Clinton New Era, 1892-04-22, Page 71/4
Joint Afietta
Of St.Allar-y's, Ont.
A Great Sufferer from
:Dyspepsia
Perfectly Cured by
Hood's Sarsaparilla
The best stomach tonics 'known to
medical science are so happily com-
bined in Hood's Sarsaparilla that it
cures Indigestion, and DyspeP4ia in its
severest forms, when other medicines
fail. In many cases Hood's Sarsapa-
rilla seems to possess a magical touch,
FO quick .and so gratifying the relief.
Read the followiag from an aged and
respected citizen of St. Mary's, Ont.:
"I am very glad to give this testimonial as
to what Hood's Sarsaparilla has done for me.
1 suffered very much with dyspepsia. I have
been taking medicine
For 25 Years
nid-i nuver had anything; do me as-nnuell
good as Hood's Sarsaparilla. Every symp-
tom -of-41m dyspepsia has entirely disap-
peared iMd I feel that I cannot praise the
medicine too highly. I
Eat Better, Sleep Bettor
:snit feel stronger than I have for nteny
jars. I have taken six bottles of Hood's
Sarsaparilla bought of Mr. Sanderson, the
runist." JOHN AIKENS.
CORDIAL ENDORSEMENT.
Front Mr. Sanderson, the Druggist.
I know Mr. Aikens to be a sizictly honest,
r' ratthtforw-ard man, and take much pleasure
P,iiiyinr to the truth of the testimonial
gives above." 1?. G. SANDERSON, Drug-
. t. Que:,t1 Street, St. Mary's; Ontario.
HOOD'S Pi LLB, the best after-C.inner
rs+ii t (14,erilim, prevent constipation.
SUN SHINE.
I never like to see a man a-'rastlin with the
dumps
'Cause in the game of life he doesn't always
catch the trumps ;
But I can always cotton to a free and easy
cuss
As takes his dose, and thanks the Lord it
isn't any wuss.
There ain't no use o'kicking' and swearin'
at your luck,
Yer can't correct the trouble more'n yon
can drown a duck,
Remanher when beneath the load your
afferirf bead ieshowe'cl; —
That God'll sprinkle sunshine in the trail
of every cloud.
If you should see a fellow -man with troub-
le's flag unfurled,
And looking like he didn't have a friend in
all the world,
Go up and slap him on the back and holler
"how'd you do,"
And grasp his hand so warm he'll know he
has a friend in you.
Then ax him what's a hurtin"im, and
laugh his cares away
And tell him that the darkest night is just
afore the day,
Don't talk in graveyard palaver, but say it
right out loud,
That God'll sprinkle sunshine in the trail of
every cloud.
This World at beet is but a hash of pleasure
and of pain,
Some days are bright and sunny Ind some
all sloshed with rain,
And that's just how it ought to be for when
the clouds roll by
We'll know juet how to 'preciate'the bright
and smiling sky,
So learn to take it as it comes, and don't
sweat at the pores
Because the Lord's opinion doesn't coincide
with yours!
But always keep rememberin' when cares
your path enshroud
That God has lots of sunshine to spill be-
hind the cloud,
SCIENC,k.1. AMO PROUFEES3
,14-11kflESTINO PARAGRAPHS QW -LEP
FROM VARIOUS SOURCES.
HTHE ICI.;,:iNT.01.1 NEW
EitifAKS OJ VSSUION,
CARIOATI/IIES OF THe LATEST FA5H-
iONAII1Lg STYLE OP COSTUME.
Hamilton Inventor'e Storage Hatter:
for Which Large Claims arc Made—A
New Cheap Alloy--Pilterlug Sewage—A."
Electrie Flagmaii,•Suustruck Steel.
Mr. Thos. Laing Kay, of Hamilton
secured a patent on Auguat 215th last, on a
storage battery, for which the following
claims • are made: Each individual plate
after being filled rith electrolytic com-
pound, ill covered with a perforated sheet
ef lad, rubber or equivalent material that
will resist the action of the acid to prevent
the compound from falling out of the plates.
