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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1891-04-03, Page 7Corpse Chapped Hands, Sore tips. Salt Rheum. Roughness of the SlSln. Freort . Bites, Chafing. Tiitr4„ sisriburn, Freokies. etc., -Etc. ( 1.111, Rt'(l d•" •i i rabyapt-This Paragon.. i math- '1110 usea the toile rendering Skin beautifully. soft. and ethe like, re- stori its natures flri rages, elgsticity and tceehndss,'and to gentlemen is 1tsensable After Shaving ying all irritation on the instant. Rata aU eubstitutes. Large Bottles Twenty-five Cents. PREPARED ONLY BY H. SPENCER CASE Chemist and Druggist, (o King Street West. Hamilton, Ont. For Sale by J. H.COMBE, Clinton tItAXS[ED EMULSION COMPOUND ONCHITI S 188 Lexington Ave. New York City, Sept. 10, 1588. I have used the Flax -Se& Emulsion in several cases of ( hronic Bronchitis, .1 J the early stages of Phthisis, and have been well pleased with the results, JAMES K. CROOK, M.D.' CONSU TIO Brooklyn, N. Y., Feb. 14th 11»0. 1 have used your Emulsion in a case of 14th, (consumption) with bcnelit sal results, where pude: could not use Cud Liver • .I I ❑, :env feral. " J. 11. bROGE, M. D. NERVOUS PT iii1H 13renlam, N. Y., Dec. 20th 1r. : I e v. strongly reccalrnel:L Flan Seed Ems . as helptel;et"erelief a:e4i,•:z,i cern ./f ;.t. Bronchia: .J N •:^ 4 t1, , tions, an' craltonic tr. 1 a: ne I !chit *y. +'else I . T,1i.5..\ _F. • to rip I rc7:•r?:11.1xFr.!:; r. 'n Luc: ere •n•ly''t. .. -.0 the C..•; L_ 0 !3_.::.� _ .i.,c s ao f : n, ::,:I )• : a - . A('r''iRi! I a { 1 • `h.a ) it:,;!: 'New fork, Aug.e, 1 :e,4, • I bo••c :.-•1 }" '::-Se., I Emulsion Compound in a rase•• ; 4., . M J•n,.tt:ir.on and the result wa more' tr..,•. �; ort (.,r—,t a -•s marvelous., and Con- tinuous. ! r• •vi rind 1.6,1.u -tinily to the profes,ioa add hwr.,ally ct large• , L:. Il, GILBERT, M.D. Mir. .TM Sold by Druggists, Price $1.00. FLAX -SEED EMULSION CO . 35 Liberty St., New York. J. H. Combo, .\ ,ant, Clinton. 01 Pure Cod Liver 0H and HYPOPH'O'P}IT'ES of Lime and Soda Scott's Emulsion is .r !,r':yerf is a tvolederptl Flesit Protnterr. )f is the Best M11wl t, r1+r CONETiWWP x WM, Scrofnia, Broachitis,Waating Dis- eases, Chronic Coughs and Colds. YALI.rtTAOr.E AS Miti.N.. Scott's Entn!sion 1., only pat up in ea', mon dolor manlier. Avoid all imi!ationsnr suitititutiona. Sold by all Druggists at r.)^.. and II,L( 1. SCOTT S; ROWNr1., Belleville. ARE NOT a Pa gative' medi- cine. They are a BLOOD nertneR, TONIC and RRcor- STRUCTOR,aathey supply in a condensed erns h,. substances i �, needed to en- , I I:I,., Blood, curing ‘, 4 �• ,1 ..1., 's4es Opining •:,O) and Wao. fRI '1 tk1 • t't ,,on, or from tgi ' t 1 '• ' U HONORS it 1,, . . ,. •,D, and alar t 11110 and Brum • •f._: '-+ BLOOD ant ti when broker i i,y overwork, 1,0 tend worry disease, c v, noses and fndiscre- tione. They have a BPI:CIvIC ACTION On the SEXUAL SYSTEM Of both men. and women, restoring LOST VIGOR and correcting all I RIlgovnARITIEB and SetPRESSIONS. EVE , Y MAN N .4 ends his mental lac- int 1i1d85J ,:' les dull or fulling, or his pbyaical powers t1, ;else should take tbeco Pette. They will res to. •• his lost energies, both physical and n,un'•tl. EVERYp(1�tip :! st,nuld tako them. f L-0Ilf'�i;'-11 i'hey care all s0e .)rossions and ire, -,: •• , which inevitably oaten sickness when : ,'ted. SIX DUMB lDUMB W111LE 1i1.ASP11l,151!NG New I.11tvert l'tnlr Mittel; 19. Superstition. people among the I1'reneh (.) tholic. in this city aro wondering over tl,etitte Mitch be- titll Litui. La 111 n tin Illolnlity who. Ihey claim, testa etelel(ee dumb for Llasplients. The Father IA:wee—e, or 11 Creel, had opal sei 1t. t4M.it,r4 it) St. I..'iu-set' d Lv had preached un cltquent berrnort, tell nig' the peo- ple lit stool! the w•all,let'Itlr toed careless te..embers i f the church to their religious dutie•. •'Yvon know any nue," -aid r he speaker, “that