The Huron News-Record, 1891-06-24, Page 3t,.
The it a 'n News4 ecor
41:14 a lfear-t4L2 #Ii attvente
Wieglttl!cl?day, Juno 14th, 1801
IN 4 DZl`TTISTtS; ClIAIR..
swift: "E 1TliaopolagGOA.I9 ?GsBtuaKfi I1X
TEM QPI?R.ATOih.
There,, is a dentist in testa who
earns $W,000 a., year, Considering
'this severity of the eompetitiou you
lavquld scarcely believe it. "So long
the women eat candies arid the
,''uses eat pfastries and confections
IIIrthere will he plenty to do in spite
of the. competition." That ie what
.h,,e said.
"Must be a very disagreeabie
°lltleiness ?" . the reporter suggest•
'Ods
"Well, a little."
`.'0 -o -o -o -o -e -w," from a patient.
He made a jab at the patient with
...Something that looked like a hand-
6Rri.
X00 o -o o•o•o-o-o-w."
Not much sentiment iu it," he
said, pausing a moment in hie work,
white the patient grabbed him by
the arta, and piteously bagged him
not to hurt hills The patient was a
than 1 Outside in the reception
room were a uutnber of ladies wait-
ing their turn. The patient was in
full view. At tirst, they thought
ahudderiugly, "What he now suffers
we shall soon endure," and they ex•
changed looks of sympathy and self
pity. But the spectacle of a strung
man yelling with pain over e tooth,
desperately clutching the operating
arm of the dentist, with one hand,
'chile with the other he boat the
Air, was too much. They uudged
each other and laughed.
"Hurt you," said the dentist in-
dulgently, "not a mite ; not a mite.
You see, I have to mike a retention
for the filling."
With that ho began to work the
hand -saw.
"Ow-ow-uw-ow-ow."
"No, not much sentiment. Aeso-
ciatious disagreeable, No pain,
you know (with a consoling look at
the patient) paiu is greatly ex.lgor-
ated. But people cone here suffer-
ing. I only see them when they
are suffering. Teeth in every state,
and so many without teeth. Then
there aro the piteous appeals
4
The patient clutched the dentists
arm violently, while a clammy
sweat gathered on his forehead.
"There, there ; you are all right ;
no pain at all, my dear sir. Ah,
that'e beautiful," as he got through
with the sawing busiuos-.
"As I was saying," he resumed,
"an environment that is constantly
disagreeable has its drawbacks. I
think that is the reason I like the
country. 'I can't got there often, but
when I do I revel in it ; then I feel
like Writing poetry. Perhaps that
is the reaction.
"Do yeu ever fail in a delicate
op oration ?"
"Of course I do. Every dentist
dons. We do the best we can.
Sometimes complaint is made that
the teeth we put in are too large, or
too far apart, or badly shaped.
Vanity is a large factor in this busi,
ness. Everybody likes nice teeth.
very few have nice teeth to start
with. Bad teeth are an inheritance.
Genorotians of pastry and candy -
eating make bad teeth. The Scoth
have good teeth. That is beeauee
they eat oatmeal."
a "Young ladies are more particu-
lar than married ladies, I suppose ?"
"Bless you, yes. A young lady
trust have gold filling ; the more of
it the better. Sometimes they have
no need of it, they insist upon it.
They think it is good form 1 Mar-
ried ladied will put up with amal-
h
am Not all oftem. ofu
CO rs e.
A young lady could not endure a
vacancy in the front of her mouth.
A. married lady will endure it with
equanimity.
"What is the best dontrifice ?"
"The beet dentrifree," said the
dentist in a stage whisper, after
looking at the ladies in the recep-
tion` room --"is good, wholesome
plain food. The teeth thrive best
when you give thein work to do."
THE SUICIDE CLUB.
Bridgeport, Conn., June 14. -
The discovery that landlord E F.
