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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1891-10-16, Page 7Noy, Muer, we ST. ! -" wipe aaeNree14'<1wW,fd►sel* f+rrC orifs. 111114.0000 rel..; Ike *+g ts► f enteelikelliteigclOirvilb pre aavetbant Outer* Laocoon in the coils of Attie fatal ser. 'elite was not ore helpless than is the man who pines under the ef- fects of dis- ease, excesses, overwork, Worry, etc. Rouse yourself. Take .heart -:of hope again and BE A LUT 1 We have cured thousands, who allow us to refer to them. WE CAN CURE YOU by use of our exclusive methods and appliances. Simple, unfailing treatment at home for Lost or Failing Manhood, Gen4al or Nervous Debility, Weaknesses of Body and Mind, Effects of Errors or Excesses in Old or Young. Robust, Noble MANHOOD fully Restored. Improvement seen the first day. Bow to enlarge and strengthen, WEAK, UNDEVELOPED ORGANS AND TARTS of BODY. Men testify from 50 States and Foreign Countries. Write them. Book, explanation and proofs mailed (sealed) free. Address ERIE MEDICAL. CO., 4 BUFFALO, N.Y. rn40XAM's Electric }fair R@storr Restores Grey Hair to Its Original Color. Beauty and Softness Keeps the Head Clean Coot and free from Dandruff. Cures Irritation and Itch - ,Ing of the Scalp! Gives a beautiful gloss and perfume to the hair, produces a new growth, and will stop the falling out in a few days. Will not soil elolnor:the most delicate head-dress. . DIR CTI Ns wrra Peon Bornat. _Lire* per Bottle. Re�fusen convincedce . Fifty 5OI.te AGENT FOR CANADA . SPENCER CASE emist, No. 50 King Street Wed_....-. �••=.: Htsmlltiin: =Outsets For sale Jas H Combe It will not, perhaps. he r'eme;n- tiered that in Oa great exhibition of 1,1351 a specimen 0 iron_apor was exhibited, Immediately lively competition ensued among iron masters as, tothe thinnessto which iron'eould be roped. One ironmaker rolled sheets the aver, agethicknesa of .which was the 1=1.,800 part of an inch. In other words, 1,800 sheets of this irons piled one upon the other, would only measure one • ineh in thick- noes. The wbgderful ;fineness of this work may be more readily under,• stood when it is remembered that 1.200 sheets of thinnest tissue paper measure a fraction over an inch. These wonderful iron sheets were perfectly smooth and easy to write upon, notwithstanding the fact that they were porous when held up in a strong light.—Lon- don Paper Maker. "JUST AS GOOD," Say game dealers who -try to sell a sub- stitute preparation when a customer oalls for Hood's Sarsaparilla. Do not aI QW any such false statements as this induce•you to buy what you do not want. Remember that the only reason for making it is that a few cents more pro- fit will be made on the substitute. In- sist upon having the best medioine— Hood's Sarsaparilla. It is peculiar to itself. ARH NOT a Pts A gative Medi °' Dino: Theyare a DRI.Otfilit L�I BLOOD Burr aa,.�J'•: roNrO and REOON- aTROOTOR, as they supply in a condensed 'VS- ,,..00 ,form the substances jo ■ needed teen- oh the Blood, curing 1. • diseases . coming fom Poon, and Way Y BLOOD, or from rrtaran Halon in e BLOOD, and also Lls.a:,.tually rgorate and Buu.ILtthe BLOOD ant SYSTEM, when broker rFOPI down by overwork, mental worry disease. excesses and indiscre- ( tions. They have a IPtoiaiO ACTION on Ile 8EZ%7Ln SYSTEM of to h:men and +semen,' FOR I ALE eatoring idsT moon and" °correcting, all rouLABITIEa and aO 'PRE6sioNs. ERY MAN wh" ands lila mental , or u c,•s dull or Easing or ysical powers flag; ug, should take these They will restoi o his lost energies, both physical and mental. ' EVERY n ONIll1 ahheeuld Ira ake thanem.i Ty cuall t pe'elelontt and irregular! os, which inevitably 510k11eta cted. 2 'r ntn,uld take these Praia 1� Liti 9.11,v wtll•cure the re- ad O}�y�lht�fuii 1..;d 'molts, and strengthen' the LING ilislr' ei onrd take theta , ','Lisa Pu.Ls wiv 0 them regular. For sale by all dui, •r will be sent ripou receipt of prise (50e. per b•,.,'i. i y addressing THE DR. WILL i atS'B MEI); JL . nt 1LAXSEED CO POUNDr .tfNCH ITIS 186CityAve New Yorkrk City, , Sept. X9,1 �I have used the Vizor -Seed Emulsion in several eases of Chronic Bronchitis, and the early stages of Phthisis, and have been well leased with the