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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1896-05-13, Page 2`seillSeeresreeerereeNie , 4 : f , THE POLITTOAL CONtST ON. • PREMIER TUPPER SAN'S CANADA MUST EXPECT NO FAVORS FROM THE UNITED eee STATES. JJ • KOOTENAY CURED WHERE 50 'DOCTORS FAILED. Fora number of years I was greatly troubled with a skin disease. 1 went to Hot Springs, Ark., and I actually believe I consulted over fifty doctors at different times without getting any relief. 1 took one bottle of your Kootenay Cure and it has cured ine. Previous to using it 1 was unable to shave. It is no doubt a wonderful medicine. I recommend it most highly. Yours truly, A. TRUMAN, log Kiug St. L., Hamilton, Ont. The Huron News -Record roc s Year -41.00 In Advance WEDNESDAY, MAY 13th, 1806. :PRODUCTION OF COAL. Interesting Facts Complied by the British Board of Trade. The British Board of Trade has issued a statement showing the production and consumption of coal and the num- ber of persons employed in the coal production in the principal countries of the world in each year from 188:1 to 1894, For the first time mat:sties ot coal production in the Britt:el colonies and in British East Indies are given, and of the consumption of le Hese, coal in other countries. Althouelt too ne- uree are sometimes only estimated, they oan be taken as eubstantlaily aceuraze. In 1894 the United Kingdom produced 188,277,000 tons; Germany, 76,741,00); France, 26,964,000; Belgium, 20,534,000; Austria, 9,573,000; Japan (1893), 3, 371.000, and the United States, 152,448,000 tone. Of the British possessions, Canada produces between 1,000,000 and 4,000,000 tons, and in addition imports half her total consumption, principally from the Inited States, New South Wales pro- duces about 3,500,000 tons, but, unlike Canada, her output has been of '.ate years practically stationary. New Zea- land yields over 500,000 tons per an- num, but shows little or no increase. Natal's output rose from 26,000 tons in 1889 to 141,000 in 1894. Similarly in Brit- ish India the production has steadily risen from 1,216,000 tons in 1883 to 2,- 821,000 tons In 1894. The countries which import coal In excess Ok the amount they export are Russia, Sweden, France, Spain, Italy and Austria-Hungary, and of British posssesslons, Canada, Victoria, Queens - laid, Tasmania, New Zealand the Cape and British India, together with all the minor colonies, with the sole ex- ception of 1..a.bue.si (Borneo): In the United Kingdom, Germany, Belgium and the United States most, if not the whole of the coal consumed is of native production. Of Russia's con- sumption, 79 per cent. is her own coal, 17 per cent. is British coal and 4 per cent. comes from other countries. In Sweden 88 per oent, of the coal con- sumed is British, in France 12 per cent., in Spain 60 per cent., in Austria-Hun- gary less than 1 per cent., and in Italy nearly the whole is of British origin. The number of persons employed in coal production in various countries in 1894 was as follows: United Kingd.nn, 665,747; Germany, 299,627; Belgium, 117,- 103; France, 131,587; Japan (1893), 30,345; the United States (1893), 363,309; Brit- ish India, 43,197; Canada, 9,654; New South Wales, 9,131; New Zealand, 1,899, and the Cape, 1,601. THE TIME EOR BUILDING tep the systein is at this season. The col(' weather has made unusual drains upon the vital forces. The blood has become impoverished and impure. end all the functions of the hotly eutrer in cosequence. flood's S irsaparilla is the great bitiltici. because it, is the One True Blood Purifier and nerve tonic. 1-1001:es Pilins become the favorite catartic with all who use them. All druggists. 25c. Hort Her Nerves. "Don't you think, ma," asked Edith, pointing to the crying baby, "that he's a little out of time to -day?" Spo: fed Dors. It is said that every spotted dog has the end of his tall tipped with white. LADIESSur. At n 11'87 tio'I.LiSh. otASIr: fa The rani:1r ni;dlein:.71y.ELYIliiii'l,rePVX$6.;113111. the whole STANDARD MEDICAL CI., 2411 St. James Stmt, Moll trea Mr. James Doyle, a Raleigh Town- . ship fernier, was killed by lightning. if you would always;be healthy, keep your blood pure with Hood's Sarsapa- rilla, the One True Blood Purifier. HE WANTS OTHERS TO KNOW. Dear Editor: Please state In your valued joernal, that if any sufferer from Nervous Debility, Seminal Weakness, Lack of Energy and Ambition, Lost Manhood, Night Losses, etc., will write me In confidence, I