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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1891-05-01, Page 7rive in the apecial lines of draft, THE HORSEMAN coach, saddlo and light harness — r-,. ENJQY GOOD HEALTH—«arses. whenever a farmer °an A decidedly inereasiu;, inteest roduce a horse for tho market __ (aa --a. in trotting guise stook which, will sell from $300 to $1900 !' U,�.�li°S throughout Canada. on, his merits at four years old l 1 1 it is estimated that there are no S[(Impaling Bltt8rs ess than 26,000 breeders of trot- there is good big money in breed- ing that kind. As to breeding ting horses in the United States. draft stook it seems to me that Mx Henry. the Pours lvania the country is pretty well stocked Cures every kind of Unhealthy Humor and y now, and that the West,with their Disease caused from Impurity of the Blood. f man who paid $60,000 for Anteeo, uhea and rich lands, can produce PURIFY is the proprietor of a big woolen enough to supply all demands, This valusble remedy nares Sidney and Liver ( g P y complaints, Pimples, Eruptions of the Skin, Boils, mill. more profitable than we of the Cow pa asleep, 'rains n,Siclt6tomach Central States. But coaohers, trot- LonsofSleep Neuralgia, yspea iatheBonesant# The skeleton of the Oelebtated Back, Loss of Appetite, Lan uor, Female Weak- Bt nglish stallion Hermit,who died Cera and saddlers are olasses of - messes, gentlesa, Qeneral De�tWty. Rhetunatlstu - not long ago. has just been put on hores that we can raise profitably YOUR exhibition in London• and it is my opinion that there is hillilliblAitis a gentle, reguting purgative as well as a pia possessing the peculiar merit of seting as a good appetite. money In breeding roadsters ppuuwereul agent in relieving Congestion and Chronic Wanted—A , PP moremonei n driverseedi roadsters any- Orilla of theliverand all visceral organs You get it easy enough by taking or gentlemen's BLOOD Hood's Sarsaparilla. It tones thing else. They are a luxury on the market, command the highest m toa new and vigorous action, the whole the digestion and cures sick head system a new and vigorous action, giving tone e price of any other horse and the and strop to the system debilitated by disease, ache. supply is far short of the demand. oridinate Ina cr} ngee of the f climate The hackney is regarded by Mnny farmers are foolishly. T and of tire, stylelikely think, trying to breed fashionable Full directions with each bottle. Price SOe. and some as a of horse to $1.00. Refuse 0.1,1 substitutes. attain popularity in certain locali- and phenomenal trotters. It ties of the Dominion. Of novel -1 would tea difficult matter to show Prepared by H. Spencer Case, Chem- ties and 'booms' there is no end in i to them that they are on tho 1st and Druggist 5 0 King Street West, Hamilton. Ontario. horse flesh. Among farmers and'( wrong track, but they w-il s o it For sale by J. H. Combe others a little more fixity of par- ere long. I would day t • be - pose in the business is highly ginner, study the markets, breed in a special line and produ t best, and • there is aro doubt but that the business will prove pros table. �LAXSEED EMULSION COMPOUND BRONCHITI $ 130 Lexington New York City, Sept. Ave.i9, 1888. I have used the Flax -Seed Emulsion in several uses of Chronic Bronchitis, and the early stages of Phthisis, and have been well pleased with the results. JAMES K. CROOK, M.D. CONSUMPTION Brooklyn, N.Y., Feb. 14th 1889, I have used your Emulsion in a case of Phthisis (consumption) with beneficial results, where patiet.. could not use Cud Liver 011 J. H nyROGE, M. D. NERVOUS PROSTilikTION Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 20th, 16881 I can strongly recgmniend Flax Seed Emulsion as helpful to the relief and possibly the cure of all Luc t. Bronchial and Nervous A flections, and a good gen era tonic in physical debility. JOHN F. TALMAGE, M. D. GENERAL DEBILITY Brooklyn, N. Y. Oct. 10th, 1888. _Lregatd,FlaxSeact Emulsion as, reatlLr superior to the Cod Liver Oil Emtils,o SA. gGO tallyytetTON, M. D. WASTING DISEASES 137 West 34th St., New York, Aug.6, 1883. 