The combine.tiens_with the cells of pro-
jecting lugs made to be :secured to hori-
zontal bare, *aid bare provided with upward
lugs so that when two or more batteries
are placed side by side the lugs of the bars
come together, and are secured by a
rectangular clamp with binding screw and
a rubber washer, interposed between the
point of the !screw anti the lug. Perforated
rubber plates or the equivalent non -con-
ducting substance forming the non -conduct-
ing projections on each sideinterposed
between the positive and the negative
electrolytic plates to prevent eaid plates
from buckling and coming in metallic con-
tact.
Practical Leather Waterproofing.
A much sought desideratum, namely, a
really practicable method of waterproofing
leather and raw hides, is churned to have
been practised by an Aware -Hungarian
chemist, with much suecteee, his method be-
ing to impregnate the material with a gela-
tine solution, combined with some mineral
salt to coagulate the gelatine in the pores.
An effective mixture for producing the de-
sired result is found to be the following :
Twelve hundred parts water, fifteen parte
gelatine, and five parts potash bichrornate ;
or 1,500 parts water, fifty parts gelatine,
and thirty parts potash bichrornate. The
temperature of the solution may vary from
50° F. to the boiling point. When the bi-
chromate percentage is small the liquor is
mixed cold, and the leather or hide is im-
mersed for a period of some twenty-four
hours. As the proportion Approaches the
point of saturation the temperature must
approximate more nearly to boiling and the
time of immersion be reduced until it be-
come* momentary.
,•••••••IT.,...111,•••
RA
April 22 1892,
00,0 IHILLWATTEE
Paathere and Ears Done Up In a Way
Thet Flakes One Laugh at First Sight --
flat They Are Sahli to Ite Light, Waren
sad Waterproof.
Tho dresses made entirely of feathers and
furs, which come parts of the wardrobes
of the Princes? of Wales, Mme, Car-
not and the German. Emprese, have
not eaaaped the art of the carieatulist.
A New Cheap Alloy.
What is claimed to be a most valuable
alloy has recently been brought to notice,
the constituents of the same being copper
and antimony, in the proportion of 100 to
6. The process of production consists in
melting the copper and subsequently adding
the antimony, and, when both of these are
melted and intimately mixed, fluxing the
mass in the crucible, with an addition of
wood ashes, magnesium, and carbonate of
lime, which has' the important effect of re-
moving porosity and increasing the deusity
of the metal when cast. The alloy can be
rolled, forged, and soldered in the same
manner as gold, which it very closely re-
sembles when polished, the gold color being
unchanged even after long exposure to am-
monia and acid vapors in the atmosphere.
The cost of this alloy in the ingot is said te
be about 25 cents per pound.
Filtering sewage.
After a series of experiments, extending
over several years, a plan has been adopted
tor the purification of the sewage of Paris,
which now flows into the Seine, to the
"gteAt-detrffinent
Under this plan an iron aqueduct will
convey the drainage from the city to a
point near the forest of St. Germain.
Thence the sewage will flow through a ma-
sonry conduit pierced with holes, through
which the liquid will escape upon the land
where required. When distributed the
water in the sewage sinks through several
inches of soil and is conveyed back to the
Seine.
By this meo.na an enormous quantity of
drainage can be easily treated, and the
water, after filtration, is as clear as crystal.
Experiments with this plan were begun in
1876, near Paris.
OF FEMININE INTEREST.
The co-operative cooking club of
Junction City, Kap., is a greatsuccess,
and begins its secondyear with forty-
four well satisfied families. Over $5.-
000 wag expended lastyear in table sup-
plies, but fully $2,500 was Saved for the
families as a whole.
Kittie Wilkins, of Idaho, a profes-
sional dealer in horses, is a young and
pretty woman, with 'a profusion of
golden hair. She has bred and sold
stock for the past six years and visits
all the large cities. She is queen of
stock dealers, both in judgment and
inanagement of horses.