will inform him by sealed letter, free of charge, how to obtain a perfect euro. I ask for no money, having nothing to sell. I know how to sympathize with these sufferere and am only too glad to be able to assist them. I promise decay one absolute secrecy and as I do not, of course, wish to expose myself either, I do not give my name. If you desire to got Well, send stamp and address simply: P. O. Box 388, LONDON, ONT. The Ottawa City Council hits reduced the number of tavern licenses from 71 to 66. /I snittenne from Lost bianhoed WEK MEN Norvous Dabney, Leek of Vigor tralso ens 10'daye treatelfdlt Wit tree to anyone monding es !eche In Portaeo Stamps. Erratikaltit lenelOAL 00., 916 8. Al nos S:reet,liontreel Liberals Will Say a Restricted Iteelproeity May be Negotiated—Jas. T. Blaine Be- ealled--O.rits "Want a Chance to Turn the Goverment Out." In the political contest that is just be- ginning, the trade question as usual will be an isSUO t Importauce The new Prime Minister, 81r Charles Tupper, In bis patriotic) and comprehensive /theme for the advancement of the interests of Imperiled trade, bas shown that this coun- try has no favors to expect from the United States. Tho loaders of the Liberal party know well that since the repeal of ,he Reciprocity treaty of 1854 the United States congress has repeatedfy &united to enter into any other arrangements with Canada than those which would produce Free Trade in every commodity. Fortunately the Dominion Government has been guided for the last eighteen Years by trted and patriotic men who !lave declined to allow Canada to become a slaughter market, not only for the manufactured goods of New England, but for the beef from the Chicago stock- yards. From a hundred Liberal platforms in Canada we shall be told this year that there is still a prospect of negotiating a re- strieted treaty of reciprocity. The state- ment will be untrue. The Republican party is certain of victory at the next election for president. It already controls the House of congress. And what does the Republican party Fray? Listen to the words of jetties G. Blaine, one of the party's foremost lead- ers:— "I am opposed, teetotally opposed, to giving the Canadians the sentimental satisfaction of waving the British flag, paylug British taxes, and the actual °ash remuneration of American markets. They cannot have both at the seine tint lle THEY COA1 WITH US they can hn whet we have, but It is an absolute wro against tbe rights of American citize teat millions of men who owe the Unit States no allegiance, who take no p nor lot with us, who are not of us, b choose to be foreign to us. It is not fe play. It is not taking care of our own. It is not looking out for the rights of those who are obedient, honest, and loyal citi- zens, and a Government would be in de- fault as to the duty it owes the humblest citizen if it chose to say that wo have no Market here that shall be sacred to our people any more than it shall be sa- cred to those who aro alien to us and ow allegiance to Queen Victoria. "So far as 1 cum help it," said M Blaine, in the next paragraph, "I do n mean that the people of Canada shall b Canadians and Americans at one and th same time." These aro the words of one of Sir Ric ard Cartwright's American friends. Mr Blaine said, in effect that the people WASTOP4; 04,10,Yt4 Were WiV'S ertReleit serihtia and artleie. a reSPeatfUlly deed te the flair/MienOf the ea', re- marking, Oir the *ay, tliat t4e IRO- tration Of Peter Tumbletlewn'a born Is a little exaggerated, but net, beyond a condition all are liable to reach Whe pursue his method. Bain fvOin the eaves is conveying hie manure clown into the nearest ravine. This will eave him the labor of carting ft to the field. Just now the poor man is having a hard time. There is a depression in the barnytkd where he has to walk when coming to the barn or returning from it. It IS filled with a black solu- tion of cow manure. He has to drain It away or wade through it. The lat- ter would be the easier way and he would continue to do so were it not for the fear of hie patient wife, Nancy, who has said so many times : "Now, Peter. just look at your nasty boots!" This part of the picture Is not over- drawn. The "Peters" are very numers nus. The rents in his barn covering turnish plenty 01 fresh air and sun- shine for his cows, and "Oulu boos: fellers" say these are necessary to pre - V ent tuberculosis. But not all Peters are just like this one. Cows pass half the year In the