HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1897-04-30, Page 3rl
8
CLINTON NEW
i
ER',II1 11
N
What 'tie Has Done For
.elknown Canadian
People
MEAD WHAT THEV SAY
heumatisln, Catarrh, Dyspep-
d other Ailments
Cured by the use of his
Wonderful Little
Pellets
Mr A Pryor, 7 Eln, SL. Toronto, says:
"I was a great sufferer from dyspepsia; so
bad at times I was unable to attend to my
duties, and had severe pains in my stom-
soh. The remedies that I took gave me no
relief whatever. Three small vials of Mum.
Lon's Dyspepsia Cure made a permanent
cure. 1 heartily recommend it.
Munyon's Rheumatic Cure seldom fails
to relieve in one to three hours, and cures
in a few days. Price 25o.
Munyon's Dyspepsia Cure positively
f' onres all forme of indigestion and etomaoh
troubles. Pride 25c.
Munyon's Cold Cure prevents pneumonia
and breaks up a cold in a few hours. Price
25o.
Munyon's Cough Cure stops coughs,
night sweats, allaya soreness and speeuily
heals the lungs. Price 2Fo,
1t1uryon's Kidney Cure speedily cures
pains in the back, lions or groins, and all
forms of kidney disease. Price 25c.
Munyon's Nerve Cure stops nervousness
and builds up the system. Price 25c.
Muny on's Headache Cure stops headache
in three minutes. Price 25.
Munyon's Pile Ointment positively cures
all forms of piles. Price 25o
,Munyon's Blocd Cure eradicates all im-
purities of the blood. Price 25c.
Munyon's Female Remedies are a boon
to all women.
Munyon's Catarrh Remedies never fail.
The Catarrh Cure—price -25c—eradicates
the disease from the system, and the Ca-
tarrh Tablets—price 25o.—cleanse and heal
the parts.
Munyon's Asthma Remediee'relieve in
three minutes, and cure permanently.
Price $1.
Munyon's Vitalizer restores lost vigor..
Price $1.
A separate oure for each disease. At all
druggists. Mostly 25o a vial.
Personal letters to Prof. Munyon, 11 and
13 Albert St., Toronto, answered with free
medical advice for any disease.
A Rocking Chair Injures Health.
The Journal of Hygeio-Therapy says:
"The swaying motion of a swing or rook-
..,... -111g ahait le' inclined to prtlduce congestion
of the head, and this is the reason of its
soothing effect. We consider it injurious
to older people as well ,as to .children.
ItMany a woman rooks much vitality away.
She begins talking to her friends, and al-
most without conseiousnees begins her
ceaseless, nervous rock, violating both the
rule of good taste and the laws of her
body."
Home Decoration.
on in The
J h
there is no surer
Writingpia home decorati
Woman's Home Companion, Katherine B.
o nson says:
Despite all that has been said and done
o the
contrary, way of
imparting a cheery and homelike air to a
room than by adding a few pretty home.
made things that show thoughtfulness for
the comfort of the occupants as well as the
maker's taste and cleverness. Never was
' this truth more delightfully illustrated
than in the reading corner which a young
matron recently arranged in her hand•
comely furnished guest chamber. The
main furniture was of birdseyemaple, and
the dominant colors soft blue and ivory
white, all beautiful and in perfect ao•
cord, but too spiok and span to,be either
restful or homelike: Something must be
done to relieve all this. Fortunately 41
was large enough for the corner idea, and
it was carried out.
From some source an old fashioned,
square cherry washstand and a light wood
Boston rocker wore obtained. The former,
with a shallow drawer. next to the top and
a shelf half way to tho floor, was easily
converted into a handsome table by re•
moving the ;`ornamental" back and sides
and adding a larger top. With a simple
but exquisite cover of baby blue linen
ornamented with white linen crochet in.
sertion and lace, this stands diagonally
across the corner and holds a Dresden
china reading lamp and ink well, with pen
rank and tray, while the shelf below car.
ries all the other essentials for letter writ-
ing. On the wall above is a set of hang.
ing bookshelves enameled ivory white,
with splashes and irregular lines of gold,
and filled with a good assortment of booke
and magazines. From repeated stainings
in the days before the beauty of natural
bard wood finish was appreciated the rook.
er had taken on a tinge of red that bar
monized beautifully with the table. This
was given a dull finish, and bank, seat and
arms supplied with loose cushions oovered
With blue denim (washed first to soften
the texture), finished with piping and
tufting buttons of white duck, and secured
to position by white cord and tassels (same
as used for sash curtains).