Schmidt, of Birmingham, who took
his life last week, was a member of
the famous Bridgeport suicidal club,
has again hrought that grewsome
• iforganization into prominence. The
history of this peculiar club dates
back some six years. As origin.
ally organized the membership was
limited to six. Upon .their death
the club was to become extinct, and
it was not intended that there
ehontd be any deviation from this
plan, but incredible as it may seem
OS 8o -on as the existence of the club
was known they were besieged with
applications for membdrship, and,
as the members could not stand the
pressure, they were obliged to let
othera in until the original six grew to
r`lighteen. None but the initiated
have ever known to all the qualifi-
`{ o�tio�til fo`>f"ififlierlltil5=1''"-,,To=re=-
jeeted ones wore bound by afearful
atoll before they were allowed to
ev411 mart iu ; old the exaalivatioln,
It is, alis of the rales o Om ,Order
that at least two of the members,
slxal4` altufhle oft' the .Mortal ,coil
enol' /oar by their owtl hlandd,' but
it leas ewer heels kUOWQ eco outetii
are whether tots are drawn to'deoide
who the saeriftce. is to fail upon, or
whether the members are swam at
initis boll 49 destroy .themselves
withi a stated, time. The latter
theory seems the most probable in-
fei+enoe from the fact that the mor
teary record of theclub has been
kept up with:fearful regularity, as is
attested by the following liatot sui-
cides of the members :-
First 3 ear--Ang`ast Heisterhagen,
found dead in a Geller with a but -
lett hole in his head a revolver in
h.is hand ; Joseph Kopp, shot him•
self iu bed at Water and Bank
streets. --
Secondyear-George Leavenwor-
th, died in Case's hotel from lauda-
num, self•adtniuiatered ; 'Wm. Mee-
kte, cut his throat with a razor in
his room on Bank street.
Third year -John Kienzy, shot
hitnsolf through the heart with a
rifle in the teller of his saloon on
Main street; John Schneider, threw
himself in front of a locomotive on
South avenue, but said by some to
have been an accident.
Fourth year -John Mattern, hung
himself in the show where he work-
ed on Bank street; Wendel Bautn,
cut hie throat with .t jackknife while
iu New York.
Fifth year -W. H. Baby, sent a
bullet into his brain from a revol-
ver; E. F. Schmidt, blew his brains
oat with a shot gun at his hotel iu
Birmingham last week.
This remarkable chronological
record is pretty conclusive that two
must die a year, and that the year
i t which the horrible deed must be
done is fixed at the time that they
are admitted to membership. It is
also pretty well established that
another cardinal rule of the Suicide
club is that the death penalty must
be inflicted on one' self in the
most painful way by shooting out
the brains or cutting the throat.
These most excruciating tnethods of
death aro made mandatory at the
outset, as it is considered effeminate
to die by poison, asphyxiation or
other similar methods. It will be
noticed from the above list that of
the ten members who have paid the.
awful penalty of membership in the
club six have fulfilled the obliga-
tion by bullet, ono by razor, one by
iccoruotive, ono by jackknife, one
by hanging, and only one by poison.
Although poison is strictly pro-
hibited and future punishment is
supposed to follow any member who
violates his oath and dies by poison,
yet there is just one instance when
it is possible to die by poison or
a gentler means than the oath re-
quires.
The organization now has a world'
wide reputation, and recently the
secretary received two applicatians
for membership froth Caen, France.
LECTURE ON TACT.
n
A few evenings ago Rossr
D.
Smith lectured in the East End
Methodist church, Montreal, on
"Tact." Two Seotchrnen, said the
lecturer, were having an argument
as to the number of the senses.
One maintained that there wore
five, and the other stoutly asserted
that there were six, saying, "See,
now, there's the sense of feeling,
hearing, seeing, tasting, smelling,
and common sense, which you have
not got." The Irishman's 'defini-
tion of tact was that "it was a nate
way of doing everything." Tact
was derived from the Latin word
tangere to touch, to affect. Some
persons thought it was related to
tactics, but that was a mistake.
