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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton New Era, 1893-05-12, Page 6Mity 1% 1893 :. SHOPS BiUeher' Shop sMrT "r�i . BLOOK, QPPIXHTE THE PQST Qfr'lICE; WANTON The undersigned having Opppened Out in the aosires c©tate tsbiexnd the verychoisMea, he keep age outside vt himself, he is to a position to sell. gie very. Closest prices., He will at ail tints be prepared to lay the Itig�lest market prize for Export Cattle. lllm1'C$E HOGS always wanted for txport, Give .a rail. ,%ROBT. F ITZSIDIUNS Rf •ST, BUTCHER SHOP tnosticordially to thank all those who llave,tvoreti us with their patronage since we cmpueneetl. lq business, and to assure them and the µblip generally that we are in bettor shape th ever to cateer to their wants, having added a proved refrigerator and other conveniences o 81op. 1Y,HEATLEY & FINCH 1104... MEAT Market rSINESS : CHANGE. ,The undersigned desires to intimate that he plan bought out theintorest of Mr Conch, in the ut sin business lately oarried on under the ply abs g tte y Mie pf.F RD & COUCH. He will continuo the ame at the old stand, and trusts by givingthe i,`oloseet and most careful attention to the uei- • ,,,riees' ptrafghttorcieheecIntStrd and courteous treatment :raihdre and a•f iraharrt! ;ely labilepatronage. dere carefully and promptly filled JAMES A. FORD . antral Butcher Shop finbseriberdesires to thank the public general- f, eneral. b for the patronage bestowed upon him; and tdlie same time to say that he is now in a bet rposition than ever to supply the wants of all. • As he gives personal attention to all the details of the business customers can rely on their orders ,being promptly and satisfactorily filled. Rietmotto is "good meat at reasonable prioes.': Cc rice Sausage, Poultry, &c., in season. Lash paid for Hides, Skins, &o. JOHN SCRITTON, Albert St., Clinton. Flour and Feed Stores Hour; Feed. ,& Seed Store The undersigned having purchased -the busi- ness of Messrs Walker & Hanley, desires to inti- mate that he will keep on hand the very best _FLOUR and FEED Ox ail kinds, also the choicest variety of Clover, Timothy & Small Seeds, • Which will be sold at close margins for cash. ALT also kept on hand. He will also keep a choice variety of all kinds of TEAS, which con- sumers will And to be excellent value. J. W. HILL, HURON ST., CLINTON. COOK'S FLOUR, PEED & SEED STORE We have in stook -se. choice assortment of Seeds, such as CLOVER, TI1%IORTHY, MILLET, s repels d for Farm or Garden i e: Flour and Feed of all kinds D. COOK, CLINTON. BANKS The Nelsons Bank. Incorporated by Act of Parliamont,1856. CAPITAL, $2,000,000. REST FUND, - $1,000,000 HEAD OFFICE, MONTREAL. J. H. R. MOLSON Pros. 1*. WOLFERSTAN THOMAS, General Manager Iiote8 rt'xounted, Collections made, Draft issued, Sterling and American ex- change bought and eold at lowest current rates. Interest allowed on deposits. • EF ARMEELS . Monoyadvanced to farmers on their own note with no or more endorsers. No mortgage required as ecurity. H. C.BREWER, Manager un r y 61E0, D. McTAGGAI T; BANKER, ALBERT ST, - CLINTON. A general Banking Business ti ansacted NOTES DISCOUNTED Draftsjissned. Interest allowed on deposits. FARRAN & TISDALL BA1vKERS, CLINTON. ONT Advances male to farmers on their own notes at low rates of interest. A general tanking Business transacted Inte"e et allowed on deposits. ale Notes bought J. P. TISDALL, Manage NERVEREANs pre a new dire cure the wont owes of bear Lost. Vigor aria rectove the begin taloa caused or ' the won e>F Mr Remedy 1r1),tiJ;Illl i ijw 014010 VOSIRMIlfttioll, VOW* upelorre Throat.id alt mei1 ban ,t Guarantee. For a .Lara} Bide,. eek cr V4 ahfl0h'i1 forgo, PInsterwillftirpgeetathfa ao, _C.ii SHILOH'S VITA 11 R. t "Eatfoh'aVitalt�zer'SAP•61Dosh'Lae. 1 cons!der # the Du i remedy fora vebauaasd eys tem I ever Wed." For D pepsi LIvoror faneq t roublle it excels. Price a 8. " There you , : taste? Try this Remedy. It will positively relieve and Cure you. Price 5° ata, This Injector for its eucoeeetul treatment 18 furnishodfree. Remember, Shtloh'sRemedlea are sold on a guarantee to give satisfaction. The Missouri, Kansas and Texas pessenger train No. 8, was held up at Briar Creek, in the Indian Territory, at 8.30 o'olook last Tuesday night by six armed men with