1 have used your Flax -Seed Emulsion Compound in a severe case of Mal -nutrition and the result was more than hoped for -it was marvelous, and con - Onions, ions, I recommend it cheerfully to the profession and humanity at large. M. H. GILBERT, M.D. RHEUMATIS Sold by Druggists, Prise $1.00. FLAX -SEED EMULSION CO 35 Liberty St., New York. For s•tle by J H.1CVnb3 ARE NOT a Pin gative Medi- cine. They are a BLOOD BUILDER, 't'oNIC and I8EOON- srnncTOR,asthey u,•ply in a condensed Ili! t`. a substances art's;•: reededtoen- curing A-1. • t 1•"on and War. • ; LOUD, or from l i ,1 . , 1t;-MoHs it .o n, and als and BUIL, A. • :i'• Th.. ion au, A.. ••..:ea broket .•: t.y overwork, tat ,verry,disense, ;sox and fndiscre- .;,s. -They bave a :-;.1;•'1rrc AcTrob( oto sExt,m,Svs•rnnr both men and woolen, restoring' 1.o8T VIGOR tai un -t correcting all 1.% ITti:1 nrLARtTIES and et•1tuesIONa. desirable. The English stallion Melton, that was bought last year by the Italian Government for $50,000,is now in' the royal stud. In the matter of horse breeding the Italian Government has taken a very advanced position among European nations, there being no loss than seven official breeding studs, which contain 38 stallion°1�', A California paper states thb.t Charlie Ford is said to be the only horse that ever won a heat from Maud S. There is no 'said to be' about it; the old gray gelding that is now limping around the•streets of Chicago in front of a buggy beat Maud S. the only heat that the chestnut mare ever lost in her life.—Breeders; Gazette. A lot of trotting -bred stock that was recently l3hipped to the Sand- wich Islands from California had a pretty hard time. They were sent on.a sailing vessel which en- countered very heavy weather, all the -horses being more or less k-i;iioeked-outs One -of the, mares„ died, and the stallion Nutgrovo was seriously injured in ono of his hind legs. .' At no season of the scar is cold in' the head and catarrh more pre- valent than dosing April. To neglect either means misery and perhaps fatal results. Nasal Balm is the only certain remedy for these dangerous diseases, and as a precautionary remedy should be kept in every. household. Nasal Balm bas cured thousands of suf. fcrers—it will cure you. Try it. A MIRACLE About a year ago Mr Francis Sweet' jr., a farmer at (esto, was thrown from a rig by a runaway team and sustained serious intern- al il,juries. He treated with the local physicians without success, also with a Detroitdootor,who told him that there was a possibility of his recovery if the greatest caution were used. But that it would be ne:iessary to refrain from all work for at least two years. Mr Sweet got along nicely till about three months ago when he watt taken worse and became so bad that he was confined to the house nearly altogether. Latterly he was taken to his bed suffering terribly from his injuries. The attendantjphysician plain- ly that if his spine became affec- ed there would be no hope for ,,:+:•1'•ses coming MAN \<•, 11^.ls his mental far - EVERY MAN . tall Dr failing, his physical power, 11: ottld take these. Pi r,us. They will r•': , • • • Jet energies, botb 7bysical and month!. , ' : •',Hula errtakee them. EVERY Y�O�: all tin sessions and irrepitn, • u, which Inevitably t,ctail sickness a'hut 1 YOUNG all �f MEN ; t t oke these Pmts. sill cure rho ge- sults of youthful bad hal -t ,, ,.t.d strengthen the Next year, Hon. Mr Alowat w�il have been twenty years Premier of Ontario, and will have served the people continously for a longer period than any premier in power in tt•c Dominion tc-day. His pi emiershil jtfates from 1872, that of Sir John Maedouald from 1878, that of Hon A. G. Blair from 1563, that `of' Icon. W. S. Fielding from 1554 and that of Hon I1 Mercier from 166. Mr Mowat buts lohtea well after the interest of his native