Tact was Roman, tactics was Greek.
Tactics was foremost in war, tact
in peace. Tactics was destructive,
tact constructive. Our Saviour in
his parables, and conversation with
the woman of Samaria ; Nathan,
who, after weaving the net round
David, said, "Thou art the man."
Philip who, when he had found
the Saviour, went and found
Nathaniel, and instead of stopping
to argue, sitnply said, "Come and
see," were used as illustrations of
tact. Consecrated tact was needed
in the church, in the school; and in
the home. Knavery, cunning or
overreaching is not tact. Trickery
often descended to depths where
tact is unknown. Tact could be
prostituted, but not imitated. Illus-
trations of want of tact were then
given by the lecturer, and the
audience were soon convulsed with
laughter, particularly with the one
told of a large -hearted, good•natur-
ed Irishman, who was detailed by
his mates to go and break the sad
news to a Mrs. Brown, whose hus-
band had just been killed. Pro-
ceeding to the house he knocked
politely at the door, and enquired,
"Does the widow Brown live here!"
Mrs. Brown smiled, and replied, "I
am Mrs. Brown, but I am not a
'Widow." ^-°"TiBdsdryo'reemidisk ens -
for the corpee is comin' round the
carnet."
TUE CANADIAN PACIFIC
'A RAII,,,WAY OF 1RI1gpRe$slaLE AND
goicionroue E.NTg ,prose.,
•
i<t' ( to. flown the IDistangtr+, llzetasen
Tr ndea mat clitira uya tVeek- Aerese
the dianerteen.Vw ,Ment 1r4 Leri• Than.
Doter payd..
Abe -C:tnaditan Taciflo railway xas been.
very reach in evidence of bate, It htr at pave,
ubiquitous and irrepressible, Its enterprise
breaks out ie the float unexpected places,
and produces results which sitartle roti -tape
people out -of their propriety. klvatr the
Americans have been taken Shuck by the
Canadian Pacific, They do not know What
to make of it, or how to regard it. It will
ziot fit into their preconceived ideas of the
J- ainucks as a sleepy, short-sighted race,
whose destiny is to shale gracefully into
the folds of the Stars and Stripes wilt n
,they become ripe for that distinguished
honor. Whatever else may get swalJwt cd
up in the almighty union it is not to be the
Canadian Pacific Railway, That seems t, be
well able to take care of itself, and it swal-
lows more of American trade than. the Ameri-
cans like to see going past them; Its lutest'
feat, has, like all the rest, a dash of ronautio
brilliance. Without any fuss or preliminary
flourish it has started a new mail service,
which cuts down the orthodox courts, of post
between Loudon and China by nearly a week.
In the overland journey across America it
has Saved at a stroke fully two days out
of six. The first through mail from the
east did the 4,300 miles from Yokohama
to Vancouver in less than 10 days, and the
2,000 miles from Vancouver overland to
Montreal in 3 days 17 hours, making
barely two weeks from Yokohama to Mont-
real, Had there been direct connection with
New York, that city might have been
reached in the same time or a little more,
and if the mails had caught an Atlantic
g,eyhouud like the Umbria or the City of
New York on the point of sailing they might
have reached London in three weeks from
Japan.
This is all too new and original, and
it conies on us so suddenly that it
needs two or three times thinking
over before it can be fully real-
ized. Only a few years ago twice 21
days would have beau considered very
rated travelling from here to Jnpau. After
the feat itself is adequately realized a new
cause of wonder arises from the way in which
it has come about. Canada w as, till lately, a
very unlikely quarter of the globe to be
looked to for grand postal reforms and im-
proceuloilts. In the early days of the Dominion
so little idea was over entertained of its ever
becoming a postal highway to the east that
when the maritime provinces were being
joined on by railway to Upper Canada, the
line was purposely diverted from the straight
and carried round in a great semi -circle, in
order to keep it as far a way as possible from
United States territory 1 How supremely
foolish those military jackasses would look
to -day if they could revisit New Brunswick
and see how absurdly they had misread the.