Win- chesters, supposed to be the notorious Henry Starr gang. The plucky express messenger refused to give up the oombinatioq,although a revolver was held at his head and a knife to his throat. The passengers includ- ed President Martin, of the Kansas City, Pittsburg and Ga f Railway, and party on a tour of inspeoti n. The pabsengers were relieved of everyt ing from pooketbooks to pocketknives. r� ACUTE or CHRONIC, Can be cured by the use of SCOTT'S EMULSION of pure Cod Liver Oil, with the Hypophosphites of Lime . and Soda. A feeble stomach takes kindly to it, and its continued use adds flesh, and makes one feel strong and well. "U A UTION . "—Beware of rubotitates. Genuin e prepared by Scott do Bowne. Belleville.. Sold by all druggists, SCo. and $3.00. jFood Digestion Complexion are all intimately connected -- practically inseparable.. Though the fact is often ignored, it is nevertheless true that a good complexion is an impossibility without good digestion, which in turn depends on good food.' There is no more common cause of indigestion than lard. Let the bright housekeeper use % sr, �*1 COTT O}ENE .C_ G� fit' The New Vegetable Shortening and substitute for lard, and her cheeks, with those of her family, will be far more likely to be '• Like a rose in the snow." Co'rroLENR is clean, delicate, healthful and popular. Try it. Made only by N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., Wellington and Ann Streets; MONTREAL. • HONEST HELP FOR MEN PAY NO MORE MONEY TO QUACKS. A sufferer from Errors of Youth, Nervous Debility and Lost Vigor, was restored to health in such a remarkable manner, Iffier all else had failed that he will send the means of cure FREE to all fellow sub. facers. Address, with stamp, MN. COWARD MARTIN, (TEACHER) BOX 143, DETROIT, UICH. RWILLIAMS' INK ILLS ALE FOR EOPLE Are a BLOOD BUILDER and NERVE TONIC. They enpply in condensed form 4r.r. the sub- stances needed to enrich the Blood and to rebuild the Nervus, tons making them a certain and speedy cure for all diseases arising from impoverished blood, and shattered nerves, such as par- alysis, spinal dig - eases, rheumatism, eoiatiea,loss of mem- ory, erysipelas, pal- pitation of the heart, sorofula,chlorosisor green sioknose, that tirefeeling,tbat affoo ' so many, eto. They have a gpeoira action on the sexual system of both mon and womon;•rostoring lost vigor. WEAK MEN (young and old), suffering from mental worry, overwork, Insomnia, excesses, or self-abuse, should take these PSLns. They will restore lost energies, both physical and mental. SUFFERING WOMEN afflicted with the weaknesses popular to their eox, such as suppression of the periods, bearing down pains weak back ulcerations, etc., will find these pills an unfailing euro. PALE AMG SALLOW GIRLS should take these Pills. They onrieh the blood, restore health's roses to the ohooka and oor- treot All irregularities. MA'AM or 1rl'rrATrorm, These - PIM' are 004 bis all dealers only in 1:o:ea bossing our usatbie-rk or wilI be sent ,'y mall, poet paid, onri skuarprl♦ee-400CiitI box or6tot son, ai. '..t ` 1 :a lt..' ,' ED. CO. , —17 s''iMr roll Jg#. .'CLJ.NTQN 1114W E. know amp proferiiiional mon, t hard doctors, for UR LETTER BOX. �t , who had mighty wiggling to We wish it distin tl understood that we wggle into grewith alaaced do not hold ourselves responsible tor any- financial abash? Does his memory serve tiling which appears under this heading. liim so badly that he cannot recall instano- - es, legal, medical, clerical, mercantile, me. NOT DEAD, BUT SLEEPING, ghanioal, banking establishments, or any- OH!thing else, of failure, banlsreptoy, suspen- To the editor of Ilio Clinton Now Era ` sions,,assignment%, chattel mortgages, cher- DEAne Sia, ---I must confess to . y.ou and iii sales, or oven midnight Sits, all bearing your nninerons readers, that, in relation to, me out in proving the fallacy of snob la that annoying question under disoussio>k ridiculous, one-sided argument, as he would try to stuff into my brain. for some time in your•paper, I have, in a Goderioh Township Farmer is anxious to measure, lost my bearings. As nearly as I know to what I aseign nay own straitened can remember, the last notes 1 reek were oircumstanoea. Weil, air, I can imagine somewhere near a Goderich township grave- how welcome he would