Province, too, for outside of the criticisms of the Opposition in Ontario, which have again and again fully met, both in the House and in the constituencies, the Mowat Ad- ministration is pointed to as a ,model manager of the trust com- mitted to its care. Only the other day, the Conservative Mon- treal Gazette, in discussing Que- bec Provincial affairs, hold up the him. record of the Government of On - Last week,the suffering man was tario us ogre to take pattern by. so bad that his friends and family gave up all hope. His will Was made and his brother James, of ---"-* sLinimeut cures garget in cow Kingsville, sent for. On Wedensday. April Sib, he was converted. That night and I all Thursday he suffered terribly. Qn Thursday evening his friends and the poor man himself' had given up all hopes. All thought he could not live till morning. The disease had reached his spine. His family had gathered around! his bed,to bid a last farewell, His wife and his brother were kneel- ing at the bedside praying. It was just seven o'clock. Mr Sweet says the thought struck him that surely as the Lord is able to save t me He is also able to heal mo. lie at once put the eleventh hour thought into practice. Ho pray- ed to God to heal him, and quick as a flash he felt he was well, and he dumfounded those present by Brussels, Feb. 7, raising himself up in bed. Five J. M. DIcLl:ol,Goderich. , minutes before ho could not raise Dear Sir, -Fifteen years ago last No - head or limb. More surprising vember I started to doctor first. I was still next aflornoon, last Friday, I treated for dyspepsia, but they never he got up, dressed himself, washed helped me any. At times I suffered In case of distemper,ifth • eath- er is cold, keep the ani ' t ndoors in a well - lighted an ' f -Ventilated stable. Feed-- es an mashes with roots and ay, and learn an abundance of ;lure water at all times within the animal's reach. A little saltpetre, say a teaspoon- ful, may be dissolved in the water every night till the kidneys act freely. When the throat commen- eesswelling apply warm poultices of linseed meal, changing th em twice daily, and ds soon as the throat begins to fluctuate, open it and liberate the puss, afterwards continuing the poultices till all uischargos cease. Ordinarily this is all the treatment that is required. If the throat is very sore and groat difficulty is experi- enced in swallowing an ounce each of chlorate of potash, gentian root and licorice root should be mixed .Lpt,a,,pint ofmolasses, _and a tea- spoonful of ft . smeared on'- the tongue every threes" hours.—(Ren- tucky Stock Farm. The Chicago Breeders' Gazette says: 'Trotters and pacers that matte ice records in Canada dnr- ing tho winter just closed are now being sold to unsuspecting parties who will take them on the strength of such porn lrmances. As a matter of fact an ice record is about as reliable as to say- that a horse went 2:20 because the railroad cru i o which he was lilac- ee covered the distance in that time. a The • tendency amuug many housemen seems to be towards exaggerating the price, received fin their stuck, .so much so that it is becoming quite a common tiling for doubts to be express( 1 as .to the correctness of the report- ed prices of much of the high-pric- ed stock that is being sold at private sale. In a recent number of Clark's Horse Review a writer handles this subje2t without gloves and calls things by their proper names— fraud, deception, lying: system. YOUNG WOMEN Tooseut? take then• Thtake tvill stake them regular. For sale by all druggists, or will be sent upon receipt of price (50c. poi box), by addressing THE DR. WILLIAMS' WED.CO. BrockvillOnt. I took Cold, ,z C I took Sack, I 1.O'11C N ESU1.1•: take My Meals, I take iVIy Rest. Tenn,, discussing the success of Asn Aa vx;oroc; Fxouc;n ro l Aisi C. W. Williams, which some A\V'rII1Nc; f CAN 1..