A co-operative home for single wo-
men is ta be started in Vienna. Each
will have a share in the housekeeping
on certain days. _ One hundred persons
sue wanted at the start. An income
of from $5 to $7 per month from each
one is expected to pay expenses and
accumulate a fund which will pay for
the home.
The recent death in London of Mrs
Terry suggests thoughts of the remark-
able family of actors Of whom she was
the mother. Frederick and Charles
Terry are clever members of "the pro-
fession;" Mrs Morris, nee Florence
Terry, made her mark on the stage be.
fore she retired upon her marriage;
Kate Terry on her reputatiOn with
Pechter at the Lyceum, and is now
Mrs Arthur Lewis, while Ellen and
Marion Terry's fame exceeds that of
their brothers and sisters. The father
of them all is still live.
OH, WHAT A COUGH
Will you heed the warning. The signal
perhaps of the sure approach of that more
terrible disease Consumption. Ask your -
naives if yon can afford for the sakes.of SSW:
ing 50o., to run the risik and do nothing for
it. We know frond et perience that Shiloh's
Cure 'will cure your cough. It never
6 -Doe -4,91
An Electric Flagman.
The well-known English engineer, Sir
William Arrol, has devised an electric sig-
nal to prevent accident to workmen en-
gaged in repairing railroads.
It consists of a portable electric battery,
to which is connected a bell for giving notice
of approaching trains. A soleplate and
spring it attached to the ride of the rail,
and the spring is depressed by the flanges
of the passing wheels, closing the circuit
and ringing the bell. As the workmen con-
tinue their work the wire is run out, so that
it is poesible to get everything from the
track before the train retches the spot.
The inventor refuses to patent the inven-
tion, being desirous of having it universally
adopted by the railroads of the world.
awestruck steel.
According to Iron, one of the most trust-
worthy of the English technical journals,
the light of the sun and the moon have •
very deleterious effect upon edge-tOola,
Knives, drills, scythes and sickles assnme a
blue color if they are exposed for some time
to the light and heat of the eun ; the sharp
edge disappears and dm tool is rendered
absolutely timeless until it is retempered.
A similar prejudicial effect has beldn ex-
ercised by moonlight. An ordinary eaw is
inserted to haVe been put Gut of shape in •
tingle night by exposure to the light of tlis
MoDE.
A New Idea In Puddling.
An English metallurgist has just patented
an improved process of puddling.
The improvement omelets in melting the
pg -iron in a cupola and the transfer of the
molten. metal to the puddling furnace"
where the boiling is done. A small portion
sf scrap ie melted with the iron, or a little
manganese is added to the melted kelt.
IS Hi claimed that the output of a pud-
dling furnace ean be greatly increased by
this pleat.
A Substitute far
A French manufacturer has discovered a
'substitute for celluloid, which he has named
hyaline, which poseesses the very great ad•
rootage of being non -inflammable. It is
composed sof colophon., lac, copal, Dominant
resin, essential oil of turpentine, and gust
sotton, and is described esti grainless, odor-
less, transparent, and tenacious.
Traesparent Drawing Paper.
If it is desired to Make drawing paper
iranslaarent, the readier to trace a design,
wet it with benzine; it must be. kept con-
stantly moistened, as when drv it becomes
tgain opaque. ' The benzine will not injure
'my paper or ordinary print or fabric, but
>I' course the sketching mast be rapidly
Ione.
Th. New London Tunnel.
The contraot for a tunnel 1,900 feet long
Ind 20 feet in diameter tinder the Thames,
n London, has been awarded to the English
arm that is now constructing ebb Hudroa
River tunnel, in New York. The seam'
sill cost &early $5.000,000.
BEAUTY IN Fl7R.
theae dreams the claim is made that,
the feathers mid furs being arranged as na-
turally as possible, the covering formed is
at once light, warm and waterproof—not an
oIIJageous demand when the natural con-
s of the fowl and beasts are remora.