receive any state• yard; some poor, unfortunate fellow farm. went, and how loud and prolonged would er had succeeded (mere by bodily strength be his "amen," were I to say, "to Ottawa." and awkwardness than by systematic dig• And yet he will persist in being cool enough ging) to shovel for himself a hole. And, I to think that we would be ditto to believe sir, judging of his extreme poverty, as his assertion, that the cause of his own lay expressed by hie digging outfit, I act- in that direction. Not much, I vow. And Wally fell ander the impression that while we do not care to assign any great some of his more wealthy neighbors, proportion of our own diffioulty, to our would have . to fill that hole, after the col- lapse; but, imagine my surprise, when, by some kind of miraculous interposition, (pink pills, I guess) he has either risen from the dead or awakened from a very stapify- ing sleep, for no man, properly awake, could set up such a babel of argument as decorated ono page of your paper last week. 1 have another confession, Mr Editor, to make to yourself. I feel, to some extent, the unfairness to myself that has oharao- terized this discussion. If Goderioh Town- ship Farmer requires two or three letters to my one, to hold his point of question, had you not better run in an extra edition or give him all the breeze he needs. a Your tender, pitying sympathies must have flown out profusely towards the poor fellow, when his life blood had so nearly chilled, and his pulse beats ran so low, when, hum- ble as a little child, he gratefully conde- scended to meet me upon one common platform, and call it "Only a misunder- standing." For my personal benefit I wish to refer, in brief, to his letter under that heading. I would much rather have seen my reply to that in print, but as that is now out of the question, I shall have to content myself as best I may. I beg to advise Goderich Township Farm- er that my brain is not quite so stupidly bemuddled, as to admit of a palming off upon the public such a confoundedly mean interpretation of our differing views as he would so meekly sum up in that heading. So far as I am concerned, there was no misunderstanding about it. I took him at what he said, and not at what he tries to say he meant, presuming, of course that he was responsible for what he said, (and I hope he will not force me to think differ- ently of him) when he took the pains to epeoify in blank and white, without modi- fication or restriction in any degree; and while I have his letters in my library,where I oan refer to them a hundred times, I am not willing to be represented as misunder- standing, and I think it would be just as manly of him to make the admission fair and square, that he either misunderstood or misrepresented himself, when he wrote as he did. Now, sir, there is another point, and then I think I will pass by the former let- ter : Goderioh Township Farmer said that all I had written was foreign to the original subject, and that he made no comparison in his first letter between the farming and manufacturing classes. Well, sir, no more did I, which is plain enough, if he will take the time to refer to my first letter; but, sir, he will scarcely make that assertion in re- ference to his second. The comparisons there were not made upon the most refined basis, yiz., down -trodden farmers, African Hottentots, trained monkeys, etc., etc., all existing (not Living) simply to pander to the wishes and desires of another class, of ..mossaeesydesignation, just for the meagre recompense of kicks and cuffs, with an oc- casional crest thrown in, and much more of the same nature, which I need not re- view here; and then, to top it all in good style, to throw out the inference, no, but to state the positive fact, that all these things are the outcome, the result of our present system of government and tariff wall. If what little I said (and it was not mnoh) was altogether -foreign Wench 'a Tudierous argument as that, and you can convince me so, then I will quit writing, and go to farming for a longer term than my fellow farmer did. There's too mnoh of the mushroom about him for anything. He springs rip in a hurry when the weather suits him, and wilts just as quickly, when it don't, and I suppose we will hear from him whenever be can get a good chance, and