\v MY BANDSo`, have attributed to luck rather than getting Int tor/, FoR ScotfS ability, says: "There is no' more Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil 'loci:' in the trailing horse busin- and HypophosphitesofLirneand PHYSICIANS MEET with no more common or dangerous malady than catarrh. It begins with a coldain the head, often resists all forms of treatment, and runs from simple ir- ritation of the mucous membrane to chronic inflammation and destructive ulceration. Before Clark's Catarrh Cure was known the doctors adopted a long course of constitutional treatment with their patients, but now they re- commend them to go to the druggist and get a package of Clark's Catarrh Cure. When the druggist cannot supply, the remedy will be sent by mail on receipt of 50 cents. Clark Chemi- cal Co., Toronto, New York. • A REMARKABLE SHOW] S.G. TWENTY YEARS w'Oit11 t»' T11E SAL- VATION ARMY. At th_+ present moment the Salvation Army has no less than 9349 regular officers, 13,000 vol- untary officers, 30 training homes.. with 400 cadets, and 2864 corps- seattered over 82 counties. In England alone it has, 1377 corps, and has held some 1(10,000 open- air meetings. This represents a part of its religious work. Be- sides this it has in social work 30 rescue homes, 5 shelters, .8 food dep5ts, and many other agencies for good.. It began in the labors of u single friendless dissenting minister, without name, without fame, without rank, without in- fluence, without oloqutnce; a man poor and ponniless,in weak health burdened with delicate children and disowned by his own connection ; it Low numbers multitudes of earnest .evangelists. It began in an East End rookery, and 111 leas than twenty years it bas gone from "New Zealand right round to San Francisco, and front Cape Town to Nordkoping." It The Duke of Portland is regard- ed as the most successful turfman that has ever been known. It was thought a remarkable thing when he headed the list of' winning owners three years ago, and no- body imagined that he would keep well up toward the front, but now it teems that during the last three years bis stable has captured more than 4600,000 in stakes and purses. More than this, his stall- s tall- has shelters, refuges, penttentla l•,n St.Simon heads the list of I ries, food depots, sisterhoods, and \wi11l.ing English stallions file the brotherhoods always established season of 18110• in the slums. It has elevated thousands from degraded lives. 1 ohn Moor, jun., of Columbia, It has given hope and help to myriads of hopeless and helpless outcasts. It has proposed a scheme which, in spite of square miles of damp blanleet and oceans of cpld water, has received the sympathy of some of the highest both in church and state. I think � that even the 1 itterest, the most Unjust, the most cynical, and the most finical •of the laymen and clerics who have written to tra- duce and execrate it might wish to God that in the lite work of any one of them they had done one - thousandth fraction of (rood com- parable in one visible direction to that which has been wrought by "General" Booth. From "The Salvation Army," by the Vener- able Archdeacon Farrar, in IIar- per's Magazine for May. HAVE YOU THOUGHT OF I'1'? For firm thousand years or it chanced, every time, that he more the world groaned, seer id was carrying his little baby up IIthrough and fumed :lboul its ct,rns•, fo 1 and down in his arms all there \w y no pe-siblc rr!: t—nD the middle of the night, 01111 they certain :1t d painless crags until DrI could not make up their minds to `colt Putnam gave to the world, i touch him. ]lis 'gest ('ern Extractor. Tt'1 ha(l no tl,tnbt of the It nth t,i co c:eo FoimaEo:�.• .,2 • CASTOR for Infants and Children. uCsiterlalesowenadaptedtochiLdrentbat Osistoria cares Colic, Colisti. ion. I recommead Asa anperior teeny pt eecripttoa Soto Stomach, Diarrhaet►+ pro ma'asas Ville Worms, gives sloop. amara do me." It r1 Aaca ca, M. D.,�� mogestion, 11180.Oxford 8$.. Brooklyn, N. Y. WWloui injurious meditation. Tax Cerrretm COMPANY, 77 Murray Street. N.1 Rumball's Carriage Factory, Why not do your own Thilkili? 