i. -s u Catholic and should come to this ntissi;n, remind him Of it and tell him to :tek lit his soul's welfaru while tet tl:e.e iy time. This roused the nli.s,iunury spirit. in his eofgre:;:lliuu, and Louis L' May tytls oho i,t the re- e:th itraut Cstledies tet a tear. Irl) preached to ego to ciao ch. He had not been to church in a Ionise time, and, being a 'fiord fell,w•' his more devout co religionists elided y ored 10 induce hien to 1'e - new hil, views til allegiance 'o the Catholic faith. Le May respond- ed to these endeuvin s w4t 1 i ulki- nesa. 11i, duty u•as urged upon hill, when he Iteeettie enraged ;11,11 n:till' ''1'o — with the lllizdinn,' 1111(1 he be—1w it pi ofar:e Ili tide, car's- ,u:; the raissi•ei, the chinch, 1110 priests, lope::1111 everything con- rieeie.1 with thh church. Snit - don; v nit-dole;\• ho grew 1 igi'1, his !ern• I44 i'cbt:d eutivu!5ieely, 1411(1 he ea -lied for 1,! oath. Lie endeavor- to speak, hitt he elinld not WWI' 11 wt,l'I. Ile w•:1. snichen dumb. riint'e iltzn ho hay L1i0tvil tt i11(lu better, 0111 ire e,iii yet toticel:lle wily a little.-1.he ttt•e;"rs say •NIC 1141 a tl•Ill:e tai pttrnly,l- I,',)llgllt u11 by Ili., excitement, but the l'runch Catholics +lics tlur t. upon it as It \ i-itati,nl :C..11) 1:; 11 4+11' 10)4,- p1e11y, y1'tn .'.ort' t, known 10 asset' (21!1) ilir .n the city mid the mission 1)u; been e,u',vded every day t-inet-. NOW, GIVE ATTENTION To the purification of your blood, for at no season is the body susceptible to the benefit to be deprived from a good medicine, as in March, April and May. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the people's, favorite spring medicne. It stands unequalled for purifying the blood, - uring scrofula, salt rheum, etc, regul- ating the kidneys and liver, repairing nerve tissues,strengthening and invigor- ating the whole body as well as checking the progress of a.:ttn aul chronic di - ease, and restoring the afflicted parts to a natural, healthy condition. If you have never tried Hood's Sarsaparilla for your -spring Medicine." do -se this season. SOUNDS LIKE 1''1C'TION. 1 l-k'ri.I curt'e.ponden1 ruu- ralt•, 't ,t1,1_• toil hint by the capt:li1 el' 1110 tient pas^epger .te:uncr that ever plied the water of the Oekla,vaha. The vessel (reit' bad one :.tute'ruolti the cap- tain': room. and the pilot -house. on this trip were an old No horn t-cntl0mlut :tint his wife. The hus- band was sitting forward reading using an elegant, pair of gold rimmed, gen ewe pebble eprec- tecle-. All at ones a limb brush- ed alongside, and the spectacles disappeared. He said nothing of bis loss un- til his return, supposing them gone, and useless to trouble the captain to stop the boat. The trip was made, the partiee return- ing, and the boatlaid up a week and then started out on another trip,: but this time with another couple as passengers. Just before night the lady and husband were sitting in the same seat occupied by the gentleman when he lost his spectacles on the former trip. Along came a limb and caught a fine silk not and carried it away. The lady was bemoaning her loss, when looking down in her lap and lo! there were the lost gold -rim- med spectacles. They had be- come fastened to the limb,und the last brush tubbed them off. So much for the spectacles. -They were sent to the owner, and the captain still has his letter of thanks, in which was a $5 bill. Now comes the other part. The lady who lost her net, a very fine one, bought a common ono as :t makeshift from the country store kepi at Silver Springs, un- til her return In civilization.; She came back on the same boat, the same place vas reached with her in like position, without knowing or noticing it, however, when her net and switch wore about to be- come entangled in the limb again. She frantically clutched both, and bcyard a scratc'1Ptor so passed in safety; but lo, again,on 1: eking in her