run in two to some other fellow's one. Well then, by way of introduction, that ought to be enough. What new-fangled hobby has this learned scribe got onto now? Oh, just the same old song, only perhaps a little more personal in his references. It seems as if the whole make-up of his nature homes fairly on the bias with the man or woman who is fortnnate enough to get "control of a little more money" than he has been able to do. His system revolts at the Divine arrangement, whereby one man is allowed the stewardship of ten talents, while another of only one. He cannot allow his mental to grasp the idea that it is conducive to the happiness and welfare of the human race; that it is necessary, shall I say absolutely so, to the progress and advancement of the same, that there be those conditions of contrasted poverty and wealth, or any other of the divinely instituted and established con- trasting features, which may give distinc- tion in either or the opposite direction, in- dividually or collectively, to members of that our great family. And, from the very gleamy aspect, which it would seem he almost courts to hie view, he would paint himself pictures that depict in wofnl contrast the poor, poor farmer, as against the rich and happy manufacturer, merchant and professional man. . Then, again, in order to prove his way, (and that's right) he cites a few cases, and whether for insult or whatever else, it dons not matter, he aims as near as he possibly can, to make a bullseye, I suppose, but he never hits anything, he only shows how narrow and contracted a fellow can be, when his very limited wisdom world lead him to believe he was making a point. But, `neighbor, for the sake of your manli- nese, don't force your conscientious scruples into the belief that there have been more midnight flits (or near so many) from the township of Colborne as from your own. Or, on the other hand, don't let your sur- prise exceed itself, should yon hear of some more from this way; and more than that, I'll trust you would not put all the blame upon the Legislature. But, Mr Editor, that is not my point, I want to ask Goderioh Township Farmer, —suppose he takes two weeks to consider— can he dispose of two rich manufacturers as readily as he did those two poor farmers? gnes. . I am afraid, sir, that G. T. F He took good care to select Mr Massey to does not know Just how some of his oarry his constituency. when he could have kin and kind of the human race do live, readily selected one much nearer home, er and while it may not, in a sense, be half a dozen, if ho wished (that is, I mean, of his business, I will uarantee t).omanufactory). The men, ofcourse,are any gone, they failed, and, liko'•King B.," took that if he did, it would bete means midnight flits. Does he know of any more of inculcating in him more of a spirit manufacturing establishments, right in our of contentment and gratitude for the midst, which, like his buaineas and mine, position and life that, Heaven allows re pretty fairly on the balance?,- Doeshe him in this world, and if he thinks that cheap John paintings and carpets,we do not believe that we are talking in any light or nontlensioal strain, when we make the assertion, (and are prepared to prove it) that while men are continually getting into straitened oiroametenoes, and failing finan- oiailye.they are doing so from some cause, but that cause is in most instances nearer home than at Ottawa. I am not talking for the simple fun of talking (for it is not fun) and when I say anything that applies to myself I want to be candid enough to take it, but I like to see everyone else, even Goderioh Township Farmer, just that hon- est. The short time I have lived I have e ant in farmin and that in Canada,and while I may at times be decidedly seepy looking, I do not want him to infer that my eyes are not sometimes open to the subject of my occupation, and my observation and experience have taught me this, that there ie yet money to be made at farming, and that upon Canadian soil? But that money is not going to be made like our predecessors made it, and because our fathers were successful farmers, may or may not be sufficient evidence that we are, nor even that they are, ahould they still be in the businese. And the simple fact that a man was a successful farmer fifteen or