necessities of the future. The founders of
the Canadian Pacific railway read the signs
of the times much more wisely when they
surmised that what Canada needed most
was the straightest line of steel whieu
could be drawn from ocean to ocean. They
foresaw that such a railway would be at once
a splendid property for its builders, and au
immeasurable boon both to Canada and to
international commerce. They had uot mere-
ly the financial courage to build the road. but
still more remarkable was the skill they
showed in divining the best uses to make
of it,
The Canadian Pacific bas been finished for
only four years. and, in that short period it
has struck out more new departures than any
other railway on the American continent.
The exploit it performed last weak was oue
of a long series, and it is not to be by any
means the last of them. Canada is not big
enough for men like President Vau Horne.
They can take in the Pacific ocean as well,
and it is onlya question of
time wben
they outgrow the Pacific. Everything they
have yet touched has turned, if not to gold, at
least to success. Not merely did they bridge
over the Rockies, which we were told before-
hand it was impossible, but they have discov-
' eyed the much more wonderful secret of mak-
ing a Rocky mountain road self-supporting.
This they have done by bringing traffic to it
nolens volens. They have planted settlers on
it to create local traffic, and they have com-
passed sea and land to get through business
for it. The Dominion Government, the Im-
perial Government, and even that most
Pecksuitlian of institutions the general post -
office have all, in spite of themselves, been
made to bring grist to the Canadian Faciac
mill. The postal contract for the imperial
mails to China and Japatr was part of the
grist, and it is slightly comical to glance back
at the history of the operation and see how it
was brought about.
On the side of the Canadian Pacific railway
It was, as usual, a bold and strange innova-
tion. When the G. P. 0. was first roused to
a senseb
o f t oossibi '
p hty of an alternative
China service by way of the Northern Pacific
ocean and Canada, it insisted on proceediug
very cautionely. The experimental adver-
tisement for tinders which it issued in 1885
called for only a 10X or 11 knot service.
The Canadian Haciflc board took the breath
of St. Martha's le -Grand clean away by de-
claring that if it was not worth a 14
or 15 knot service it had better be let
alone. Such revolutionary suggestions stag-
gered a department which had so stereo-
typed 12 knots speeds in its ocean mall con-
tracts that it had begun tq see something
sacred in those figures. There may be as-
sistant secretaries to the G. P. 0. who regard
12 knots an hour as the rate at which the
world revolves. At all events, it was con-
sidered the maximum of safety and good
policy for China mails. Four years of per-
severing suasion were needed to bring up the
post -office to the lowest standard of Canadian
Pacific speed, and the practical rosult was a
contract for carrying mails from Hong Kong
to Quebec in a minimum of 684 hours.
Mr. Raikes, when he thus got rid of the
importunate disturbers, may have grimly
consoled himself with the thought that they
had put their heads into a noose of their own
making, and would not be likely to give' him
slush more trouble with their inconvenient
advocacy of high speeds. Yesterday morn,
ing, he must have stared, however, when he
read in his morning paper that they had
walked clean away from their apparently
impossible engagement, and cut down their
contract time voluntarily by another 10 per
cent. or more. Instead of 680 hours they
have needed only about 2.5 days, or
600 hours, for the run from Hong
Kong to Quebec. With proper connec-
tions they might have reached New York in
the same time, or less, W hat is more strange
still, they will not acknowledge anything
wonderful in the achievement. They have
begun, the say, as they mean to go on, and
the maiden trip, surprisingly ail it compared
with,,existintetaandataisr-i well•rwithinAbeirr,
powers. In the Empress of India they have
"vessel which tan lFaep vp s le krtol< weed
tight acrsiee 11.141: #'aeltic: $14.0 hada higher •
iuudlicatedhorse power Chau the hest of aria
•04l0tio greybopnda, and so reagnifiaent. is
her a11colinz5u4attou iwtbfor passengers -and
fi'tetght thet kn her outward ttr'.ip.aha ha4 pf td
pa her;expensea to Vancouver b€dere she
1lt;trted irQn1;aong Kgng.. -•
.