lap, there lay her silk not,lnst coming 1 p All lost and finally reeovereu on the samo limb, PUT UP ANI) PUT I:OWN. 1 want a word to rhyme with ills. 1 have it now; 1'11 put down pills, T:xcuse,me though -than put down pills, l'd rather suffer some big ills. '1'o put down the old-fashioned, huge, bitter pills, that griped so and rnode such disturbance intern- ally is more tllnn a wise man will YOUNG M Ei guns " •v u,11 o these ere- i:,.v \cell cure the so - sus of youthful bad cu:,:ts, and strengthen the system. YOUNG WOMEN matte them regular. Per sale by all l be sent receipt of ie (50o druggists, perlno box), byaddre sing p ME DR. WILLIAMS,aAR if CO.Ont. Br should take them. These Pu,Ls will Fn•,e 11',10 for,'•r. r. I,evn/••, ^.d'I44 Work for 110, 1•v Am., I'ee•, Torn*, mut .Inn noon. Tnlndn Olein_ See rut. Otherp nre doing Ira tvn11. Why of you? Somo sere over 1601.00 e bath. You tondo the work .n4 lire . Rvell l;Pnnonnnro'rP uv .ver ,mine from 1.to NICs do v. All eC„^ w,•,Iww vera bIw rad oink 7011. l.an work In .pure tiro., er 81111,11 time. Ins nv,n.y fur w,rh- M, lel+nr0 nf4 1 awn nmunf 1110111. NM{MV cud ,rnnd,rful. ,'ortln,rt+r, fr n. $1.11stlettda 0,atos.hhOrortland,ltlalne • SPOILING A NORSE Iia3 Lookeo here, you! you said 'this horse was sound and kind and free from tricks. The first day 1 drove him he balked a dozen times, and he's as bad to• day.” 1)oalor—"Um, you've been wondering if 1 cheatud you, may- be?" 'Yeti. I have.' • 'And the first time you druy the boss you sort e' wondered if ho hadn't some tricks, didn't you.? 'Of course.' And you kept saying to your- self, I wonder if that there horse will balk, may be?" 'Probably.' - 'And you had Sour mind on it a good deal, most like?' 'That's true ?' t 'That's wot's the matter. You have hypnotized him. See?'—N.Y. Weekly. C. C. I{ICiiARLti d: Co. GENTS—I have used your MINARD'S LINIMENT in my family for some years and believe it the best medicine in the market as it does all it is recom- mended to do. Cannaan Forks, N. B., D. KIERSTEAD. John Mader, Mahone Bay, informs us that he was cured of a very severe attack of rheumatism by useing MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT. de H -e will riot put up wi-i-e FPGb nnneeesiqui y suffering. Ile usesl)r Pierce'. Pleasant Pellets. As a Liver Pill, they aro unequaled. Smallest, cheapest, easiest to take, Put up in vials, hermetically scaled, hence always fresh and reliable, which is not true of the large pills in wood or pasteboard Foxes. As a gentle lexative,only one Pellet ft r a dose. Three to fi'ur 1 the4 tiny, sugar-coated gram's. act pleasaotl J1I) 1 pain- lessly as a cathartic. i'ilE 'IN SMOKE; AND VAPOR. ill -,:1 which Les worked so r' r a to '� 11 l . cures •r-' 1 li 1 heti Of late mats,: 1 ., year, ill Europe, 1)11(4 been known to the !'situs. 1 peaO:utts,who pruc• (ice it i'I their vapor baths. The bath of nlnta vapor, generally known lt• the name of,..Russian bath, I,t :I temperature that none can endure except those who are aeenstomed to it from childhood, is one of the capital features in the life o1' ilto Finnish peasant, and procures hits tho highest im- aginable pleasure. The 'Sauna,' the pla(•1, where elee„,beths are laical, is a sgnrtro house built of' wood, like all the houses in the land, only it h:ts no chimney; the smolt,,}; passe, out through a hole in one of the walls. In a corner is a large furnace, and opposite the fer11trc0 a sort of loft or shelf, which is recited by means of a ladder. The vapor is produced by pouring buckets of water on heaps of burning hot stones placed on top of the furnace. The Fin- nish peasant, with his family and his servants and evelsybody- be• Io112i111 to him, from the oe..o>en- 1 arian down to the new-born babe, takes i hese baths every night in summer 'during the haymaking and harvest, and once or twice a week i11 winter... Such is the sim- plicity of these