results. JAMES K. CROOK, M.D. HOLDING WHEAT. Another 'hold your wheat' cir- cul'ir has issued by the alliance. Agood many farmers have already held their wheat longer than they wished they had. It is a very good rule to sell, if you want to sell at all, when you can get a. good price for a thing. The first circular about holding wheat was Lased on the facts that wheat at the time was low and the demand was to be large. That demand bas not been supplied, but the first movements in that direction brought the price of wheat. up to fair valuation. ' It loops now that while wheat will .continue to go across the ocean for the next six months that the amount exported will depend upon the price. One man or any combination of men cannot° fix, khat, price: E,nrope will do without millions of bushels of wheat that she needs and needs badly if anattempt is made to put an exorbitantpriee upon it. That has been demonstrated in previous years, when-•the•=foreig-n-•'dema`itid" almost ceased under fictitious values. It is all right to hold wheat or anything else for a fair price, particularly when the pro- spect of obtaining a fair price is as promising as it was in July in re- gard to wheat, but beyond that a holder goes on to the risky ground of speculation, and is liable to suffer.—Rochester Herald. THE MOON'S .INFLUENCE Upon the weather is accepted by some as real, by others it is disputed. The moon never attracts cornsfrom the tender, aching spot. Putnams Painless Corn Extractor removes the most pain- ful Dorn in three days. This great remedy snakes no sore spots, doesn't go ftigling around a man's foot, but getsto bueinees et once, and effects a cure. Don't be imposed upon by substitutes and imitations. ONSUMPTION Brooklyn. N.Y., Feb. 14th 1889. I have used your. Ethulsion in a case of Phthisis <consumptionl -with beneficial results, where patieae could not tithe Cod Liver Oil in any form. ' ; J. Id. DROGE, M. D. US PROSTRATION Brooklyn, N. v., Dec. 20th, 185.4. 1 tart strongly recommend Fina Seed Emulsion as he: pail to the relief and possibly the cure of all Luo”. Bronchial. and Nervous' Affections, and a good gen oraltoeiain"physical debilityy, JOHN F. TALMAGE, M. D. RERAIDEBI tITY n Bremen,N. Y. Oct. loth, 18 1 regnrdiDJaicSeed Emusion as !rapidly-sheenbr td slid Cod-LiYbt' Oil Emtdsions so generally in use. ,D. A. GORTON, M. D. 8�,�,. 187 WiA.Ith Btl An ra ilial(: New Lroa is 'Aug.*, � ydi1P Flax -&sed Emubron Compound 'ttY)t� case of Mal -nutrition and the resu1t+waa rhorbtp'(at ilisped;'f684-it iryrs marJelout, Mid doh. thumbs. •I•ris6 tueldItcheerfullytotheprofession add humanity at large. Id. H. GILBERTT, M.D. RHEUMATISN Sold by' L1ruggleta, Prise $ I ►00. FLAX -SEED EMULSION CO ' BIS Liberty St., NOW York. aliggilligi• or sae yliiiim J: ole► .- 0-0 DEATH. Is death the passage -from the ee i e thesimu neo — u c s v. h lta us successive t0 that " is to, say;' ,from . time to eternity? Shall we then under - ,stand, in its unity, the poem or mysterious episode, of our exis.- tence, which till then we have spelled out phrase by 'phrase? An'Ils this the secret of that glory which so often enwraps the brow and countenance of those who are newly dead? If so,death would be like the arrifial of a,travel-, ler at the top of a great mountain, 'whence he sees spread out before him the whole configuration of the country, of which till then he had had but passing glimpses. To be able to overlook one's own history, to divine its meaning in the general concert and in the divine plan, would be the begin- ning of eternal felicity. Till then we had sacrificed ourselves to the universal order, but then we should understand and appreciate the beauty of that order. We had toiled and labored under the con- cluder of the orchestra, and we should find ourselves become sur- prised and delighted hearers. We had seen nothing but our own lit- tle path in the mist; and suddenly a marvelous panorama and bound- less distances would open before our dazzled eyes. Why not? idE, FITS! tV'lifri 8 tiny l: Care l de Bot meat( merely to Stop hdm for a.ttnio budlIth, rt hsvo thorn return .agsziin I moan . ST ort1N1LLINO'°sio%NSOS the disease tddy. warraant Brat asses, Reeftsw othrre Melo td rMrito caro.the e sA.a MAO tonna( aeF •et, Doni It aaiy, int Bond, at fort it' treatise and a lino rutsa O luta .:sire E7trazse and POSTAI/10Z. i. Reg`t, `M. O. 180 ADi .AIDC S'f� Ti TORONTO, UN'r, T$ ! ROJ 8J ILA ti rat atld ` tlrt�-r: So, Y. 1„ , , ,l.