• ay ug Bottle Melts to. Veuceuverat At"
lanae racing epeed, they, trallyf cured the na to
the nadima. Pacific railway, agd tart them
forthe next 3,000- lnrqup: $ tlotwbie the rate.
whiclk the swiftest ocean gr'eyllouu4 could
f iatntpia for such w distance, The mall train
carne etcross the senatileent at thtl ''ziipree
retiented rate of 3b miles an hour -bare•
ly 10 Miles an hoar short of the. best.
London and North-western expresses
front London to Liverpool] This, too, we
are assured can be made a regular every
day performance. The Canadian Pacific
road is in such splendid physical condition
that even higher speeds could be run with
safety. The whole length of it being under
one control, there is nc friction between
separate managements, and no time lost in
passing tram one jurisdiction to another,
What this one advantage, insignificant as it
leeks, may yet ureau to the Canadian Pacific,
it would be difficult to foretell. This largest
trunk line in America, handled by mon whose
courage and ability are equal to their oppor-
tunities, is becoming at the same time the
most enterprising and successful, The Can -
dials Pacific has possibly fresh surprises in
store, both f,.r the G. P. 0. and•for the pub-
lic at large. -London Financial Times, May
5, 1801.
A CURE FOR THE CROUP.
Simple Remedy for the Terrible Atniction
Discovered in France,
Several papers of Paris have published that
Dr. Laugardierre, of Toulouse, had at differ-
ent times experimented with success with a
new treatment of sure etiicieuey for the cure
of that terrible disease, the croup. The new
treatment consist in the use of sulphur. Dr.
Laugardierre nartetes thus his first experi-
ment in the Paris Temps:
"I called for some sulphur powder,
took a tablespoonful of it, which I diluted
in a glass of water, ordering to drink one
tablespoonful of the mixture every hour
shaping it before using. Next day the
child was better. New potion for the next
day. The following day the child was cured.
The only thing left was a loose cough, which
I attributed to the false membranes circulat-
ing in the tracheal artery.
"Asking the parents to save it for me in
case the child should expectorate them, two
days later a sudden fit of coughing expelled
them, and three dried-up pieces the size of a
large beau were brought to me."
After that cure the doctor obtained several
others, but none more convincing than the
Following:
"A little girl was dying; neither cry nor
the least sound could come from her larynx;
the pimples of diphtheria wore on the ears,
neck, head and cheeks; her wheezing breath-
ing could be heard twenty maters ort."
The doctor had secured a probe to Meufll-
ate nitrate of silver into the larynx. The
parents opposed that, but consented to make
the child swallow the sulpburatod potion
during the night. -
"On the next day the child, which I had
considered as lost, was resuscitated -the voice
was restored; the potion was continued dur-
ing that day and the next day the Ghild was
cured."
The communication of Dr. Laugardierre is
of too much importance not to be the subject
of a serious and immediate examination and
it is for the Academy of Medicine to order
such.
Dr. McDaniel's Smoking Tree.
Among the people of Norcross Dr, Daniel,
in his yard, grows an ordinary mulberry tree.
Yesterday afternoon Mrs. McDaniel, while
sitting on the veranda, saw a puff' of smoke
emerge from one of the limbs. She rubbed
her eyes to see if it was not an optical delu-
sion, but when she looked again she saw an-
other puff of smoke spring from another
limb.
She called to her husband that the tree was
on fire. The Doctor came out and was no less
astonished than his wife, for the whole tree
was puffing smoke. It came out in jets from
the limbs, like a boy smoking a cigarette, The
Doctor climbed into the tree but could see
aothing unusual about it, not a place in the
bark being broken. The smoke was oozing
from the bark and could be plainly seen as it
floated off on the breeze. There was no odor
to it whatever, buttiit was white in color and
looked like tobacco smoke.