stable and here Ls where they are led all the 't• grain they get. The quality of tae ve manure, of course, depends much upon ng the amount of grain fed. 1 think any ns observing farmer would indorse me in ed saying that on the average where man,- art ore is thrown under the eatas, as )..n ut Peter's case, there is easily an annual ir loss of fertility by leaching as much in value as five dollars per cow. A roof to cover the manure as represent- ed in one of the illustrations can be erected for 50 cents a cow. NOW a 20 -cow dairyman who throws the manure under the eaves loses nearly $100 a year 'fly his shiftlessness. Is not this a serious leak ? One might just e as well throw so much money in the fire. Attention Is called to this mac - re ter now be -cause it is the meet suttee:tee 01 time to get a few logs out of the woods and have them manufactured into e suitable lumber for- a shed. In suet case all the cash a shed would cost h- would be the price of a few nails and • the sawing bill. Ordinary dairymen this country must join the United State before they could gain access to tit "market that is snored to our people. The alternative may be suitable to Mr. John Charlton, the Ltberal M. P. who wrote to Amerioan congressman telling them how they might make Canadian lumbermen close up their mill. It may be satisfactory to Cir Richard Cantwright, who has said that worse things might happeu Canada than to join the United States. The statement ofJanaes GI. Blaine may suit the Liberal leaders, but it will not suit the loyal people of Canada, in whose ranks are many men who once were Liberals. The trouble with the Liberals is that ey have no trade policy. At the eleo- ens pf 1887, the Liberal party had a ross-eyed tariff policy. Sir Richard was for a revenue tariff with Free Trade as the goal; Mr. Blake, at Malvern, found that, in consequence of the large revenue re- quirements, high duties were indispensa- ble, and Free Trade therefore impractica- ble. In 1891 the Liberals were as far as ever from having anything like a policy. 'heir cry was "anything to defeat the overmuent." The subsidiary cries hanged in the various localities. While Ir Richard would be warring for straight toe Trade in ono section af the country, r. Laurier would be assuring the peo- lo of another section that the Grits ere not going to kill the Protece vet Tariff. Tho people believed neither of om, and in 1891 the Government of Sir ohn • Macdonald was triumphantly re- urned. At the present time Laurier, Carle ight, Chariton and the other Liberal mpaigners are crying to the people of anada, "Give us a chance. Turn the overnment eut Wo don't quite know hat we're going to give you, for we ven't decided amongst ourselves. But '11 be something that you'll remember." That's just it. The people of Canada member only too well the state of the untry tinder the last Liberal Govern. not. They know that the Liberals and cer friends the Americans, the gentle - en who furnish thousands of dollars to o Liberal campaign fund, will play hob th this country if they get a chance. Clearly, Canada has to fear tho United tater and its friends the Liberals No ne man thinks Wilfrid% Laurier to be ythtng more than a figure head. Ela eked partners, the Quebec Liberals, the n who learned politics in Pao/mile ool under Mercier, would make such aid on the Treasury, if they got the anoe, as would make the people of this matey to look in aghast. Mercier waR . Laurior's greatest friend. Pacaud, o blackmailed a railway contractor, is other. It was of men like these that n. Alexander Mackenzie when premier d:— 'Friends expect to he benefited by res they are unflb for, by contracts y are not entitled to, by r cly ances not ned. •Eneraiett ally themselves with friends push the friends to the front. Some attempt to storm the office. I have offended at least twenty par- mentary friends by my defenoe of the el." here was an honest Liberal, the or of the party, who told the truth. at was his reward? His followers herously turned him out of the post - of leader. They installed Bon. Ed- d Blake who was turned out In the o way. And those are the men who want to hi poorer. FOrlarlatel, for Cinada, s are too many patriotic Onnedians alltheni to gain their wish, 4,0 art Jana St their dam iO3,a a^d thoratk. G c S F M p w ti th J t War ea w ha It re CO m th th Nei St ea an *1 me sch a r oh 05 Mr wh Ho an eai ofil the ear and ts lia cited T lead Wh treat, tion war cam A atta Sher f0 I. have a dread of contracting