twenty years ago, is to me no guarantee ab all, that he will be the same to -day; and the man whose eyes are not open to that fact had better bo out of the businese. My own experience, in a nut shell, is jest this, that my own coarse of farming has got to be changed, in order to be a Burmese, but I am not ashamed to make that change. Now, again, that fellow thinks it passing strange that while I assign so many causes which are tending to make farmers poorer, etc., I should also say that they are better off than they were before. That is untrue, I did not say Bo; what I did say was this: These are some of the causes why farmers are not so flush with cash, why they have a greater indebtedness, but not why they are so much worse off than they used to be, for I don't believe it.- And again, in, connec- tion with that statement, he makes an admission . which exactly proves what I have been telling him, and over which he exercises himself so much, viz., The farm- er who has expended money in improve- ments upon his farm, is exactly in the posi- tion of the man who invests in the purchase of a bank or government stock. Well, then, if of that much, I presume, the same if he invests in a manufacturing establish- ment, or a business of any other kind, mercantile, professional, or anything else. That is just exactly where I want him. The " fluctuations which apply to the one class will apply any- where. That is another of the rules that works both ways. Fluctuations have been quite in fashion ever since creation, and if Goderich Township Farmer lives to be the age of Methu- saleh, (and I hope he may, if it helps his vision,) he will find them in vogue, and they will apply anywhere. If G. T. F. wants to prove it, let him sell his farm, any time he likes, and get $4,000 or $10,000, if he can, and invest all his spare cash anywhere, I don't care to what favored country he goes, nor to which of the businesses he envies so much, and fluctuations will follow him. Perhaps he will double his money", -but just as likely he will lose it, and regret, while his days last, his flit from the farm, whether he does it by sunlight or moonshine, for, as I intimated be- fore, his township takes the cake for those things, and because of their rari- ty in surrounding townships, they are made the basis of considerable remark, the Sossi ere forgetting that nuptial relationship between the townships might cause a spread of the disease, but never mind, it would be just as well for G.T.F. not to be too personal, for two can play at most games—but that is not farming. G.T.F. must not suppose that farmers are all such confounded fools as to allow all their interests to be subservi- ent to that favored class of which he speaks, nor to allow some other class to quietly walk off with their labors, nor to waste all their time in wrang- ling or jangling over the merits or de- merits of their respective parties, in- stead of attending to their farms. I do not know how much of his time he invests in that way, but there are some farmers west of Holmesville, who do not spend theirs all in that way, and some, too, who might admit that they still make a little money at the busi- ness, and some of them, too, would scarcely be willing to compare their wealth as a five cent piece, as against that of the most of Canadian manu- facturers; and my candid opinion is that in a great many instances a com- parison could be made quite favorably to the farmer, in result: In reference to Mr Massey and his liberality, I might say this, so long as his liberality is manifested out of pro- per motives, there need be no fear of his wealth taking to itself wings. Per- sonally, I do not envy him nor his po- sition, and while he may be one of the monied men of the country, there are others much richer, and it is not for me to say he has not made it honestly. I believe it to be the result of long and ardent toil, together with the very ex- tensive nature of the business in which he has been engaged, showing that the amount which he received upon one single article of his manufacture was not the means of building him up—nor upon the ten, but the hundreds, and the thousands, and the tens of thou- sands. Let me say here that the quali- ty and the quantity of the production of any establishment, even though it be a farming