Dr. McDaniel called in his neighbors, and
they too were mystified. Soon the news of
the smoking tree spread, and people from all
over town flocked to the Doctor's home. From
4 o'clock until 6 the tree continued to emit
puffs of smoke while a crowd of about 150
people watched it. -Atlanta Journal.
How to Read the Tongue.
The perfectly healthy tongue is clean,
moist, lies loosely in the mouth, is round at
the edge and has no prominent papillas. The
tongue may be furred from local causes, or
from sympathy with the stomach, intestines
or liver. The dry tongue occurs most fre-
quently in fever,' and indicates a nervous
prostration or depression. A white tongue
is diagnostic simply
of the feverish
gn P Y condition
with perhaps a sour stomach. When
it is moist and yellowish blown it
shows disordered digestion. Dry and brown
Indicate a low state of the sys-
tom, possibly typhoid. When the tongue is
dry and red and smooth, look out for inflam-
mation, gastric or intestinal. When the
papilla: on the end of the tongue are raised
and very red we call it a strawberry tongue,
and that means scarlet fever. Sharp, point-
ed red tongue will hint of brain irritation or
inflammation, and a yellow coating indicates
liver derangement. When so much can be
gained from an examina$ion of the tongue,
how important it is that the youngest child
should be taught to put it out so that it can
be visible to the uttermost point iu the
throat! -Dr. Julia Homes Smith, in New
York Ledger.
What a Woman Should Weigh.
A woman whose height is '
Should Should
Weigh Weigh
Ft. In. Pounds Ft. In. Founds
5 0 .118 5 5 139
5 1 l'34 5 6 143
5 2 •128 5 7 148
5 3
5 4
.I30 5 8 158
138 5 9 158
This table is for women between 20 and 45
years of age. After that they become heavi-
er. A woman should weigh but little less than
11 man in proportion 10 her height. The bust
9f a perfectly formed woman should measure
ten inches more than her waist. If the waist
Is laced in smaller than this the abdomen is
pressed down and the bosom up, causing both
to billow Out to an unnatural size and com.
pressing the waist too much for either health -
or beauty. -Pittsburg Dispatch.
Diminutive -Marriage Fee.
A magistrate at Watkinsville, Ga., receiv-
ed four silver dimes as a marriage fee last
reek. The bridegroom, a youth of 18, said
it was all he could afford. The bride was a
4 STUN' GOOSE.
It wait 0,' very Warta Sabi,atil after-
noon, and the door:bf Ole parish `
kirk in tint little hamlet of D--,^..
Watt etendlug widia apete to; .adraltsaa
eaugh air 'as poeeible, While the
eerlapp Was proceeeling a stray $apse,
al .ark ' inquisitive turn, of mind,
thrust its head in at the door, peered
cautioitsly about,
an at length
stripped fairly inside the building.
Now, the seate of the church were
so arranged that the door could riot
be seen by anyone save the minister
and the precentor. The latter a
time what irreverent and light.
minded young wan, eeewed highly
tickled at the idea of a goose attend-
ing service, and grinned and winked
at hie chums in a manner highly
displeasing to the graver portion of
the worshippers, to whore the
cause of his mirth was unknown,
The minister, on the other hand,
was somewhat irritated by the in•
trusion of the bird, and called to the
beadle :-"John, I say John, put
out the goose." Honest John
straightforward arose from his seat,
stacked up the isle to the precentor's
desk, and grasping that astonished
young wan by the shoulder, ex-
claimed : i"Cows awe' cot' ma
wan ; dae ye no' hear what tl,e
minister says?"
• MOST INTENSE.
Mrs. E. Harwood, 23 Mose Side,
Blackburn, London, Eug., suffered along
time with acute sciatica. The pain wag
moat intense, and she was tumble to
obtain relief until she applied St. Jacob's
Oil four times, when she was completely
cured.