any un- necessary expense. A shed is looked upon as involving expenditure to con- struct than is necessary A man hav- ing 24 cows and no shed refused to subscribe for a farm Paper because he "could not afford it." It is hoped this will set some such manure -wasters to thinking. Persons who have not been on tours of observation through dairy sections can have but a faint Idea of how ex- tensive the waste is 1n this respect. It amounts to many millions of dot- lars annually In the state of New York alone. Probably one-balf of the dairymen would plead guilty to this indictment. But there are many honor- able exceptions. Some keep their manure under a shed cover, and the more able have their cow barns so constructed that they can drive a team through behind two rows of cows. A vehicle Is kept standing in the stable, and when a load 11 obtained It is driven to the field and spread. This Is the most sensible way. When the country was new the soil filled with sweet native grasses and the butter made had a delicious flavor. By the lax system of dairying the sail gradually became depleted of fertility, the tame grasses slowly went out and weeds and coarse grasses Caine in. The butter made now is not of as good quality as formerly. A few of the best dairymen, observing whence they were drifting by this system of depletion, changed their methods, fed more grain, especially cottonseed meat, carefully husbanded and applied all the solid manure made, and now the tame grasses are driving out the weeds and other wild growth, This Is farm- ing on right lines. It must be under- stood that most dairy lands are not tillable The dairymen might go rur• ther now and utilize the liquid man- ure, which Is almost wholly neglected. —Galen Wilson, in N.Y. Tribune. Treatment of Milk. Milk should be strainer] and fret as soon as possible after It comes e'oni the cow. It is well to Place a cloth in the common strainer, through which the milk may fliter, thus removing all possible dirt. Thls cloth may oe a square of oheese-cloth doubled, which is handy and easily cleansed. A Hint to the Wise. When come eat boards and etioks there is probably some deficiency In the feed. Place slacked lime In the Dalt and feed. Feed bone meal. trooreasee the bran In th grain and ehang e pas- tures. What would cure in one case may not in another Try bone meal. OA 1) ea, yo A *ir V SPLENDID EARTH ROADS. Sixteen Parte Clay, erwenty-Two Parte Sand and Sixty -Two Graeae Greatly improved results in roa4 building or repairing may be attained by any device that will prevent earth and water from mixing on the road- bed, and much may be done in the way of improvement by a prover art - mixture of suitable earthly material. The requirements of the material, says Engineer Haupt, are that it shall not be readily affected by moisture, tem- perature or pressure, which are the three principal destructive agenclee. Clay is very sensitive to water and temperature and has a high ratio of absorption. Sand has little coherence and yields readily 'to pressure. Gravel has great mobility, due to its ispherol- dal form, but by mixing these in the proportion of 16 parts of clay, 22 of sand and 62 of gravel, and impervious roofing may be laid, whiale if under drained, will make an excellent earth road. The maoada.m and telford roads when correctly made are excellent, but as built by most supervisors in ties country they are pseudomorphs, un- worthy their names. When in the march of science the time comes for segregating the alumi- num contained in the clay road Into a hard, smooth, resisting medium covering its surface, we will then have a road metal, both in fabt and name, 'which will solve the problem Of the clay pit and give us a medium of trans- portation which will surpass even the railway In cheapness and convenience. —MIssou.ri Roads Improvement Jour- nal. Steel -Tracked Roads. In the wreck of matter and the crush of worlds, coronations, conven- tions, boat races and things, it is just as well not to forget that the farmer feeds us all, when the mud doesn't prevent his hauling stuff to market. Farmer O'Donnell of New York state, distinctly understood that he, and not Farmer Judd of New Jersey, or any otheg person, is the suggestor of the steel traceked roadway, per- haps the most promising of the new good roads ideas. Farmers O'Donnell, Budd and others propose, in brief, to lay wide, shallow steel rails in the public highways, with turnouts at in- tervals. Wagon wheels would run easily on