institution, is the thing that is oing to tell, so far as move chit iron ry for Pitons -rr Cast IPl io any effort of his own, Edward Bellamy, or anyone else, will ever instil into the nature of humankind the silly idea of a dividing up of the wealth of this globe, so that the two extremes of wealth and poverty would be upon a more even platform of enjoyment, the sooner he crawls over the h lis to that nearest graveyard, with some of hie brothers -in -faith farmers to cover him up, the better for him, but before he goes I would advise him to make arrangements with some person for the erection of some kind of monument to his memory, otherwise I can assure him he will soon be forgotten, or at least hi's doctrine will. Or if he could possibly persuade the one great family of humankind to try on the experi- ment, he would find In the course of a few days or weeks, that many of them would be like the Irishman of whom I have heard, they would want another divide up, and don't you .forget it my fellow traveller. Now, Mr Printer, the longer I write the less, it seems to me, I have said, or at any rate, the more I want to say, so I'll just wind up short, but let me just add, that if G. T. F. wants anything in our line of information, so long as the bailiff does not disturb us too much,we will cheerfully pander to his require- ments. We can do this thing if we are poor, and run a small farm too, so long as we are permitted to do so. Thank- ing you for the use of this week's edi- tion, I remain, respectfully yours, N.B. [N. B. is hardly fair to Goderioh Township Farmer, in insinuating that ho gets two or hr re to N,B's ono. Goderioh Townshi t oo lette P Farmer admits, at the outset of his last letter, the right of N.H. to be heard first, but N,13's last letter was mislaid, and therefore could not be published, a fact that N.A. was not in ignor- ance of. We have triol to bo perfectly fair to both parties to thisdisoussion; ab the same time we think that "personalities" are too prominent in the discussion, and this letter proves our belief.—En. Naw En,.I When Baby was sick, we gave her Cestode. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. Public prayers are being offered in many cities for Southern and Central Russia for the abatement of the severity of the weath- er. Since Sunday the thermometer has risen slowly. In a repent `snowstorm in Smolensk twelne men and many cattle were frozen to death. A oattle plague imported from the Don country, in Odessa, where 10,000 cattle have perished since January, is ravaging the Southern Governments. Hundreds are dying, and this will further impoverish distriots threatened with famine. Best Cure For All disorders of the Throat and Lungs is Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. It has no equal as a cough -cure. Bronchitis " When I was a boy, I had a bronchial trouble of such a persistent and stub- born character, that the doctor pro- nounced it incurable with ordinary remedies, but recommended me to try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I did so, and one bottle cured me. For the last fifteen years, I have used this preparation with good effect whenever I take a bad cold, and I know of numbers of people who keep it in the house all the time, not considering it safe to be without it."— J. C. Woodson, P. M., Forest Hill, W. Va. Cough " For more than twenty-five years, I was a sufferer from lung trouble, at- tended with coughing so severe at times as to cause hemorrhage, the paroxysms frequently lasting three or four hours. I was induced to try Ayer's Cherry Pec- toral, and after taking four bottles, was thoroughly cured."— Franz Hoffman, Clay Centre, Kans. La Grippe "Last spring I was taken down with la grippe. At times I was completely prostrated, and so difficult was my breathing that my breast seemed as if confined in an iron cage. I procured a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and no sooner had I began taking it than relief followed. I could not believe that the effect would be so rapid and the cure so complete."