.4 floor cushion covered with some soil
of oriental stuff in which old red predom-
inated relieved the color monotony, while
a wicker footstool a few inches higher
stood beside it and seemed to say, "Take
your choice and be comfortable."
TAKE ONE
Of Dr. Ag.ew's Liver Pills after dinner, it
• to digestion and overcome
evil effects of too hearty eating.
Entirely vegetable—Do not disturb the
system.
Btjte, prompt, active, painless and pleasant.
hip effective Little pill is supplanting all
he old school nanseonspurgatrves. The de -
and is hard to beep up with since placing'
on the Canadian market. Take no sub.
tante. 40 doses, 20o, al all druggists.
The too.'
aimiie
sigsattusis es144, 1.17
dattLESTCSRX.A..
4, wrapper.
MISS PARLOA ON SOUPS.
The French Ilowsekeepor's Way of .!hiking
Them Described iu a Lecture.
"Economy Is the watchword of the
Frenoh people," said Miss Parloa in her
talk upon the characteristics of French
cookery at the New York Young Wom-
an's Christian aesooiation, 'and the
Frenoh housekeeper, no matter how
simple the dish, excels in the making of
it. The market prises are much higher
in France than here, butter and sugar
costing more than lie much again. One
may buy half a lemon or part of a par-
rot, and it is not thought unusual, and
only a sufficient quantity* is purchased to
supply each meal, and an unexpected
guest is never provided for."
Miss Parloa added that roasting and
broiling aro hardly known among
the working classes, and pastry is
made only in the kitohens of the very
wealthy. .American housewife m
take the lead in the making of dainty
and fancy desserts, but to a Frenoh-
Woman the making of soups and sauces
is the most important part of the cook-
ery.
The following simple soup is said to
lad savory and de cions: Put 8 table-
spoonfuls of batter or meat fat in a soup
kettle and pour over it 2 quarts of wa-
,»r. Let it cook 10 minutes before add-
ing a pint of potatoe s out into cubes
and 8 leeks washed and sliced thin.
Add a teaspoonful of salt and one-third
of pepper and allow this to cook very
slowly one hour. Break 5 slices of stale
bread into pieces and put in the soup
tureen, and turn the soup over it when
cooked the required length of time.
A Frenoh vegetable soup is made thus:
Cut a large onion into thin slices and
put them in a pan with 8 tablespoonfuls
of butter. Let them simmer together
half an hour and add 2 quarts of water.
Have prepared a pint of white turnips
cut into cubes, the same amount of po-
tatoes, half a pint of carrots, half a pint
of the white part of the leek cut into
thin slices. Add a clove of garlic, an
eschalot, a teaspoonful of sugar, one-
third of a teaspoonful of pepper and salt
and cook slowly an hour, adding some
chopped parsley 15 minutes before the
soup is removed from the fire. This soup
may also be used' for a vegetable puree
by pressing it through a coarse sieve,
and to a pint of the thick soup add a
pint of boiling milk.
A paste for thickening sauces is kept
at band for constant use. Here is the
way to make one that will keep a long
time: Cut equal amounts of beef, veal
and pork suet in small pieces. Put them
in a kettle with very little water and ,
slowly render. Turn off the first fat,
and when very hot stir in flour until it
forms a thick paste—about a pint of
Sour to a pint of liquid fat. Put these
into a graniteware vessel and plate in
an oven and cook three to four hours.
Keep in glass jars covered.
HE TURNED ON THE GAS.
Another Incident of the Youth of George
Washington.
Mrs. Pickett, the widow of Genera]
Pickett, hero of the desperate rebel
charge at Gettysburg, relates an anec-
dote of an old mammy whom she dis-
oovered at Fredericksburg and who ver-
itably believes that she was Washing-
ton's first nurse. Here is her story:
"She was an old woman in a linsey
woolsey petticoat and a bright turban,
and we found her in one of our jaunts
around the pity and took a kodak picture
of her... One of the company asked her
in fan if she remembered Washington—
you see, she was very old."