[ are the merman merican. trottelh lu,�`tti ing their records this -seaside t 6:it it is hardly safe to write a pais*, graphearning a horse with its re cord, for before the paper goes to press It may be something alae. A team may match well in ev- ery respect, but if they . no not carry their beads and tails alike it is a nrisrnath. Judging horses correctly is 'a trade'to be learned but when acquired it is a valuable one, provided it is put in practice for.profit. The trotter Irene M. receatly kicked out her driver on a Mon- tana track, smashethe sulky to pieces and ran two and a quarter miles before she was stopped. It was then found she was unhurt, and after a little rost the mare went on and wen the third heat eventually capturing the race. A handy and cheap ointment is madefrom lard or pork fryings mixed with an equal part ,a' ker- osene oil, and is good 1r'r' cuts, wounds and sores on 1, mals, and also a good remedy for lice on bogs. I have a colt which got a bad wound on one hind knee this summer, and I used this kind of ointment on its wound with good success, as the knee is entirely. well and nicely haired oder now. The much–vaunted English saddle, although it is a model as far as the seat goes, is, says a man who knows,a good fit for the English horse, but not for the American. It is made very nar- row over the withers and the can- tle is rounding over the backbone, which is all very well for the English horse. But our horses have quite thick withers, which require a spreading tree, and where the English horse has fat ribs and is round over the back, where the cantle comes, our hors- es ale narrower and require a more peaked termination cf the tree. John Burnett, of Wiscon-in, says:—"t want to inform th,' cad- ers of Farm, Stock and 11 one, that, after many years' ealperie ace and through trials of all kinds, I have become satisfied that clay floors' tramped solidly to make them sufficiently hard, are by all odds the best for horse stalls. they are elastic arithout being soft, and have the best possible effect on the hoofs. If plenty of strawaa,ltept_on_the_floor,.. 11 will absorb all liquid excrement, and besides prevent the shoe calks from seriously disturbing the clay. Earth floors largely reduce the cost of shoeing, for they render the hoof soft and tough, enabling it to stand more wear and tear than when dry and brittle,as they always are on wood or even concrete floors, though the lust are preferable to wood. Novelties are always of more or less interest, and the following from Chicago to a New York daily will interest horsemen: 'The new system of stopping run- away horses by electricity bad a practical test on the lake front recently. A B Hobson,the inven- tor, got into a carriage to which two horses were attached, but with no driver on the box. A. man lashed the horses with a whip and they dashed away at a break -neck speed. Suddenly the animals raised the mselves on thele haunches and came to a full a invention consistsof stop. The inv dry battery under the driver's box and connected 'by wireswith metal balls placed, in, the , horse's nostrils. There are,but,two but- tons, one on the drivers box, the other inside, which will elose'the circuit w hen pressed. The result is a mild shoo$,, which ,the invertor claims, will invariably, bring runaway horses to a stand- still. IIONir A COAT OF TAU .i%;4L' I'ooplo who read of tarring and feathering by White Clips anTM' ,'tilers know that the pliniebment .;.is a very' ilnpleaaanitone, but few imagine ho'Kt terribly painful and dangerous it is. In Wyoming ,I once saw a man•who, bad been 411,. red and feathered, and, although he fully deserved the discipline, 1 could net* help pitying him. gardened tar is very hard to re- move from ,,the skin,, and when feathers are added it forms a kind of cement that sticks closer than a brother, As soon as the tar sets the pictim's suffering begins. It contracts as it cools, and every one of the little veins on the body is pulled, causing the most exquia- ite agony. ' The