THE HED SURGEON
Of the Lubon Medical Company is now at
Toronto, Oanada, and may be connulted
either in person or by letter -on all chronio
fliseases peouliar to man: Men, young,old,
or middle-aged, who find thenssolves nerv-
ous, weak and exhausted, who are broken
down from excess or overwork, resulting in
ninny of the following symptons : Mental
depression, prematnre old age, loss of vital-
ity, loss of memory , bad dreams, diusness
of eight,palpitation of the hearte emissions,
lack of energy, pain in the kidneys, head-
ache, pimples on the face cr body, itching
or peculiar sensation about the scrotum,
wasting of the organs, dizziness, sPecks be-
fore the eye, twitching of the musoles, eye-
lids, and elsewhere, bashfulness, deposits in
the urine, loss of will power, tenderness of
the ecalp and spine, weak and flabby rens-
clee, desire to eleep, failure to be rested by
sleep, constipation, dullness of hearing, loss
of voice, desire for solitude, excitability of
temper, sunken eyes surrounded with lead -
encircle, oily looking *kin, etc., are all sym-
ptoms of nervous debility that lead tolinsan-
ity and death unless eured. The spring or
vital force having lost its tension every
function wanes in consequence. Those who
through abuse committed in ignorance may
be permanently cured. Send your addrese
for book on all diseases peculiar to man.
Books sent free sealed. Heart disease, the
symptons of which are faint spells, purple
es, numbness, palpitation, ,skip beats, hot
flushes, rush of blood to the head, du I pain
in the heart with beats strong, rapid and
irregular, the second heart quicker than the
first, pain about the breast bone, etc., can
positively be cured. No cure, no pay. Send
for book. Address M. V. Lubon, 24 Mac-
donell Ave., Toronto, Canada. Jan. 1, 92.
RELIGIOUS SERVICE IN A GAM-
BLING HALL.
---
The most uncharacteristic thing of Creede,
and one which was Bret Hartish in every
detail, was the service held in Watrous and
Bennigan's gambling -saloon. The hall is
a very long one with a saloon facing the
street, and keno tables and over a dozen
other games in the gambling -room beyond.
When the doors between the two rooms are
held back they made a yery large hall. A
clergyman asked Watrous if he could have
the use of the gambling -hall on Sunday
night. The house, was making about IMO
an hour, and Watroue calculated that balf
'an hour would be as much as he could afford
towards thecollection. He mounted a chair
and said, "Boys, this gentleman wants to
make a few remarks to you of a religous
nature. All the games at that end of the
hall will stop, and you want to keep still."
The clergyman stood on the platform of
the keno outfit, and the greater part of the
men took the seats arouud it, baying with
the marking cards scattered over the table
in front of them, while the men in the sa-
loon crowded the doorway from the swing-
ing doors to the bar, and looked on with
curious and amused faces. At the back of
the room the roulette wheel clicked and
the ball rolled. The men in this part of
the room who were playing lowernd their
voices, but above the voice of the preacher
one could hear the clinking of the silver and
the chips, and the vdice of the boy at tha
wheel calling, "seventeen and black, and
twenty-eight and black, again and — keed
the ball rolling, gentlemen —and four and
a itevein the middle of
the hell and two electric lights; the men
were crowded closely around this stove,
and the lamps shone through the smoke
on the tanned upturned faces and on the
white excited face of the preacher above
them. There was the most excellent
order, and the collection was very large.
I asked Watrous how much he lost by the
interruption.
"Nothing," he said, quickly, anxious to
avoid the appearance of good; "I got it all
back at the bar."—Harper's Weekly.
THE INDIAN CHIEF STYLE.
The second illustration represents what
may be called the Indian Chief style.
There are eagle feathers in the crown, and
long streamers of black rooster's tail fea•
theta depend from the shoulders. The
arttie are encased in a sort of bird chagreen,
verv hendsome and becoming, though some-
--whitracrely; - -This-cost eine-de preciTifirly-Up==
lier1ate for belligerent mothers-in-law of a
*gar oast of gountenance.