" "Deed an deedy I do, miss,' she an-
swered glibly.
" 'Perhaps were one of his nurses,
mammy.'
"'Dat am jess so, missy—I nursed
him when he was a leetle mite er baby.'
" 'Oh, then, you must have known
about the cherry tree?'
"But she did not, and it was explained
to her and she listened with much in-
terest.
" 'Ize don know nothin 'bout no cher-
ry' tree, missy, but I 'members 'zaotly
'when his maw found him in her room
an de gas a-burnin 'canoe he done tarn
it on.'
"'Did he tell her be turned it on,
mammy?'
"' 'Deed an deedy he did, foh he neb-
ber tole no lie.'
" But, mammy, there wasn't any
gas in those days.'
" 'Yes, dere was, honey. I 'members
dat too.' "
We decided that old mammy bad been
the servant of some George Washington,
but not our own immortal George, and
we left her to enjoy her peculiar delu-
sion undisturbed.—New York Mail and
Express..
Rev. D. Guthrie, of Walkerton, for-
merly assistant to Rev. Dr. McDonald,
Seafortb, has received a call from the
Presbyterian church at Rossland.
One reason why Scott's
Emulsion cures weak throats,
weak lungs, makes rich
blood, and strengthens puny
and delicate children is be-
cause all its parts are mixed
in so scientific a manner that
the feeblest digestion can
deal with it. This experi-
ence has only come by doing
one thing for nearly 25 years.
This means, purest in-
greden.ts, most evenly and
delicately mixed, best adapted
for those whose strength has
failed or whose digestion
would repel an uneven pro-
duct. Por s; to by all druggists at
see. and $r.
Ruining the Skin.
A specialist says: "Ttnoturo of bonzoiu
is ve:y t;. . ;:., ..'.,l .1', o.: ;:: The
familiar r.,,ewater" and glyt•erin in the
majuitity of iu,tancts makes the com-
plexion dry. yelluw and leathery.
".1 ace nlatlktl art..
dteadfu
111 t h i
o r
1 effects
on not only the skin, but the general health,
particularly those made ut rubber. alley
make the face perspire, and the impurities
which exude from the pores cling to the I
rubber for. awhile and are reabsorbed.
Steaming the Lace robs the skin of its nat-
ural oil, causes wrinkles to appear and
makes one sensitive to neuralgia. Uncle
the delusive pretense of facial massag
many hundreds of women have had th
delicate tissues of their faces pinched and
slapped pp and rubbed and twisted without
any regard whatever for the natural con-
dition of the skin. Disappointment gen-
erally follows the use of all the thinp I
have mentioned, and also of the'methods
employed. All of these remedies,are enough
to ruin a woman's face.
"One should be as careful about soaps
used on the skin as about dict. The best
soap in the world for the complexion is u
pure olive soap made In the south of Spain
from the fruit of trees that grow near the
creeks.
"It takes six months to make this soap,
and it is expensive; but it is economy to
pay a good price for anything that goes
on the complexion. A woman,cries out
against paying $1 for a box opowder.
She doesn't know that it will last twice as
long as $1 worth of cheap powder."
Parsley.
Parsley is used in many dishes for sea-
soning as well as garnishing. An easy way
of chopping parsley is to dip the sprigs into
boiling water in which a piece of soda of
the size of a pea has been dissolved, and
let them stay there a moment, when they
will turn a bright green. Place them upon
a board, and with a sharp knife cut the
leaves quickly into particles. When pow-
dered parsley is desired, Mace the sprigs,
after taking them from the boiling water,
on a plate in a hot oven for a few mo-
ments. When the parsley 1s dry, it cane
readily be made into pow nor by'rubbing it
through a sieve.
Tho Finger Bowl.
Tho finger bowl is sometimes brought
upon the table, even in well ordered
houses, to be sdt from the serving tray di-
rectly upon the cloth, without any inter-
vening plate or even doily. This is proba-
bly a reaction from the excessive ceremony
which has occasionally accompanied its
use, hut it is of rather too Spartan sim-
plicity to suit most tastes.—Exchange.