populations, and such the respect for the Sauna, considered ns a sacred place, that the promiscuity ()Cages and sexes never has any batt result from the point of view of morality. A crime committed in the Sauna, is held to be aggravated tenfold by the holiness of the ground where it is committed. Each one without troubling himself about his neighbor, enjoys the atmos- phere charged with smoke and vapor, beats his flesh with leafy branches of birch, and^ refreshes himself' from time to time with a little cold water. `ometimes during, the winter the men rush out of this temperature of 150 de - gees Fahr., and roll themselves in the snow: their bodies being red as raw beefsteak. They maintain that these enormous changes of temperature render them less een,itiVO to cold and heat. THE WISE SAVANTS Tell us that • rheumatism is a blood disease; that it can be cured only by a remedy which works through the blood. And yet, if you have the darting pains of rheumatism in muscles or joints, try a little of Clark's Lightning Liniment. It will go direct to the seat of the pain and relieve it at once. There is no waiting weeks and months until the disease can be attacked through the bldod. This seems to be contrary to scientific claims, but it is true that Clark's Lightning Liniment will cure Rheumatism, Sold by druggists; pride fifty cents, lark's Chemical Co., Toronto, New York. -- W ROSE BUSINESS IS IT? j Wen Orford was brought before the Magistrate on remanu recent- ly, charged with having born drunk on Queen street last Satur- day, says the Torontonail. Orford was arrested on that day, and dur ing the remand was liberated on bail. It is estmated that he has been arrested five hundred times during the past 15 years, and the police says that ne has paid thou- sands of dollars in fines. When be appeared in court to tight the charge, which was laid under the Vagrancy Act, he was unmistak- ably drunk, and his only witness was in a similar condition. At his own request he entered the witness box. "Now, your Worship, ask me any questions you like and I will answer them, remarked William, in a thick voice. "I don't want to ask any ques- tions. I'm quite satisfied that you were drunk, responded his V or - ship. Drunk! Drunk! And if I was drunk, whose business is it but my own? The Government leg- alizes the sale of liquor, millions of dollars arc spent in manufac- turing it,the city and the Province realize a big revenue from its sale, so why shodld I not drink it. But what does the word drunk mean; define it for me, Your Wor- ship. Oh, you ought to know; are an expert. Yes, a thorough expert, but ask me those questions. No, but I'll commit you to jail for GO days. Bill gazed in amazement at the Magistrate for a moment, ( and then with a drunken leer growled ori'; You're very geiieroui. When he entered the deck there was a young woman named Florence Elliott standing up ou a charge of' vagrancy, and as ho was prising by her he suddenly threw his arm, around her leets and proceeded to hug and kiss het vigorously. ire was dragged down to Ike cell by a constable. you When Baby Wm sick, we gave her Caetorla. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Mies, she clang to Caetbria, When sti. had Children, she gave them Castor A Huron Boy. The Comber herald' contains the following sketch of a Huron boy, who is evidently climbing the ladder of fame :— REV. T. 1•: 1f EUD1.E. The subjact of this brief sketch was horn at QBenmiller. near (.odericb, Huron Co.,on Feb. llth,1864 From the very day that he set sail on the sea of life up to the present time be 1 has shown a keen desire and interest in the welfare of the little folk, hence he has been called the 'children's friend.' He attended the public school st his native village until he reached the 1 fifth elites, and afterwards served an 1 apprenticeship at tae car penter trade i and it is said by those who are in