1891. and combed unassisted, and went about his regular labors about the farm apparently as well as ever. Up to this hour Mr Sweet is good condition. greatly from indigestion. I turned to be dropsical. Limbo and body swelled badly. You know what I was like when I went to Guderich-a mere in 1 wreck. Could hardly walk. suffering from Bright's disease. A year ago last fall I began your Renovator and Speci- _ ,ceure: teak the medicines steady for three months. I began to mend right away. "But if you saw me now, well and hearty, eat everything that is going. I owe you the praise of saving my life. I was in a hopeless condition when I went to see you. In fact no person ever thought I would get better. I can• not speak too highly of you and your medicines, for it was them that c.ured me. Words cannot express my thanks to yon. Freely pass my name to any one. Yours, &•c., JANIES DUNCAN. Chicago, Nov. 21, 1890. J. M. Mc•LEoi, Goderich. Dear Sir: I have just finished your System Reno- vator last night. My case was chronic. Send me another bottle. The Renova- tor has done me a great deal of good. Every person I u.eet remarks how much my complexion has changer.], and the expression of niy eyes is so different; I gained much in flesh. I cannot express how intuit better I fel. In other res- pects 1 innprovad also. Yours, JANE C. C. RICn.tiu'S .c CO. GENTS -I have toed your SIINARD'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. SAVED BY A BABY. A lawyer of wide experience says that it is difficult for honest people to teali,o how' distorted the view an crinlinpl often be comes- In many cases it i, l,ruct- ically: impossible for him to dis- tinguish between gond or evil. Yet there is always :1 bit oI moral sense left at the, bottom. The lawyer in question was once gilled upon to defend two then w•I,o were accused of robbing a bank. Th;)- were h•ywere evidently thoroughgoing rase;t1s, but the lawyer was .itis .tied that in this particular ^ase they wet'o inocent, They confessed that they had intended to rob the bank, that in this ease they had riot only made alt their plans, but that they had lain in wait for three nights to kill the night watchman on his round. They declared however, that they bad then abandon° I the wholelenterprise, but the wife nt one of them, who was in the secret had told their plans to her brother. This man, as was afterwards prov- ed, carried out the scheme which they had abonded, and then man- aged to throw suspicion rupon them. 'Of course, when they told me tl.is story,' says the narrator, 'My first thought was that they were deceiving me; but in the enol, though the taledid not sound very probable, T somehow came to be- lieve it. 'The thing that puzzled me most was that they gave no ade- quate reasons why they had not carried out their murderous plans on the three nights when they were lying in wait. 'I pressed thong upon this point telling them that they might as well trust mo, for that if 1 found at any point of the case they had deceived me, I would unhesitat ingly throw up the defense, no matter what the result might bo. 'This threat frightened them thoroughly, and each tried to make the other tell. They showed so much ahamefacedness that I confess that I was prepared to -hear something unspeakably wicked; for I thought that any- thing which made such scamps asnamO,,,must be dreadful indeed. 