THE HUMAN OSTRICH.
dolt04ird illustration shows what can be
feather costomes for the advanoe-
meat ef sleigh Holing. It also makes an art -
to costume for women who never
at shopping is half so interestiug a
at whoa the .now is on the ground.
A MEATH ED HARMONY.
The last cat is an indication ef how
walnut who wear birds in their hate may
harrnmare the rest of their apparel so as t•
match the hat. It is true that the head is
that ef a duok, while the tail is that of a
pheasant, hint this may be taken luta proof
if the wearies considerateness for bird* in
P OT taking half of each of two instead of
the *bele of one. This costume Di excel-
Serttaal adapted for'. slimmer girl wlio has
suddenly, wakened up to find that she has
resohed the autumn of her life. As mien
in tkils cut she is on the lookout fer a kns
bait
Tit ter Tat.
ve)y—If I were to (tall you a liar I
▪ but speak the exit* troth.
arlits,—lifit you alni-ays were afraid
tke truth.
lits the Wings.
basito)...-There ill a critic ever
the Waldo.
kroliegLikei he Wet. We
1The 'Safest
AND niost powerful alterative is
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Young and
Ad are alike benefited by its use. For
the eruptive,
eases peculiar to
children nothing
else is so effective
ashitlhie sitma medicine,
'whileble flavor makes
4,1 ;
it easy to admin -
•y
little boy
had large scrofu-
, lours ulcers on his
" neck and throat
—St from which he
suffered terribly.
-- Two physicians
attended him, but he grew continually
worse under their cam and everybody
expected he would die. I had heard of
the remarkable cures effected by Ayer's
Sarsaparilla, and decided to have my
boy try it. Shortly after be began to
take this medicine, the ulcers com-
menced healing, and, after using several
bottles, •hie was entirely cured. He -is
now as healthy and Strong as any boy
of his age." — Willi= F. Dougherty,
Hampton, Va.
"In May last, my youngest child,
fourteen months old, began to have sores
gather on its head and body. We ap-
plied various simple remedies without
avail. The sores increased in number
and discharged copiously. A physician
was called, but -the storm continued to
multiply until in a few months they
nearly covered the child's head and body.
At last we began the use of Ayer's Sar-
saparilla. In a fevr days a marked
change for the better was manifest. The
sores assumed a more healthy condition,
the discharges were gradually dimin-
ished, and finally ceaffed altogether.
The child is livelier, its skin is bother,
and its appetite better than we have ob-
*erred /or months."—Frank M. Griffin,
Long Point, Tates.
"The formula of Ayer's Sarsaparilla
presents, for chronic diseases, of almoist
every kind, the beat remedy known to
the medical world."—D. 'M. Wilson,
M. D., Wigge, Arkansas.
Ayer's Sarsapariiia,
FESPARED Sr
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mau;
Price $1; six bottles, $8. Worth $5 a bottle.
Hillwattee is the Dame of a Black Tea,
blend of Indian and Ceylon, put op in Eng-
land. The English people are noted for
having the &nest Tea. We guarantee SU
weight in every paokage. Da'i's vet*
smooth and of meh flavor. You can only,
procure it from' us as we control the eale of
si iu Clinton, and our trade for this Teo
has increased very fast, far beyond wheat
we anticipated. We have just got a keels
supply. Try a package. - —
Fresh GROCERIES all in Stock
G.SW ALLOW
Have Wanted and Must Have
I HAVE
•
A full stook of D. M. p'erry's and Steel Bros Field and Garden SEEDS and CORN.