flat milts eight or ten inenes wide, with flanges on either side to prevent the wheels slipping off. Except upon main traveled roads the cost might be pretty heavy, but there would be almost no limit to the ]oaas that could be drawn upon such a track. Bicyclists could ea-sily use it The ap- pearance might not quite equal that ot a good, well -crowned macadam road, but the klea is worth consider- ing, especially in regions where maoa- dam stone is scarce. One beauty of the steel track is that wagons with narrow tires could safe- ly use It. Macadam necessitates a broad tire law, which causes some op- position. How true it is that there's nothing new under the sun ! Here we are again back at the old plank road idea. A steel plank running lengthwise instead of a wooden one crosswise; that's all the difference. And in the west, the last few years have seen the rearipararsee of the prairie schooner and the freight wagon. —Owen Langdon, In the Lamp. A Cheap and Practical CallSOWaY• The usual method of buildeag causeway Is to lay down two rows of .‘,•i.:\OtlYel'i\*,*''' • j:/r,, 'OW Tag trc); Je% CP,F • sECtiFtEs caUSICWAY. stone, to stretch flat rocks across from one row to another, and to cover the whole with earth. The two rows of stones soon work together, while brush and other rubbish will work in and clog the drain. A better plan Is shown in the accompanying sketch. A few stx- inch drain tiles are laid down, and both ends are covered with wire net- ting. The whole is then covered with earth to make the roadway. Such a drain cannot clog, nor can the sides settle together, while the labor of mak- ing It Is not one-half that required where stones are used.—Amerlean Agriculturist. Better Road Laws Needed. The road tax system of personae service or commutation is unsound as a principle, unjust in its operation,, wasteful in its practices and unsatis- factory in its results. Some system should be devised, based aeon pro- perty, and property owners should not be exempt on account of age. As the case now stands, some families escape any road tax, year after year, all of the members being either tem young or too old, but they are abundantly able to do their share and use the roads quite as much or more than any- one. In the meantime their poorer neighbors, tenants it may be, or young men without land, must leave the crops in a critical condition, at the whim and convenience of the road - master. Often the wont piece of road is untouched and a bit Rutting the roadmaster or his friends is worked atter a fashlon.—Farm and Home. Road Handing a Science. Our communities should awaken to the fact that road construction 19 a science; that good roads cannot be built on the haphazard guess of an inexper- ienced individual that the mere plac- ing and compacting of broken stone on a roadway is only a matter of labor and workmanship; that workmanship will be of no avail, however thorough It may be, if the design bsts that been carefully adapted to the conditions to be met and to the ends sought; that an excess of strength ems be readily reoured by an u.nreasonable expendi- ture of money, but that the requisite strength and the beat permits at um minimum of cost are te be obtained only by the aPplioatfon of Well-definedi 1111011.—New 'fork Independent. Yea, By the Hundreds, Those Who Llave Been Cured of Dire Disease By South American Nervine. 11 llemegg WIdnilf83g 810 OltiVallai Iij Its Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Pronounced the Cases Beyond Cure, Great Discovery Has Proven a Genuine Elixir of Life. This Have rIto Same Verdict Comes From Old and Young, Male and Female, itieh and Poor. and From All Corners of the Dominion. If it is the case that he who makes two blades of grass grow where only one had grown before is a benefactor of the race, what le the position to be accorded that man who by his know- ledge of the laws of life and health gives energy and strength where lan- guor, weakness and anticipation of an early death had before prevailed? Is not he also a public benefactor? Lot thcee who have been down and are now up through the use of South Am- erican Nervine give their opinions on this subject, John Boyer, banker, of Kincardine. One, had made himself a hopeless invalid through years of over- work. Ae least he felt his case was hopeless, for the beat physicians had failed to do him good. He tried Nero vine, and these are his words : I glad - If say it : Nervine cured me and I am to -day as strong and well as ever." Samuel