a position to know that he can saw ' a board in two as true as a line and as quick as the rest of them. As a con- tractor he is an expert. The last con- traet he made was with a young lady of Tilbury Centre, and or which we will speak latter on. After a long period of sickness he was advised to drop bis trade and enter some sphere of professional life. Acting on this adfice he attended the high school at Goderich and took up the third class certificate work. He speaks highly of the staff of teachers under whorn be studied, and who, he says, take a very deep interest in the welfare and success of their students. He makes special mention of Mr A. J. Moore, B. A., L. L. B., the mathe- matical master of the ;school, who gave him valuable assistance in all his studies. Having the ability to stand before an audience and speak, it dawned up- on him that the ministry should be his profession, and to say that he has succeeded beyond the expectations of his friends would indeed be putting it mildly. His first attempt at public speaking Was at a temperance meet- ing in his native village, and much advancement was afterwards made in the High School Literary Society. In July, 1887, he was appointed, under Rev Mr Bryers, then Chairman of the Windsor District of the Metho- dist Church, to take charge of the Pelee Island mission. The next cou- ference year he was assistant to Rev. J. C. Nethercott on the Woodslee cir- cuit. Last vear he travelled Comber with Rev. T. W. Blatchford, B. A. This year he is supplying on the , Goldsmith circuit for the Rev. C. W. Vollick, under the authority of Rev. LITTLE SINS. 1T. R. Gundy. now President of the London conference. He speaks in "— I the highest terms of the ministers with The merchant of Panama, to bo whom, and under whose supervision seenre from fire, builds his house I he has worked, ' I fweeks he will leave for t1) on piles driven ,in the water, Ina ew e Soon, however, a minute species of the rnadreporo, eo small :ts to be seen only by the aid of the microseopo, -begins to work upon it. It bores and saws and eats away at it, till the strong piles 1110 honeycombed, and then in some darknight the e0a rises and dashes against that house and it falls. So small sires honeycomb a man'I-( character, end some (lay- men laymen stand appalled at his awful fail. Little sins shot out the vis- ion of heavers :incl God, A ton -nisi tolls how in Scotland ono day he raison his glass to get a hotter view of Ben Lomond, and to his suep(•iso did not sec the mountain at all, but only an expanse of green a 'Woo a branch of a tree was betw(on his glass and the mountain. A little leaf shut out the greet nonareh of the hills. Ayel and even the mist from his own breath would have covered the tor and pro(iue0c1 the satno reiau Selected. ' city 01 Owasso, Michigan. where, on April 1St, he takes cbarge of the Ashury Chapel in that city, Mr Heddle Wit strong advocate of temperance work, hut can it be won- dered at, for apart from many other good reasons, we:learn that it was in connection with .such work he formed the acquaintance of Miss Sarah Mur- phy, the young lady who entangled our friend in Cupid's net a few months ago, and we trust that Mr and Mrs Heddle will live to see many an- niversaries of the day upon which the Rev T. W. Blatchford made them one. CLARK'S LiGIITNiNG Liniment will relieve the painful tor- ture of rheumatism in the joints or tnnscles, it ahottld be well rubbed in with the hand, and the part covered with a piece of flannel. The pain will cease with the first applicdtion, and its oontinued use will effect a marvelous curd. This remedy needs but a trial to convince the most sceptical that it is a wonderful preparation. Sold by all druggists; price fifty dents. (:lark Chemtoetl Co., `jbrorfto, NeW York Mech4iios' Institutes continue to in- crease in ()nterio. There were 189 iustt- tates in 1887, 109 in 1889, 179 