'It took them half an hones_ to tell me, and then, between ast-Ns- ishment and emotion, I felt the tears spring into my eyes. For three nights they had lain in wait to 1dll the watchman, who lived tho top of the building; but Soda NOT ONLY CCRCD MY tllltxtl[Lu' ient Consumptioni ME UP, AND IS sow peruse. se. FLESH ON MY BONES , Al•' THE RATE OF A MUNI-) A DAY. t , TAKE it JesT AS EASILY AS 1 n Ramon R'•ntt's Emnlsfon is put up et . r..lor wrappers. Sold by ail Druggists 50o. and 11.00. Belleville. SCOTT h'OUWE, ,t,••.n.rhl.tof infnrmnson andab- .,,• . • 1ne iaw,,Show ;p_ 11.,5 itt t •. UPt"P, (:,rt..,, ', 1'•:, ,'' t Iht:-NM & 00. r4 "1.61 1 n,•nn, e'ay. _., / Vr+• \, t:. -y- CA,1 of,1 l.L. .Above Remedies are ;old by Jannesll. Combe, Druggist, Clinton. :1 CL1141 Ol J F.tiLROAD T1IIE TAiiLE Huron Street, Clinton Du you want a first-class COVERED or OPEN BUGGY, got up with the very best material and finished in a workmanlike manner; or do you want a daisy, easy. riding ROAD CART; or even an excellent, well-built LUMBER WAGGON or DEMOCRAT; because if you do, come and see the subscriber, who will supply your wants on very reasonable teems. We do not allow any slouch work, or poor material to bo used, so that people may rely on getting an article just Rl it is REPAIRING ofnteall kinds promptly attended to be. FINE BUGGIEtour specialty. o II LT M 1E3 Ail. ALA, C I .I N rrC►"oT PANTING The tlndersigll(Id is now at liberty to do anything ill the way of issued h[ay rat. The departure of trains at the several stations named, is according to the last official time card: CLINToN (1uTrunk (;min' East Going West 7.43G, ,13 a.ltrat,l 10.03 a.m. •9.°•i p.m. l.•30 p.nn. 4.:,:i p.m. 01::53 p.m. 9.97 p.m. I London, IIuron and Bruce Division Going South a.m. pan a.tn. p.m. Wiugham ..11.00 7.43 6,50 3.40 Belgrave ..10.4.9 7.97 7.03 4.00 Blyth 10.98 7.19 7.18 4.15 Londesboro 10.19 7.03 7.26 4.25 Clinton "10.00 6.45 7.53 4.45 Brumfield9.49 11.96 8,13 5.04 Kippen 9.34 6.17 8.94 5.1.9 . Heusall 1).98 6.09 ».32 5.19 Exeter ... 9.16 5.57 8.50 5.33 London.- . 8.05 "-.93 10.13 4.43 ass than in a ,lank. Fortune fav- ors those who work in nearly all business, and when that work is based on a natural, inherent love of the business, indubitable energy and a practicable application of the business on common sense grounds, it is not luck, but work that takes such a brooder to the front. If there are any lessons to be learned from Mr C. 'W. Williams' experience they aro plainly seen in the fact that he naturally loved the trotting horse that, when engaged as a telegraph operator, he spent hours rubbing. and trying a mid -blooded horse that could not trot a milt: in :,' and alter a great deal of work and I1Lior en such horses he learns that •:t horse t n trot niust bo bred 10 trot." Many Canadians :ue :eriou,ly a -kit a themselves th'e question: \\. hitt class /,1' horses shall we ' bit(41? Across 'the lines' 11.0 ••'� ,4F. • so ' I stone question ere} v lip, :.l u• .. ,. ng, ,.•`` 4'."1.""in ll.e SUM limtut �Ir W W Stever, ii•: I. :t11-\\-els it tug 1i,11ows. 'Tile c0111- s' . *Ion`.,.., •.,, ., man srru1,, grade or all -put p0 0 ,••, ,n •,, WIII >;n :Ibeggtng, 'tis 11 tie, but1 Pl'1f•tnl'R, 1\In••�1t,11. prices are bound to I e remtmern- r,® House and Sign Painting, Graining, Paper Hanging, KalsQanining, &c At reasonable rates, and on short notice. Satis- faction guaranteed. Shop on Rattenbury St. HORSEMAN Can get their Route Bills, Cards, itc., printed on short notice, in first-class style, and at reasonable rates, at the office of the CLINTON HEIR Eli. Good Cuts to select from UHEFITV 11 THOUSANDS OF BOTTLE GIVEN AWAY YEARLY. When I say Cure 1 do not meat merely to stop them for a time, and thee have them return again. 1 MEAN A RAD I C A L C U R E. I have made the disease of Fi Epilepsy or Fall-alg Sickness a life-long study. 1 warvant my remedy to Cure th worst cases. Becal )se others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of my Infallible Remedy. Give Express an Post Office. It costs you nothing for a trial, and it will cure you. Address t -H. t.. ROOTS M.C., Branch (office, 186 WEST ADELAIDE STREET, TORONTO. D'A vignotes Cream of Witch-Diazel, TIIE NEW TOILET LOTION. Softens the skin, removes roughness, eruptions and irritation frontthe face nit llltnds, and gives freshness and tone to the complexion. V is an invaluable application after shaving. Don't mistake thiit,8uperio pre- a.tation for any paints, enamels or injurious cosmetics or inferior Om xied. otione. It prevents eruptions, abrasions, roughness, redness, chart g; col - sores, and pain resulting to sensitive skin from exposure to wind and cold. • In sehort D'AvrcNON'S CRE.t\i of WITcn-HA'/.SLis at once a remedy and a preventfor very' form ofsarface inflammation or irritation. Price 25 cents per bottltai Manufactured by elf At_ NIIJ. 1-1. *0.4. II31 4;, CHEMIST AND. DRUGGIST, CLINTON , ON.T • Going North The Clinton New Era Ispublished every Friday Morning by the proprietor, Rom:. Ilnr.aits, at his, printing establishment, Isaac St., Clin- ton, Ont Tg1i>is.