Elya, of Meaford, was our id of neuralgia of the stomach and bowels by three bottles of this medicine. Jas. Sherwood, of Windsor, at 70 years of age, suffered from an attack of paralY- s4s. Hie life, at that age, was deepair- ed of. But four bottles of Nervine gave him back his natural strength. A victim of indigestion, W. P. Bolger, of Renfrew, says " Nervine cured me of my suffering, which seemed incur- able, and had baffled all former me- thods and efforts." Peter Eason. of ,Paisley, lost flesh and rarely had a good night's Bleep, because M. stomach trouble. He says : "Nervine stopped the agonizing pains in my stomach the first day I used it. I have now taken two bottles and I feel entirely relieved 'and can sleep like a top." A repro- , 'tentative farmer, of Western Ontario, Is Mr, C. .1. Curtis, residing near Wind - or. His health was seemingly cern- pletely destroyed through la grippe. No medicine did him any good. "To three bottles of Nervine," lie arm • I attribute my restoration to health and strength." Neither man or woman can enjoy life when trouble,] with liver complaint. This was the sentiment and feeling of W. T. Hill, the well- known bailiff of Bracebridge. "1 was so bad," says he, " that one of my medical attendants sale. that I was dying, but, thank God, I am not dead yet. From the first few doses I took of Nervine I commenced ta feel bet- ter, and am to -'day restored completely to my usual health." A resident of the Maritime Provinces, in the person of S. Jones, of Suesex, N.B., says : "Fur twelve years I was a martyr to indi- emetion, constipation and headache. The treatment of several physicians did not help me. I Lave taken a few SODL B bottles of Nervine, and can trut say that I am a new man." A shrewd observer of human n has said " The hand that rockse cradle moves the world." How im- portant It is, then, that health and strength should be made the lot of the mothers of this country. The wo- men of Canada are ready by scores to tell oi; the benefits that have come to them through the use of South Ameri- can Nervine. Mrs. R. Armstrong, Of 0.111a, wife of the colporteur, of the Bible Society of that town, suffered for six years from nervous prostration. Medical assistance did not help. "In alt" she saps, "I have taken six bottles ot Nervtne, and can truthfully say this Is the one Medicine that has effected a cure in my case." Mrs. John Dia- wo.94y has been for 40 years a reallient 01 Plesherton, and has reached the al- lotted three-ecore years and ten. Three years ago her system inistained sev- ere shock through the death of a daughter. Nervine was recomrnenied. She perseveringly took 12 bottles of medicine, with the result that she Is to- day again strong and hearty. Run. dreds of women suffer from impov.rish- ed blood and weakened nerves. " All vitality," says Mrs. 5. Fall's, of Brampton. " seemed to have forsaken my system. I was unable to get re- lief from any source until I commenced taking South American Nervtne. The results are moat satisfactory ---greater far than I could have hoped for." It came within the way of Mrs. H. Stap- leton, of WIngham, to treat under the best physicians, both in Canada and England, for heart disease and nerv- ous debilitybut she failed to get any, relief.' "I was advised," she says, "to take South American Nervine, and must say I do believe that lt I had not done so I would not be alive t ully, day.op Newspaper space Is too valuable permit of further additions to thee earnest words of testimony from those whb know just what they are talking about. In the common language of the day, they have been there, and are epeaking from the heart. The dozen or more witnesses that here speak have their counterparts by the hundreds, not only in the province of Ontario, but in every other section of the Domin- ion. South American Nervine Is based on a emientitIc principle that makes a cure a certainty, no matter how des- perate the case may be. It strikes at the nerve centers from which flows the life bl-od of the whole system. It is not a medicine of patchwork. but Is complete and comprehensive 10 Its application. Y WATTS & CO INNIMMEmemimmINERNIIIIIIMPI•nzameOMUMWM1112101C 11:ertIrt tururcnea. Berlin has had built wtthin its limits euring the past ten years twenty-flve Protestant churches. There are some monster congregations in the German capital. At present there are sixty-four Protistant parishes In the city. 