in 1889 and 210 in 1890, an increase in their number during the last Pediment of 76 or 64 per cent. The amounts granted to those inetitutes were, during those years, as follows: 1887, 926,107; 1888, 94,9,890; 1889, 931,428; 1890, 939,242: The discovery bas deep made that Queen Victoria's coachmen, acting un- der royal orders, habitually ase the bearingrein which lovers of horses he been fat years endeavoring to abolish. The tact that the Queen is a patron of the (ooiety for the prevention of cruelty to -animals is held by irreverent radicals to aggravate the offense,and the society is actually being urged to prosecute her Majesty. An interesting action was tried at the Guelph assizes last week which is of in- terest to liquor men and temperance advocates. An action was brought by Mrs. Wm. Clarke, against a brewer named Holliday, for -damages for the death of her husband, which, it is said, was caused by getting intoxicated at the defendant's brewery on the 30th August last,and while in that state being struck on his way to the station by a Grand Trunk train. A number of witnesses were examined and much contradictory evidence given. The ac- tion is under one of the provisions of the Liquor License Aot, whioh permits the personal representatie, where death is caused by Intoxication, to recover damages of 9100 to 91,000. The case occupied the whole day. The jury,after an hour's deliberation, returned a ver- dict of $750 damages for plaintiff. Minard'eLiniment cures garget in cow :111101.1.111.111.111110111110111111,. 1111111.1MIIMI.Innimno_0111111111111111111111i ASTORI for Infants and Children. •'Oa.lostsulowenadapiedwchildreatba4 Coatevia cures Colie.,�Q�rr�pa on. IL recommend rt as l uperlortoana prescription Sour 8tomaeh. Diarf hes ague unities. lumina to ma" H. A. Amara, M. D,. =Us Worms, gives steep, Land promo es epi 111Bob Ozforcd Bt.. analyst, N. Y. 'IVrtnouielg0.juriona medication. Tui Carnes Corroder,'17 Murray Street. N. V. eummonsonomomimisimisimminimmillft O HORSEMEN Can get their Route Bills, Cards, ,tc., printed on short notice, in tir-st-class style, and at reasonable rates, at the office of the CLINi OM rtAILROAD TI11E TAoLE 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. 10.0:1 assn. 2.05 p.m.1.20 p.m.4.5:1 p.m. 6.55 p.m. 9.27 p.m. London, HIurou and Bruce Division Going North Going South a.m. p.n1 a.m. p.m. Wingltain ..11.00 7.4.5 6,50 3,40 Belgrave ..10.43 7.07 7.05 4.00 Blyth 10.16 7.19 7.18 4.15 Londesboro 10.19 7.03 7.26 4.25 Clinton .. , . 10.00 6.45 7.55 4.45 Brucefield!1,4'3 6.06 8.15 E.04 Kippen 9.31 6.17 , 8,34 5.12 Ilensall:1.08 0.0!) 8.30 5.19 Exeter .. 9.16 5.57 8.50 '5.3:1 London8.05 •:.25 10.15 4.45 The Clinton New Era Ispublished every Friday Morning by the proprietor, lima. HOLMtis, at his printing establishment, Isaac St„ Clin- ton, Ont TEEMS. —51.30 per annum, paid in ad- vance . JOB PRINTING in every style and of every description, executed with neatness and dispatch, and at reasonable rates. NEWSPAPER DECISIONS. 1. Any person or persons who take a 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 must pay all arrears, or the publisher may continue to send it until payment is made, and then col- ect the whole amount whether the pa- er is taken or not. 3. The Courts have decided that re- fusing to take newspapers or periodicals from th.: lost office or removing and eavin mall uncalled for prima facie tvid i 11 c1 intentional fraud ADVERTISING RATES. LOCAL 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 iuserton. Five lines, 50 cents for one insertion, and 25 cents for each sub- sequent insertion. Homes to let or for sale, farms to rent or for sale, stray 'cattle and all similar 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 lice for each sub- sequent insertion. Changesadvertise- ments d ments must the week as hat week. a . have, them return 't _ in. EpileAsy _or_Fall worst cases. Becai ,se once for a treatise and Post Office. It costs you M.C., Branch Office Good Cuts to select from THOUSANpS OF BOTTLES 'Iv, r ti GIVEN A1�iA . YY R � EA LY In When 1 say Cure I do not meat merely to stop them for a time, and they N R;1 r.4 rel /ti I' A t7 I C A L C U R E. I have•made the disease of FN3 Sickness a lite -long study. I warrant my remedy to Cure-th Users he.ve failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Senday�j{ Free Bottle of my Infallible Remedy. Give Express anti nothing ter a trial, and it will cure you. Address t—H. O. ROOT& 186 WEST ADELAIDE STREET, TORONTO. I)' , vi ;non's Cream of 'Witch -Hazel, THE NEW TOILET LOTION. Softens the skin, removes roughness, eruptions and irritation fromthe face nd hands, and gives freshness and tone to the complexion. t is an invaluable application after shaving. Don't mistake thissnperior pre- a.tation for any paints, enamels or injurious cosmetics or inferior complexion otions. It prevents eruptions, abrasions, roughness, redness, chapping, col. sores, and pain resulting to sensitive skin from exposure to wind ,and cold. In• sehort D'Avrosox's CREAM oe WITcer-HAZEL is at once a remedy and apreventfor very form ofaurface inflammation or irritation, Price 95 cents per bottltai• Manufactured by JA:LV1E S I3. 40�1113 -� , CIIEMIST AND DRUGGIST, CLINTON, ONT THE - 'CENTRAL - GROCERY OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE. , McMurray & Wiltse Beg to announce that they are ready or the fall and winter trade with a largo stock of G(ENERA1L GROCERIES IIIEW FRUTS CANNED GOODS. Try our Ceylon and Indian BLACKTEA, L. is second to none in the town. Japan and Hyson TEAS, no better value any- where. COFFEES, fresh ground and warranted A 1. A full stock of Itobb'-t Celebrated MEATS and SAUSAGES. Take a look at our prize BAK1Nck POWDER, made by Mayell, of London. Handsome Glassware with. evet,e pound can. Try our German Table MUSTARD. Something new and very flee Crockery & Lamps} Just arrived a choice lot of Crockery an Lamps. Handsome Dinner, Tea and Bed . room .Sets, choice patterns and prices low. Lamps, Burners, Glasses, Wicks and N1). 1 Canadian Coal Oil. A Call Solicited. Satisfaction Guaranteed McMURRAY & WILTSE - CLINTON , COME AND TAKE This Valuable Present Away with You The subscriber offers one of Doherty & Co's justly cele- brated ORGANS free, with one Package of James Watson & Co's CHARM BAKING POWDER price 50cents. This gives an opportunity of securing ax Organ worth $196, for fifty cents The organ will be on exhibition at our Grocery Store on Saturday next. A. `call solicited from visitors to the Great Huron Central Exhibition ROBSO!. CHINA; HALL. for contracted a vertise-DAMS' -.Emporium be handed 111 a s early in possible to i000re a change Haying returned from Torouto, I am prepared to offer theepublic a fine assort rnent of goods at prices very mnbh below the regular values. Many of the good will be sold at"and under wholesale prices, acs they were bought at a heavy die I count, and I intend to give my customers the benefit. The stock consists of Tweeds, Dress Goods, Flannels, Wool Skirts, Linings, Shirtings, Table Linens, Towels; Towellings,_ Storm Collars, :Mantle Cloths, Jersey Flannels, &c 1 cannot here mention all the Goods p,nd,Prices. but will give a few. $1 ,Tweeds for 75 cents. 155 Shirting for _12_cents 75c Dress Goods for 60c. $5 Storm Collars for $3.5C 75c Jersey Flannel for 55c. $2.50 Storm CollAiN $1,25 And other goods in proportion. We wi 1 sell Cheap Caen o,- Produce, and will not hesitate to trust parties who pay 100 cents on trio 9, if they require it. We expect this to be better than other years Onr goods are right✓'-otir prices just. So come right along and be convinced. No need to pay 95.50 for pants worth $t, r: 40ets for Rubbers worth 35cts. Wishing you all a prosperous an happy year. T am, respectfully y R.ADAMS. LONDESBORE