prespiration is entirely stepped, and unless the tar is removed death is certain to ensue. But the removal is no easy task and requires several days. The tar cannot be softened by the application of beat, - and must be peeled off bit by bit, sweet oil being used to make the pro- cess less painful. The iIritation to the skin is very great, as the hairs cannot be disengaged, but must be pulled out or cut off.,,,6 Jo man can be cleaned of tar ing a single day, as the pain of the tip -4 eration would be too excruciating'. for endurance, and uutil this`"icy done he has to suffer from a pain like that of 10,000 pin pricks. Numbers of men have died under the torture, and none who have gone through it regard tarring and feathering as anything but a most painful infliction. "FAT DOCTOR BILLS MAKE LEAN WILLS," 0, woman, despairing and wretched, Dreading, yet longing, to dip, Hear the glad chores that rises, Filling the dome of the sky : 11.4 . Sisters, be glad, there'll' help to be had No longer be miserable, gloomy and sad ; Lost health regain," ring8 out the re- frain, " Poor creatures, be healthy and hap- py again." Flow ? By taking Dr, Pierces Fav- orite Prescription, the world's greatest remedy for ell kinds of diseases pecul- iar to women. It brings book tone and vigor to the system weakened by thole distressing complaints known only to women, which make life snob a burden. It restores related organs to tt normal condition. It fortifies the system against the approach of diseases which Often terminate in untold misery, if not in death --which is preferable to the pain and torment of livings in many instances. It is the great gift of soien. tifie skill and resoarob to women, and for it she eannot be ' too grateful, It res her 1118 when nothing else n It guaranteed to gide eatiefectiall b1 but Dr Sages's Catarrh Remedy costs less than one doctor's visit. Catarrh is a loathesome, dangerous disease, and the time has come when to suffer from it is a disgrace. No person of culture and refinement cares to inflict upon his friends his offensive breath, disgusting hawking and spitting and disagreeable efforts to breathe freely and clear the throat and nose—hence the culturedl Remedy. And no wise and prudent and refined use of Dr Sage's Catarrh man cares to run the risk of leaving his family without a proteotor, by letting "slight catarrh" run into serious or fa- tal throat and lung troubles, hence the wise and prudent ueeDr Sage's Catarrh Remedy. The proprietors of this rem- edy are so confident of its curative pro- perties, that they have made a stand- ing offer of a reward of 8500 for a case they cannot care. Peopio - Wonder VvHEN they find how rapidly health is restored by taking Ayer's Sar. taparilla. 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., 'writes : " 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 o skeleton, and hardly had strength to drag myself about. All kinds of food distressed me, and only the most deli- cate could be digested at all. Within the time mentioned several physicians treated me without giving rehef. Noth- ing that I took seemed to do any per- manent good 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 LIKED HIS NEARLY -STRAIGHT. The Law Gazette has told a story about some one of the Irish judges, and lawyers are trying to find out which one of the judges is referred to. It appears that a cer- tain learned judge is accustomed to dose at times during the speeches of the counsel, and, on awakening, does not always re- alize the situation immediately. An eloquent Queen's counsel was lately addressing the Court on the snbjeet of a certain town commis- sioner's, right to a disputed witter-,. way. In his address be repeated somewhat emphatically, 'But, my lord, we must have water, we must have water." The learned judge thereupon awoke and start- led the lawyers by remarking. 'Well, just Pattie drop, thank Jtou, just a little. 'I like it strong.' —N. Y. Tribune. Improvement in my condition, my appetite began to return and with it came the ability to digest all the food taken, my strength imprOvef1 'each day. and atter a few Menthe oim.faithful attention to your dit'ections • °I ,found ,t,lyfseif • a ' well womman( able to attend 80 an household duties. " The medicine has given me a new lease of life, and I cannot thank you too mn011." "We, the undersigned, citizens of $rockwa'y Centro; Mob., heteby.eitity that :the shave statement, made, by Mins: Lake, tit trite 'in 'every' particular and entitled to full credence."