Wagon Shop and Business for
Sale or Rent,
A SPLENDID OPENING. -For sale or rent,
the carriage shop and business in the Village of
Winthrop, at present owned and occupied by the
undersigned. The shop is frame with a comfort-
able dwelling house attached. 'there is also a
good cider mill and d stable. There is one fifth
of an acre of land. A good business is being done
and there is a blacksmith Oho, In connection
close by. This property and business will be
sold er rented cheap, as the proprietor has had
to retire oll account of ill -health. A steady,
pushing man can du a good business and make
money. Address Winthrop P. 0., or apply on
the premises to IVH. HORSEY. 052-51
FOR SALE.
THE SUBSCRIBER offers for sale four eligible
Building Lots (routing on Albert Street; has
two fronting on Rnttenbury Street; either en
bloc or In separate lots, to suit purchasers. For
further particulars apply to the undersigned. -E.
DiNSLLY, Clinton. 382
New -Blacksmith Shop
GEORGE TIIOWIIILI. has opened out a gen•
era, Blacksmith and Repair Shop in the
building lately occupied by Mr. Gouley, opposite
Fair's lumber yard, Albert street, Clinton, Ont.
Blacksmith and Iron Work in all its branches.
Horse -Shooing promptly attended to and satin•
faction guaranteed. The public are invited to
call before ordering any class of work in the
above lines.
497-tf GEORGE TROWHiLL.
SALE BILLS. -The
News -Record has un-
surpassed faili ties for
turning out first-class
work at low rates. A
free advertisement in
The News Record with
every sot of sale bills.
•
NOTICE.
The undersigned being necessarily absent from
town for some time, has left his books and
acconnts with MANNiNa S. SCOTT, 10 whom pay-
ments may be made.
JOHN WiSEMAN.
FOR FIRST CLASS,
HAIRCUTTING AND SHAVING.
Go to A. E. EVANS, FASHIONABLE
BARBER, 2 doors east of NEws-RECORD of-
fice. Special attention given to LADIES
AND CHILDREN'S haircutting,
POMPADOUR HAIRCUTTING A SPECIALTY
J. C. STEVENSON,
Furniture Dealer, &c.
THE LEADING UNDERTAKER AND
FUNERAL DIRECTOR.
Opposite Town Hall, - Clinton, Ont
WATCHES!
Waltham, Elgin, Illinois, Columbus, Seth
Thomas,
and Rockford -new, model.
Q.1'All these makes in key and stein winders.
Also pendant sot watches,
J. BIDDLECOMBE, CLINTON.
FARM TO LET
That excellent grass farm at present occupied
by Mr. Isaac Rapson, well known as the Dods -
worth farm, being north half of lot 36, 9th con„
Hutton, containing 85 acres. It is situated on
the Base Line, 2, miles from Summerhill and 6
miles from Manchester. Is well watered and
particularly adapted for pasturage. Has good
dwelling house, barn and shod. The lessee can
have privilege of plowing after harvest with
accommodation for man and horses. Possession
given March, 1892. For further particulars apply
by letter or personally to
MRS. JANE DODSWORTH, Kiloton.
057 ti er 0. A. HARTT, 5
ALLAN LINE
ROYAL MAIL STLAMSHIIPS.
Cheap Excursions to Europe.
EVERY WEEK
Montreal and Quebec,
To Derry and Liverpool.
CABIN $50 to $80, According to location of
Staterooms.
Intermediate and Steerage at low rates.
NO CATTLE CARRIED.
STATE
'ALLAN LINE
LINE. STEAMSHIPS.
SERVICE OF
NEW YORK AND GLASGOW
via Londonderry,:ovary Fortnight,
CAAIN, 835 and upwards. Return, $66 and
upwards.
Steerage at lowest rates,
Apply to H de A ALLAN, Montreal
or A. O. PAT'TISON or WM. J AOKSON, Clinton .
BOY WANTED.
Good smart boy wanted, to Learn general black.