'If these, Holy Cross numbers 120,817 souls; the Emmaus congregation numbers 93,- 000, the Thomas congregation 61,271, the Twelve Apostles 68,576. NV 1 0 ENVIES THE TRAVEL- LERS. The Com niPecial traveller is always pereeted lo be semelliing of "a gay dog" wite a reedy smile for old jokes and brigh new 1 uies to give in return. Yet thew is flinch that is wearing in Weller -el with long (heves through rain or sleet, 1 wary waitS for trains, sleeping in e11 1(nns and other hard - i pe. One of these ''go y d ogs" has found the secret of belng always ready for any weather by getting a Fibre Chamois lined ulster. On windy ill' rainy dri Vet; it protects him perfectly from the cold end wet for walking on milder days it is too light to be tt bur- den ; when pleeping in clid room hp throws; it, over hint, enjoying its comforting *armth—in fact he finds it, invaluable. Mr. Ralph Bilton escaped froni the 1)eer Pat k Sanitarium, and was found lying dead tinder Austin's bridge, To- routo. "THE RAILROAD KIDNEY." Railroad employees, bicyclists, team- sters and other nien who are subjected to much jolting, are often troubled with pain across the stnall of the back. This indicates the "Railrond Kidney," an insidious precursor of serious illness. On the slightest syniptome of backache take one Chas's Kidney -Liver Pill -- one is a dose—and thus Obtain instant t•elief. For all kidney troubles they have no equal. 25c. per box. The new arrangement for the admis- sion of tourists' bicycles into Canada from the United States goes into force forthwit h. For Over Fifty Years Mn,. WiN.Low's SOoltruNG SYRUP has been tised by millions of mother, for their children while teethig. If disturbed at night and broken of gourmet by Mak child suffering and drying wish pain of (iding Teeth sew: at once end get e bottle of "W. Windoses Seething Amp" ferOhildren Teething. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immeditely. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It alms Dar - there ragnlates the Stomach and Bowel, mires Wind Collo, softens the Gums, redeems Infbahmationi and gives tone and energy to the whole (system. "Mr. Winsiotes Soothing Syrup" tor &flame teeedng is pleasant to the taste rine is the preweription of ane of the oldest and best female physketes and nurses in the United States. Price twenty Ave cents a bottle. Bold by ell druggists througeout the woria Do stirs rind ask for "MM. Vi'ssmoW' Boortntra Sirstr." 14 WORK FOR MEN AND WOMEN. We ply 58 to 810 per week for emir home work. Child ran do It. No Seheine, Books or Peddling Th Is la bon t fide. Bend stamp for work and particu• larm at once. THE SEYMOUR SUPPLY CO., Mason IC Temple, Camden, N . J . 911-yly. Property For Sale. A CHANCE FOR GARDENERS. In conflequence of my age and lack of help, I have decided to offer for sale My aplendid garden, g pro- perty consisting of five and a half twres in Clinton, some of the hest land in the county of Floron, includ, ing hot beds and other necessary requirement, There Is on the premisee a frame house with of liars r• soft end hard water, barn slid other ontbuIldingg The Barfield river adjoin, the prperly. Will sell at a reasonable price for nmlf yeah And balanCe secured by mortgage. As 1 d, sire to this la a chance seldom net with. ApMy uvrAnually or by letter to the proprietor, JOSEPH ALLA NSON, 884-1.1. l'Jdnton • ^ SMALLPDX KILLS! DOES TOBACCO 1ieg1 the strong endowment given Hilole SIM ToJJaccu CDR. In the interest of the TriagSIRSI, for whom thee re- port are oOmpiled, the UNITED STATES HEALTH ISE PORTS have examined and Investigated many prepare Mons having for their object the cure of the tobaceC habit, but among them all we have nst begitarcy glyIng the editorial and oiflcial endorSoment of these REPORTS to the remedy known as "UNCLE SAM'S TOBACCO CUBE," mannfactoree by the Keyetone Remedy Company, at 218 La Sall street, Chicago. We have demonatrated by persona tests that this antidote positively destroys the teat and deeire for tobacco In ten days, leaving the eysten. in 8 perfeepy healthy condition, and the person us the same forever free from the habit. In the light rif our examinations end teats of "UNCLE SAWS TOBACCO CURE," we are but performing a duty we owe the publio when we en donut, the same, and stamp it se the erowning aehlevo ment of tlie nineteeth oontory, in the way of doritroy- Ire It habits as divining ES IS Is common (Fon camy woo); hence we earnestly advise yen to write them for Mil particulars. -e---Sold only by ALLEN & WILSON, CLINTON. meetasrmatomea.uketas,:o. ,