—O. P. Chamberlain, ( , W. Waring, 0. A. Wells, Drugglet. "My brother, in England, was, for a long time, unable to attend to his occu- pation, by reason of sores on his foot. 1 sent him Ayer's .Almanac and the tes. timonials it contained, induced him to try.Ay'er'e Sarettparillai Atter using it a little While,; he Was cured, and is now a Well man, working in it sugar mill at Briabane, neensland, Australia." — A. Attowell, harbot Lake, Ontario. yer's-: -. arsaparilla, WtttbAuti:rf •itv IN PRAT,ECTED ,coIni I;Y ,1 Filtima.nowt ausaiau metes*. V tit -, ...1r,111, has been travelling in .the faruii.ir,1i'tcken district of Kasan, has :written an account of the aw. fel condition of the people in that part of the country, from which this extract is made :— You „bo live in the ;towns can form no conception of the diatresa amopg the rural populations . If it is in itself a horrible thing to witness wholesale mortality, how much more dreadful it is to do so when you are powerless to afford any assistance. I cannot describe all I have seen; but I will give you some examples. A few days ago I visited the village of Nare- dey. ' ithin the first half hour I met 6 poor creatures at the last extre itw r niof woe. Mostthem of had not touched a morsel of bread for over a week. With distorted features and glaring eyes they glared at me, many of them only just able to stretch out their hands for the food I offered them. A few' only had strength enough to est it. They generally die before help comes. The longer I re- mained in the village the more misery I discovered. Outside the houses, in front of ithe church and in other places, there were numbers of pale, ema- ciated, sickly looking 'Apple— hunger-stricken groups—such as are seen only where famine reigns. Some of them were quite apathetic. They seemed utterly indifferent to all that was going on around them ; they were evidently re- signed to their fate. Others raved in their despair, moving about gesticulating wildly, and crying, 'Bread, bread; do not let us starve.' Mothers whose children have suc- cumbed to hunger,wander through the village, weeping aloud for their lost little ones. Everything eatable has long ago disappeared. While vegetables and berries could be obtained the people managed to live. At last even that resource was exhausted. The villagers tnen gathered lime tree leaves, which they dried, pounded in mortars and made into a pulp. For a whole fortnight they had nothing else to eat ; but of course it could not serve aaa substitute for bread. Little help was forthcoming, and death began to work havoc. Mor- tality bas •increased in such al- arming'proportions that in one locality oat of 1 0 faMIIie`s 47 ,one of hunger. M. Filomanow further reports that in several districts the popu- lation has been decimated by sickness. The situation seems to be couch worse than the Russian press is allowed to state. '' Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription, for Zn1 p and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphjine la* other Narcotic substance. It is aharmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' Tule >>lr Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys 'Worms and alla o feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour C 0, aures Diarrhoea, and Wind Coli;,. Castoria retie r teething troubles, cures constipation and flatuleney, Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomal8 li and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Oaa,,' toria is the Children's Panacea—the Mother's Friend.' Castoria. "Oastorla is as excellent medicine for chil- dren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its good effect upon their children." Da. G. O. OsaooD, Lowell, Mass, "Castoria is the best remedy for children of which I am acquainted. I hope the day is not far distant when mothers will consider the real interest of their children, and use Castorla in- stead of the various quack nostrums which are destroying their loved ones, by foroingopium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throat:;, thereby sending them to premature graves. •' Da. J. F. KINOHELOE, Conway, Ar Castoria.' • "Castoria is so well adapted to childrmlMill' I recommend it assuperior toanyp(tI rilWili known to me." H. A. Asea x,11. b. 