone an 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 sold.
Full Directions witll Each BDttle.
Price 50o. and $1 per Bottla.
REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES. Prepared by
H. SPENCER CASE.
• Hamilton, Ont.
Sold by J. H. COMBE,
S. WILSON,
GENERAL DEALER IN TINWARE.
HURON STREET, CLINTON.
Repairing of all kinds promptly attended to
reasonabto rates. A trial solicited.
SEEDS I
•
STEEP'S Seed Store.
Subscriber has on hand a quantity of
fresh and choice seeds, such as
Clover,Timothy, Field anti Garden
Seeds.
These seeds were purchased before the
rise in price,and will be sold agoordingly
Turnip and Mangold Seeds
at 15 Cts. per 11).
Also Oatmeal, Cornmeal, Cnred Meats,
&o. Try a sample.
JAS. STEEP,
Paoker,ISeed and Fed dealer
Rith' Old St and, Albert St., Clinton
Foal Roddick, It well known•"
Baptist minister, wllo tQr niu y
lived in Ontario,, andfather of
Rev. David Redd ick of Fort How
died at Solonv,u City, 1 t uiq ,
from the effects of iglitrii s susi-
twined while piowing, ttisl bog
baring run away,
.
' HEALTHFUL EXERCISE.
Only a few months ago these romping, ros -
cheeked lasses were puny, delicate, pale, sickly
girls. By the aid of Dr. t'ierce's world -famed
Favorite Prescription, they have blossomed
out into beautiful, plump, hale, hearty, strong
young women.
Favorite Prescription " 1s an invigorating,
restorative tonic and as a regulator and pro-
moter of functional action at that critical
period of change from girlhood to woman-
hood, it is a perfectly safe remedial agent, and
fulln y coduce mpounded by agood neexperienIt cedcand
skillful physioian. and adapted to woman's
delicate organization. It is purely vegetable
in its composition and perfectly harmless in
any condition of the system. It imparts
strength to the whole system. For over-
worked, "worn-out," "run-down," debilitated
teachers milliners. dressmakers, seamstresses,
shop -girls," housekeepers, nursing mothers,
and feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription 1s the greatest earthly
boon, being unequaled as an appetizing cor-
dial and restorative tonic. 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 faithfully carried out for many years..
Copyright, 1888, by WORLD'S DIS. MED. AWN.
Ste^ 0 t0 OFFERED
manufactur-
ers of Dr. Sage's Catarrhy Rem, o
incurable case of Catarrh in the Read.
•
It's easy to dye
with D_ainond Dyes
Because so simple.
It's safe' to dye with
Diamond Dyes
Because always
reliable.
It's economy to dye .
with Diamomd•Dyes
Because the strongest.
It's pleasant to dye
with Diamond Dyes .t,
:Bc c sus e they never
• fail.. •
You ought to dye with
Diamond Dyes.
Because they are best.
Our new book " Successful Home Dyeing " giving
full directions for all uses of Diamond Dyes, sent free
on application. Diamond Dyes are sold everywhere,
or any color mailed on receipt of price, zo cents.
WELLS', RICHARDSON & Co., Montreal, Que.
SUMMER TOURS.
PALACE $-r ancRO. LOW RATE..
Font Tripe per Weok Between
DETROIT, MACKINAC ISLAND
Petoske The 800, Martluette, and
Lake Huron Porte.
Every Evening Between
DETROIT AND CLEVELAND
Sunday 'Trips during Jane July, August and
September Only.
OUR ILLUSTRATED PAMPHLETS,
Sates and Eneurelon Tiokete will,be furnisher,
• try your Ttoket Agent, or address
E. e. WHITCOMB, G. P. A., OgTRO,T, MOH,
THE DETROIT & CLEVELAND STEAM NAV. CO
•
THE WONDER OF THE AOE!
Jor;eigt 47,
Allreat
A NEW I MF ROV ED DYE • •
FOR HOME DYEING.
Duty Water required in Using.
c a package. For sale everywhere. If
your dealer fcerm'ndirect to he mns not uaturrsi
COTTINGHAM. ROBESTBON Z4 00.
IS ItTSitt.r..
10
ti
•