Full stook Field and Garden TOOLS. A few pieces of CROCKERY and GLASSWARE
which will be almost given away. Full stock of JEWELEItY, ITINWAR,E, HARD-
WARE, SCHOOL SUPPLIES, GROCERIES, CANNED GOODS, OILS, HARNESS
and all goods in connection with the Harness business. A WANT a continuation of
my present customers patronage and a few more if I can get them by honest dealing,—
to close up at 8 o'clock p. m.; to give every customer as much for fl as they can get any
place else; to take any kind of fares produce in exchange for goods from a pound of iron
to a load of grain. Hides and Furs for which I will pay cash. I MUST HAVE ett
my 1891 accounts settled by the 1st of May, at the latest. The balance of my Crockery
and Glassware will be sold or given away as soon as possible to tnake room for other
goods. Three more Robes to be sold this spring. I will give CrookeryTor Glassware to
s the value of 5 per cent on all accounts paid during March.
GEO. NEWTON - LONDESBORO
TO RENT OR FOIt SALE.
House to Let.
The elegant brick Cottage Residence, on On-
tario Street, west of the manse, lately occupied
by. Mr Wm. McGee. All conveniences. Large
garden. Clinton, Jan 19, 1892. H. HALE. 1 no.'
House to Let.
The subscriber offers to rent the cottage on
Huron St, at present occupied by Mr G. Leith-
waite, containing 6 rooms, hard and soft water
and all modern conveniences, Barn and fruit
trees on the'premise-i. MISS J. ROBINSON.
If you want to buy a first-class
Brick Store or a nice Dwelling.
House on easy terms, apply to
W. C. SEARLE, Clinton
House fo7 Sale or to Rent
House on corner of Rattenbury and Erie Sts.
containiug 7 rooms and good cellar, barn, hard
and soft water, good bearing orchard and all con-
veniences. Terms ea.y. Apply to JAS. SEEP -
PARD, Clinton, or T WS. TLPLING, 844 Butter
nut Street, Doti it
Property for Sale.
Tne frame house on Maple Street, Clinton, re..
contly occupied by and belonging kith° estate of
the late Hugh Bighorn, is offered for sale. It
consists of lj story dwelling, suitebie for ordi
nary family. Quarter acre lot. Hard and soft.
water, frame stable. Will be sold cheap. Am.ly
to H. HALE, Clinton, or ALEX. JANIIESON, Sea -
forth.
11111111111111111111
— - The Clinton New Era is
— the paper you want. Only —
— - $1 a year in advance. No
— better $ paper published —
For Sale or to Rent.
Those premises known as the Commercial Ho-
belrin-the-Towir-of--Olintiou,„-tegether- with—the
stabling and appurtenances. Also those premi-
ses in the Vile ge of Exeter, known as the Queens
Hotel and the Brick Store adjoining the hotel,and
used as a general store an c post office. These
desirable rroperties will be sold on easy terms -
For particulars apply to the proprietor. JOHN.
ROISSIER, Lot 6, Maitland Con , Colborne, Ben -
miller P.O. 52m 2-5
1-1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I I
FARMS FOR SALE.
Valuable Farm for Sale.
The North half of lot 30, 2nd concession Eas
Wawanosh. Apply to CAMERON, HOLT &
CAMERON, Goderich
Farni for Sale or to Rent.
A first-class grazing farm, beir g lot 22, con 11,
Goderich township, containing 80 acres, about
40 acres cleared. A never failing creek running
through the back of the form; frame house with
stone cellar, frame barn and stables near new,
and -a goo-d-well-noar the house.- -Situated 7 -of -a --
mile from Holmesville,and 4i miles from Clinton.
Also a Waggon Shop and Dwelling in the village
of Holmesville, a good business stand. For par-
ticulars apply to E. C. POTTER, Holmesville.
Farm for Sale.
Farm for sale.—Lot 12, in tee 6th concession of
the Township of Stanley, County of Huron, the
property of the late AIM Catherine Mitchell. 100
aores-80 acres cleared and free from stumps,snd
in good state of cultivation -20 acres of bush well
wooded with hardWood timber. The farm is
well watered, and there is a good fruit bearing
orchard Frame Dwelling house and barns.