0•Mtsaranfttlee .:x•;cm tern, za.. a PPt3 8'; . kifood-openinRt f rethe righttems=bgy=:
e Opposite Falr'e Lumber Yard,
Albert Street, Clinton.
r lee
Enjoy I
PICOTTIS
of pure Cog i.lvee 011 with Byers
phosphite- of Lime and Soda- la
almost a3- Wettable 8s Milk,
A MARVELLOUS FLESH PRODUCER
It la indeed, and the Ilttle term and
lassies who take cold easily, mar be
fortified against a cough that might
prove sSrloue, by taking Scott's
Erttulsion after ihetr meals during
the winter season.
Beware of t>ut atitutions and imitations.
SCOTT 84 soviN., t3elievtne.
Di:MS 00 U G li S:,: Qp w s,
21-1.g E; ES.E ETe• •
Cures Suras, Cate, Piles in their worst
form Swellings, Erysipelas, Inll
lion, !Prost fines, C'l",pped Elands and
nil Skin Diseases.
Hirst PAIN EXTERMINATOR
-Cl'ItKS-
LunsbagarSoiatien, Rheumatism, Nur-
ralgte Toothache, Pains in
every form.
By all dealers. Wholesale by 1'. F. Dailey & Co
;IUMPHREYS'
Dn. Hoen'aaEYs' SPECIFICS are scientifically and
carefully prepared prescriptions ; used for many
years in private practice with suecess,andforover
thirty years used by the people. Every single Spe.
ei11p is a special euro for the disease named.
These Specifics cure without drugging, Purg-
ing or reducing the system, and are 3n fact and
deed the sovereign rum edi ea of the world.
LIST OF rmSCIPAL NOS. CORES. meas.
1 Fevers, Congestion, inflammation... 2
Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Colic..
Crying Colic, or Teething of Infants .2.2
1Diarrhea, of Children or Adults.... .2
Dysentery, Griping BnlousColic..., .2
Cholera ill orbits, ,Vomiting .2
7 Coughs, Cold Bronchitis .2
N. Neuralgia, Toothache, Fnceache.2
Headaches, Sick lieadaebe, Vertigo .2
10 Dyspepsia, Bilious Stomach .2
11 Suppressed or Painful Periods2r�
12 Whites, too Profuse Periods .�L
1 Difficult Breathing
1 Salt Rheum,
roup Cough,Erysipelas, Eruptions. .2.
1 Rheumatism, Rheumatic Pains.2
l0
Fever an Ague, Chills, >llalaria.5
17 1. Iles, Blind or Bleeding 5
1 Catarrh, Influenza, Cold in the Head .5
2 Whooping Cough. Violent Coughs. .5
2 General Debility,PhysicalWw.kness .5
2 Kidney Disease 5
2 Nervous Debility 1.0
3 Ilrivary Wealcness, Wetting Bed.5
32 Diseases of thoiloart,Palpltatlon 1.00
Sold by Druggists, or sent poetpald on receipt of price.
Da Huopuaays' DlAuee., (194 pagoe) richly bound In cloth
and gold, MA 'Lao 1001
IIQiirIIRF.YS' MM. CO., 111 k Ilia lYtitl.u, St., SowYor .
SPECIFICS■
WELLS, ttCIII.R.0SO Co. A.eeta t.s
MONTREAL.
is D
Regulates the Stomach,
Liver and'Bowels, unlocks
the Sec retions,Pu riff esthe
'Blood and removes all im-
purities from a Pimple to
theworst Scrofulous Sore.
BLOOD
;• CURES •;--
DYSPEPSIA. BILIOUSNESS:
CONSTIPATION, HEADACHE
SALT RHEUM. SCROFULA.
HEART BURN. SOUR STOMACH
DIZZINESS. DROPSY.
RHEUMATISM. SKIN DISEASES
BITJ
Fillt2E.AAITS •
WORM POWDEi S.
Aro pleasant to talo. Contain their own
Purgative. Ii a safe, sum, and effectuiJ
destroyer of worms in Children or Adultr
-11V THE --
r
-
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•