Speaking of the cellar, Miss Parloa said:
'Its windows should be protected with
barred iron and an Insect screen, and, if
possible, the floor should be cement and
the walls whitewashed or painted. In any
case there should be no unexplored corners
and no rotting wood or vegetables,"
In an invalid's room occasionally fresh-
en the air by means of removing the stop-
per of a bottle of fragrant lavender salts.
1f you have flowers, as the invalid recov-
ers, never allow any save the very freshest
ones to remain in the room.
Slip a wooden skewer across the top un-
der the lid of • the silver coffeepot that is
net often used. It will prevent the musti-
ness that gathers from want of air, ten
:affecting the flavor of thei,,at,.. - ! of
coffee.
A simple dessert for the children's table
Is any dried and sugared fruit, like dates
or figs, chopped and mixed with oatmeal,
fnrina,,hominy or other cereal, the whole
molded and served with plain or whipped
cream.
Girls who have skins which burn and
flush unpleasantly should not indulge in
much tea or hot drinks. They should on
co account take tea with meat, as it ren•
dere it indigestible.
A Difficult Problem
Satisfactorily Solved.
In the past the ladies have bad thous-
ands of dollars worth of goods ruined
through the use of Inferior and adulterated
dyes prepared for home dyeing. The
greatest loss that we can point to is in the
coloring of mixed goods— fabrics composed
of cotton and wool, cotton and silk, and
silk and wool.
• The manufacturers of Diamond Dyes put
up special dyes for th a coloring of mixed goods
giving colors that are fast to soap and sun-
light. Diamond Dyes for mixed goods are
the only reliable dyes iu the world, and are
all guaranteed to do perfect work.
Every druggist and dealer of any stand-
ing in Canada can supply yon with Dia.
mond Dyes for mixed goods. Do not ac-
cept imitations or substitutes; compel your
dealer to give you the "Diamond."
A. Crow That Ate Clams.
"1 knew a man once," said a fisher-
man, "who had a pet crow that used to
come down to meet him when he came
in from fishing.' The crow's owner was
a fisherman. His boat might be among
40 or 50 other boats, all Doming in to-
gether, but the crow never made any
mistake. He always knew his own boat.
He liked clams, and when be came
aboard his owner would knock a couple
of clams together—that would break
one—and put the broken clam down for
the crow to eat, and then he would go
on rowing, and that's the way they al-
ways came ashore, the fisherman pulling
on the oars and the crow sitting along-
side of him eating clams. "—New York
Sun.
A Modern Instance.
Monsieur—If I were rich, would you
love me?
Mademoiselle—I can't say as to that,
but I would marry you.—Paris Carica-
ture.
In Harbor Springs, Mich., there is a
large and flourishing wood toothpick in-
dustry. White hitch is exclusively used
in the manufacture of the toothpicks,
and about 7,500,000 are turned out
daily.
The marriage rate in Great Britain,
which ham been steadily declining in re-
cent years, is again on the impulse.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The fac-
simile
atgasttaee
Of ,
i( on
(tory
wrapper,
I run,
FOUND DEAD.
Why did he do it? He had everything
to live for,—happy home, wife, friruds,
money; but he shot 'himself through the
heart.
Why]
He couldn't have given a good reason
himself, But everything looked gloom
y
o him. He was in a gloomy frame of mind..
(It was the way he looked at life that dex,
e had ushing hustlibeen living' in too much ora hurry,
through his meals, cnd uttingushortah s sleep
His nerves got on edge ; his stomach and
diver got out of order; he grew dyspeptic
and melancholy. -
When the digestion is out of order there
is little use trying to look on the bright side
aide, f things
his This apractically
dangerous conditiothere isn't n toight
get
'Into. Yet it is easy to get, into and mighty
(hard to get out of it, unless you go about it
In the right way.
There is a remedy that has pulled thou -
Sands of people right out of this depth of
despair. It is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery. It acts directly upon the stom-
ach and liver. It restores their natural
capacity to nourish and purify the system.
It purges away bilious poisons, feeds the
nerve -centres with healthy, highly vitalized
blood, and drives out the "blue devils" of
melancholy and nervousness.