-'51.50 per annum, paid in ad- vance . JOB PRINTING in every style and of evet•' description, executed with neatness and dispatch, and at reasonable rates. COME AND TAKE This Valuable .Present Away with You The subscriber offers one of Doherty & Co's justly cel '' orated ORGANS free, with one. Packa ge of James Watson & Co's CHARM BAKING POWDER price 5Ocents. This gives an opportunity of securing av Organ worth $196, for fifty cents The organ will be on exhibition at our Grocery Store 6 Siiturday next. A call solicited from visitors to ti Great lIiu'on Central Exhibition 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 dis• tontinuod 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 pe- 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 t nem uncalled for prima facie. (vin • . t c 1 intentional fraud there is sufferit 1 I:ow:it isa resnit I their �'urv. rlheir Amine ills of c art•lrs.i,t•s ,fol' 1lo remr:ly Is their softheartedness was m.mi4- 11t bard, Try 1'ntnam'y ('orn i takitblc, and I learned afleruardy Extract•'r. I t -tire, painless ; 11,91 on 1114..0 particular nights the and prom le • 11,•w:u•t• of s111,411 watchman's wile Was 111, 1111'1 he titles. N.% '. Pol-o l .\ Ctt., 1i1'"- really Wm, (•al•1•V1ng the brills' ' 81) '0l in 111-, arms.' • xl:Mott & IIox PisOl•orllnnd,alnine u„•. +.v ADVERTISING RA1Ei-. LOCAL NOTICES -At head of local column, 10 cents per line or portion thereof, each insertion. Articles lost or found, girls wanted Roc., not exceeding three lines, 23 cents each inserton. Five lines, 50 cents for ono insertion, and '25 cents for each sub- sequent insertion. Howes to lets or for sale, farms to rent or for !tale, stray cattle and all similar advertisements not exceeding eight lines til for one month, and 50 cents for each subsequent 111(19111. A.Icertisrnl,•nts \,runout sper8:ir in- structions, inserted till forbid. Special cnntrart ar0ingomoti.t: 98811 hn••i m. Int•1'' So Cone right a1 pan l it ' for Illtt'1't 41• blur Tweeds, Dress Goods,1' lannels, Wool Skirts Linings, Shirtings, Table Linens, Towels, Towellings, Storm Collars, :Mantle Cloths Jersey Flannels, &c I cannot here mention all the Goods and Prices, but will &ive a few. $1 Tweeds for 7.i cents. 15c Shirting f(�r 1'2 cen lac Dress Goods for tif}c. $.i Storm Collars for $3.5 7•�)c Jersey Flannel for oar, $2.50 Storni Colts-, $1.2 Anil other gon,i4 in proportion. We will' sell Cheap ('asp o 1'rndnre, will not hesitate to trilst• parties who pas 100 cents of tar tl, if they require R•e expect this to be better than other years Our goods are right -our rric (;t•nrrnl a• \•'rt..nt;; 1, t Imp' 011 be convolved. No N. ROBSON. CHINA HALL. ADA :S' Emporia Haying returned from Toronto, I am prepared to offer the pudic a fine assort ment of goods at prices very much below the regulat values. Many of the good will be sold at and under wholesale prices, as they vdere bought at a heavy die count, and I intend to give my customers tine benefit. The stock consists of need to lav 85 50 for furl vrrti-rme104 and legal ad ver • I worth a1, o• 118e14 for 11 ,1,her4 wohnptrth :,tSt•yts. nr.\' kiting yon all a prosperous a al ,yr using, 10 rents per line for first laser I - tion, anti 3 cent" p, r lint. for each sub ; oto, r• . ..ling tfnllc t.. i' sotlnent insertion. f•hangra for inntrn'tr.l advertitc• 1 in os menti, k ' pse.siblo to insure a(linnet, rly in the week as l' hat week. H. ADAMS. LONDESBOR