Terme of payment can be made to suit the
convenience of the purchaser, a fair proportion
after purchase money may remain on mort-
gage ab a low rate of interest—For further
terms and particulars apply to the undersigned.
MANNING& SCOTT.
Clinton, 18 Jan. 1892 Barristers eto. Clinton.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Buggy for Sale.
Good second-hand buggy for sale, cheap. Ap-
ply to DR. WORTHINGTON, Clinton.
Shingles for Sale
I carry on hand & stock of first-elase Cedar
Shingles; twoqualities, which I will sell at every
low rate. Orders large or groan filled on the
shortest notice. Please give me a call,
W. RILEY. Londesboro. In3
CLINTON MARBLE WORKS.
COOPER'S OLD STAND,
Negt1 to Commercial Hotel.
This establisnment is in bull operation and all
orders tilled in the most satisfaetory way. Ceme-
tery and 'granite work a specialty. Prices as
reenonable as thole of any establishment
SEALE, HOOVER & SEALE, Clinton. Ina
Shingles and Lath for Stale.
Subscriber has purchased a large quantity of
No. 1. shingles. These shingles will be made to
order out of the very beet quality of north shore
cedar. All who want a first-class suingle will
find it to their advantage to ask for prices before
buying eisewhere. Orders large or man deliver-
ed at any station along the line.
W 0. WHITLEY, Londeeboro.
DO YOU WANT
A First-class Step or Long Ladder?
A Handy Wheelbarrow?
A Splendid Churn, or anything of like
nature? Then call on,W. SMITHSON, at
shop, No.7 Frederick St„ or E, Dinsley
Will be itt,Dinsley's corner every Saturday
afternoon
1 CURE FITS!
When I say I cure I do not mean merely to stop tlsora
for a time and then have them return again, I mean a
radical euro. I have made the disease of FITS, EPILKP
SY or FALLING SICKNESS a lifalong study. 1 warrant
my remedy to cure the worst cases. 1CCOUBC1 others have
falled le bo reason for not now receiving a cam Send at
once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of my infallible
remedy. Give EXPRESS and POST -OFFICE.
H. G. RgoT, M. 0.,...186 ADELAIDE ST.
WEST. TORONTO, ONT.
DUNN'S
BAK1N
POWDER
TBSEMPEERMIA4D
1 j4 C MYENSON,
—THE LEADING—
UNDERTAKER
—AND—
EMBALMER.
A FULL LINE OF
GOODS KEPI? 111 STOCK
The bestEmbalming Fluidused
Splendid Hearse,
ALBERT ST.,CLINTON
Residence over store.
OPPOSITE TOWN HALL
S. WILSON,
GENERAL DEALER IN TINWARE
HURON STREET, CLINTON
Repairing of all kinds promptly attend to rea
onehle rates. A trial solicited.
Butchering - Business
To the Public.
Subscriber having bought out the buffiness ins
succesefully conducted by Mr Conch, elicit
a continuance of the liberal patronage beetowe
on his predecessor. No pains or expense willies
spared to procure the very best meats, and °Pieta
will be promptly and carefully The busi-
ness will still be conducted at the same Maud sa
heretofore. Highest price paid for Bides, Sheep-
skins, dm.
JAMES A. YORD
NERVE
BEANS
=WE DEANS are a Dew &p-
oorer/ that ante the worst arm el
Nervous Debility, Lost View 104
Faahuil Mmboed; mamas tht
imbues. of boa or alai coma
by ove•work,or mizzx
oases of soma.
whitely ottres the meet obstinate men whir ell
TREATMENTS tam faiiedievenionglens.
gleam sant per w._4! rre ail or Or ems
remits of rice AMES
oo., Toronto. jar" WrtsigorceralgHe*. Sobl
Clinton by J. 11. Combe.
If YOU WISH
T° Advertise
Anything
Anywhere
AT Any time
WRITE '00
GEO. P. ROWELL & CO
No. to Spruce Street,
NEW YORK.
e,