J. I.. Warner, No. !goo 0 Street, Sacramento,
Cal., writes: ^During the last five years I have
been
rre many
s d ss herand an Swian Francisco for diseased a oifferent m-
'ach; but none of the doctors gave Inc even tern-
ppooraatryy relief. Two ]'ars ago I completely col -
;lapsed, and had to gave up all work. I have felt
many times that I would like to leave this world,
In looking over the ads in the San Francisco
;Examiner I ran across yours, and I now owe my
life and present good health to Dr. Pierce's med-
icines. I have taken fourteen bottles of the
'Golden Medical Discovery' and four little vials
iof ' Pleasant Pellets,' and I am entirely well of
on stomach trouble. Can sleep nine hours every
nig.' tee mad ane now ready to go to work again."
Demand for Horses.
The Dominion Agricultural Department
states that there is a good market in Great
Britain for Canadian horses of a really de-
sirable character. Ci,cd horses, adapted
for the artillery service and for cavalry
mounts, are alwe s looked after by the Bri•
fish Will Ell ry authorities, and general pur-
pose animals find ready sale. At a recent
sale of a consignment of Canadian horses in
London, the average price obtained was 31
guineas. Carriage horses sold at from 30
guineas l0 80 guineas, according to condi-
tion and breed, demonstrating the benefit
accruing to Canadian farmers from rearing
first-class animals. Grade animals brought
from 30 guineas to 60 cnineas. Mr. Beith,
M. P., nue of the Most succesbfue horse
breeders in Canada, states that the glut of
horses sriaing from the introduction of
electricity is fast being got over. The poor.
er breeds are not now being produced, and
the probable result is that farmers will in
future only raise a supeihr class of ani-
mals, and get mutd}-i t9er prices for -.them.
The outlook is more hopeful at present than'
it has' been for five dears,
DR. CHASE CURES BACKACLiE.1
Kidney trouble generally begins with a
single pain in the back, and in time devel-
ops into Bright's disease. People troubled
with stricture, 'impediments, stoppage of
water, or a frequent desire to urinate at
night, will find Dr. Chase's'Kldney-Livtr
Pills a blessing. Read the wonderful
cures in another column. One pill is a
dose, and if taken every other night, will
positively cure kidney trouble.
Mr Henry J. Modlin, son of Mr John
Modlin, a butcher in the Hamilton market,
cried saturday night at his home, 58 Mar-
garet street, after being ill six years. He
was 22 years of age, and his death is . of
more than usmeOnterest to the enedical.pro-
fession. Six years ago he accidentally
swallowed a brass -headed tack, and, after
suffering for seventeen months from it, he
coughed it up. His physician Dr. Stark,
bad hoped that with the coughing up of the
tack the young man would recover, but the
brass poison proved fatal, and he Buffered
from it until death.
The autograph letters testifying to tyres
made by Ayer's Sarsaparilla and other
preparations are kept on file at the J. C.
Ager Co's. office, Lowell, Mass. They are
from all over the world, and are cheerfully
shown to anyone desirous of seeing them.
The Signal, a Montreal French paper,
publishes a most interesting correspond-
ence, dated from Paris, and signed Maarioe
de la Fargue, secret chamberlin to Leo
XIII. The writer refers to Mgr. Merry
del Val's mission as having been necessita-
ted by a desire on the part of the Roman
authorities to bring calm to consciences
troubled by certain bishops who wish to ex-
tend to temporal matters the prerogatives
which they enjoy in spiritual affairs. He
then adds that correspondence received
from Rome informs him that "the Pope's
representative, after the instructions whin]]
he received, will have to try to bring the
dissenting bishops to accept the transaction
proposed by the Federal Governfnt, and,
if necessary, enjoin them to do so in the
name of the Sovereign Pontiff. Leo XIII.
wishes to fie e the clergy bow, as much as le
compatible with the fundamental dogmas
of the church, before the power upon whioh
the member's of his flock depend, in tem-
poral matters.
B
BURDOCK
B
BLOOD
Points
Strong
ABOUT B. B. B.
1. Its Purity:
B
BITTERS
2. Its Thousands of C1iires.
3. Its Economy. lc. a dose.
Xt.
Regulates the Stomach Liver and Bowels,
unlocks the Secretions, Purifies the Blood and
removes all the impurities from a common
Pimple to the worst Scrofulous Sore, and
DYSPEPSIA, BILIOUSNESS,
CONSTIPATION, HEADACHE,
SALT RHEUM, SCROFULA,
HEARTBURN, SOUR STOMACH,
DIZZINESS, DROPSY,
RHEUMATISM, SKIN DISEASES,
Aril $O,, Isor,
Tho1Butter and Cheese.