— W. H. Williams, Cook City, S. Dak. AYER'S CHERRY PECTORAL Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists. Price $t ; six bottles, $s. Prompt to act, sure to cure McLeod's System RENOVATOR AND OTHER Tested Remedies. SPECIFIC AND ANTIDOTE For rrpnre, Weak and Impoverished Blood, Dyspepsia, Sleeplessness, Palpi- tation of the Heart, Liver Complaint, Neuralgia, Loss of Memory, Bronchitis, Consumption, Gall Stones, Jaundice, Kid- ney and Urinary Diseases, St. Vitus' Dance, Female Irregularities and General Debility. LABORATORY, GODERICN, ONT. J. M. McLEOD, Prop. and Manufacturer Sold by J. H. Combo, Clinton DU N` B KING POWDER T ECOOK'SBESTFR,END DR. NcLEiLi, LORDON, ONT Ail Talbot St, t:peoinllst on the. EYE, EAR, NOSE & THROAT Graduate of the New Yoirk Eye and Ear Hospital 1899. Poet Graduate Course at the New York Post Graduate Medical School and Hospital yr ,Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat 1882, Eyes Tested, Full stock of Artificial Eyes, Spectacles and Len see. Will be at the Rattenldury House, CLINTON' The First FRIDAY in Bach Month. Third Visit JUNE 2nd next. Hours 10 a. m. to 4 p.m. Chargee Moderate. HURON AND BRUCE Loan 8z Investment Co'y This Company is Loaning Money on Farm Security at Lowest Rates of Interest. MORTGAGEE PURCHASED SAVINGS BANK BRANCH. 3, 4 and 6 per Cent. Interest Allowed on Deposita, according to amount and time left. OFFICE—Corner of Market Square and North St dORACE HORTON, MANAGE 5t 1886 J. C. SrEVENS0N, —THE LEADING— UNDERTAKER —AND— EMBALMER.. A FULL LINE OF GOODS KEPT in STOCK ThebestEmbalming Fluidused Splendid Hearse. ALBERT ST.,CLINTON Residence over store. OPPOSITE TOWN HALL BENMILLER NURSERY FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL TREES NORWAY SPRUCE, SCOTCH AND ASTRACHAN PINE, THE LATTER OP WHICH WE MARE A SPECIALTY LARGE STOCK ON HAND, The above ornamental trees and shrubbery will be sold at very low prices, and those wantirg any thing in this connection will save clone purchasing here. Orders by Mail will be promptly attende to, Address, JOHN STEWART. — Benmlller. Incorporated 1887, with Cash Capital of $50,000 ELECTRQ lac AND APPLIANCE CO. 49 KING ST, W., TORONTO, ONT. G. C. PATTERSON, Mgr. for Canada. Electricity, as applied by the Owen Electric Belt, Is now recognized as the greatest boon offered to suffering humanity. It is fast taking the place of drugs In all nervous and rheumatic troubles, and will effect cures In seemingly hopeless cases where every other known means has failed: It is nature s remedy, and by its steady, soothing [current that is readily felt, POSITIVELY CURES Rheumatism, Sexual Wealrnesl,, Sciatica. Female Complaints General Debility, Imppotencyy, Lumbago • Kidne Diseases Nervous Diseases, Livor Complaint, Dyspepsia, Larne Back, Varleooelo, Urinary Diseases. RHEUMATISM It is a well known fact that medical science has utterly failed to afford rollef in rheumatic cases. We venture the assertion that although Electricity has only been in use as a remedial agent for a fow years, It has cured more cases of Rheumatism than all other means com- bined. Some of our leading physicians, recog- nizing this fact, aro availing themselves of this most potent of nature's forces. TO RESTORE MANHOOD Thousands of people suffer from a variety of nervous diseases, such as Seminal Weakness, Impotency, Lost Manhood, Weak Back, etc., that the old modes of treatment fail to cure. There Is a loss of nerve force or power that cannot bo restored by medical treatment, and any doctor who would try to accomplish this by any kind of drugs is practising a dangerous form of charlatanism. Properly treated THESE DISEASES CAN BE CURED Electricity, as applied by the Owen Electric Belt and Suspensory, will most assuredly do so. It Is the only known remedial agent that will supply what Is lacking, namely, nerve force or power, Impart tone and vigor to tho organs and arouse to healthy action the whole nervous system. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS And the worthless, cheap, so-called Electric Belts advertised by some concerns and peddled through tho country. They aro electric in name only, worthless as a curative power, and dear at any price. We Challenge the World to show an Electric Bolt whore the current is under con- trol of the patient as completely as this. Our Trade Mark is the portrait of Dr Owen embossed in gold upon every Bolt and R.ppliance manufactured by us. ll Send for Catalogue --Mailed (Sealed) Free, ME OWEN ELECTRIC BELT OO., +� 49 Kin St. W., Toronto* 1 e ' ' V'Vaatiub tails paper. , 01,