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyns KV; "Our physicians in the children's slap",,, ment have spoken highly of their ence in their outside practice with and although we only have amongg n medical supplies what is known as regulate;" products, yet we are tree to confess that aft merits of easteria has won us to look wilt. favor upon it." UNIT= HOePITAt AND DIIPEN5A*III,,. AI.I.EN O. Sarre, Pres., Boston. IIsi The Centaur Company, 77 Blurray Street, New York City. ',A . GEO. GLASGOW, Gents Furnishings, &c, Has removed his stock into the more commodious premises in .Searle°s-Block,Albert St. ---- CaII and See Him. MALARIA Literally means bad air. Poisonoue germs arising, from Ion►, marshy land, er from decaying vpgetatilo, matter, are breathedinto 'the things-, '-taken up by the real d..:nnleeta tjge *Cat*Catfluid is ppuri ed anbyy the use et *good medicine like Hood's llarsaparillitr,-t 'e ?nnfortn- nate,4iotim iss oonogqerpowered. Even in the 'twill .advtailoed' cases, *here the terrible, fever' revailj Wit `bncoessful Ipedioinei haele eeled F u�trstfle °tires. Those' a+hd a ei`po ed to malaria or IMPLEMENT AGFNCY subscriber having severed his connection with the Massey Company, desires to inti- mate to his many friends that he has been appointed agent for the well-known firm of FROST & WOOD, implement makers of Smith's Falls and will be pleased to till all orders in his fine, as heretofore. Will also -keep on hand a stock of Wilkinson PLOWS, Colter & Scott DRILLS, Disc HARROW:, and articles of like nature. W. SPANLHY, Mrh 99. 6 Holmesville and Clinton McLeod's System RENOVATOR AND, OTi31pt Tested Remedies. SPECIE IC AND ANTIDOTE P A. = , ,'1.1 i\T G. i The undersigned. is now at liberty to do anything in the way of I-IousE and SIGN PAINTING GRAINING, PAPER HANGING, KAL- soxINING, &c. At reasonable rates, and on short notice. Satisfaction guaranteed Shop on Rattenbury St. a C. WILSON, Painter WE STILL LIVE IVR ! For Impure, Weak and Impoverished Blood, Dyspepsia, Sleeplessness, Palpa- tatior of the Heart, Liver Complaint, Nenralgia1 Loss of Memory, Bronohitis, Consnmpthon, Gall Stones, Jaundice, Kidney and Urinary Diseases, St.Vitus'. Dance, Female Irregularities and Gen. eral Debility. , LABORATORY, GODERICII, OMT. J. M. MdLEO7Y, other poisons ehonld.a keep'" the blood Prop. and Manufacturer. pure by taking H od eiSaraaparilla. Sold by J. H. Combe, Clinton --- AND R IOlt Still Leads Where Good Machine Oil is Required. McColl Bros. & Co., Toronto Are the sole manuftilcturers of it. Bear this in mind. McCOLL'S FAMOUS CYLINDER OIL►? Needs only to be used once tope appreciated. • McColl Bros. & Co., Tom aito. THE RELIABLE ORGANPIANO DEALER G. F. OAKES, CAME AND TAKE ,tis -Valuable Present Away with You The subscriber offers one of Doherty & Co's justly eel! brated ORGANS free, with one Package of Jame Watson & Co's CHARM BARING POWDER price 50cents. This gives an opportunity of securing nt Organ worth $196, for fifty cents will be on exhibition at our Grocery Store c next. A. call solicited from visitors to t Great Huron Central Exhibition ORGANS, 5 and 6 Octave ISE! LLS PIANO -CASED ORGANS Best makes of PIANOS Second hand ORGANS to rent RENTSPIANOS for rent PIANOS carefully moved PIANOS packed' for shipping Organs repaired and retuned REPAIRS P AIRS Piano Tuning attended to CSheet Music&Books ordered Shop on Main Street Residence on James Street Box 11, Clinton • Send for catalogue 011.1%31%, .014$ fheorga Saturday N N. ROBOft' CIIINA HALL Boos AND SII0ES AT THE -.Lowest Possible Prices for Cash My stock is very complete in all the latest styles of sea sonable goods of the 'best quality, which 1 am stilling cheaper than ever to all cash customers. Egir taken in a eelialn e. prieq'( 1.60) i tina:ed. Absolutely sold l' On J. '0. Ay8f. bt Db., l oWfeli, Mass., on trial. tkPrlSi""t4iil'l:rrtt4ibtcti$s. 'Vboidktajti'=bottler , ,,;,:,,,,„ Cruickshank