Agricultural Department its. highly
satisfied withdeveloprrents in the Canadian
export butter trader. , Hon. Thos. Ballast!'
tyneand
other leading,
hier
s report that have recently Bold butter from the Do-
minion
at ono shilling per ewt. more than
butter from Australia and New Zealand
was sold for, or within two shillings of the
price of the finest Danish. Canadian but-
ter of first -plass quality is'equal totbe Dan-
ish brand, but the Danes have controlled
the British market for so long a period
that old world merchants are prejudiced in
favor of their produot. Our dairymen
have but to persist in making and market -
in first-class
g batter, and they will soon
plane it in the front rank. It is within the
memory of many of the present generation
when Canadian cheese had next to no sale
in the .British markets, and there was
etrong antipathy to its consumption, be-
cause it was too frequently sent abroad in
poor condition. Our dairymen lived down
all apposition, and now their produot holds
first plane in British imports. We can
vastly increase the quantity of our butter
exports and enhance their value relatively
by pursuing a similar policy to that which
we have adopted with cheese, And the new
cold storage system which will enable dairy-
men to send abroad their butter in good
shape within a few days after it is made,
will greatly aid in the laudable enterprise.
ONE MINUTE CURE FOR TOOTH-
ACHE.
Magical in potency and power, penetrat-
ing at once to the diseased nerve. Nervil-
ine—nerve pain cure—cures toothache in a
moment. Nerviline, the most marvellous
pain remedy known to science, may be
used for all nerve pains. Test at once its
efficacy.
Flisha Canning of Paterson N. J. was
arrested Sunday night for drinking rum in
church. He walked down the main aisle
of Cross Street Methodist Episcopal
Church during the Easter services, feced
the assembled congregation, and producing
a bottle from his pocket, drank its health.
The sermon of the pastor, Rev. Mr Wiggs,
Dame to a sudden stop. The deacons pro-
tested, and several stifled feminine screams
were heard. Some one summoned Patrol-
man O'Brien who arrested Canning.
v U/ . to a,
Back..Ache, race -Ache. Sciatic.
I.:1121s, Neuralgic rains.
Cahn in the Side, etc.
Promptly Itollevad and Cured by
The "D. & L"
Menthol Plaster
Having nasi your D. R I. ttonthnl Plaster
for severe Lain in he bark HMI I lumbago, I
unhesitatingly recommend 8,11110 55 a gate,
sure and rapid r,•mndy : I n foe t. they artilko
tuagte.—A. LAPut>•rc, Elizabethtown, Ont.
Price 2.%c.
DAVIS & LAWItENCE CO., LTD.
Proprietors, MONTREAL.
A Shapely Foot I
A Perfect -Fitting Shoe.
Y 1
.1
It s a Cinderella Fit. No shoes could give
a better fit, nor could there be offered
a finer line to select from. No one
could ask for more attractive prices` or
greater values. It is an open question
whether we shall ever bb able to dupli-
cate the bargains we are now offering.
We have also a large line of
Trunks, Valises, Blankets,
Double and Single Harness.
We have just received two oars of
White Cedar Shingles
and are now ready to supply all de-
mands. Give ns,a call.
JAS. TWITCHELL, Clinton
I1ell�u1I6I ll?SIS
'Trees, Plants, Shrubs.
This old -established and reliable business is
being continued as usual, and those who want
anything in our line can rely on the very best
of service
Choice Plants for Spring Bedding.
Floral Designs for Weddings or Funerals
Fruit and Ornamental Trees
Spruce. Scotch .t Astrachan Pine
Pr cea of entire stock very low.
All orders promptly filled.
John Stewart Estate,*euniliier
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
in' the Estate of James McGee, late of the
Township of East Wawanosh, in the ()min-
ty of Enron, deceased
t to te statnt
inithat behaotice is lf thatgall C iven editorsaand others have
ing claims against the estate of said the deceased
who died on or about the lath day of February,
A.D., 1897, at the Township of East WAwanosb,
are hereby required to deliver or send by post,
prepaid, to JOAN WILSON, Auburn P.O. Onta-
rio, on or before the 30th day of April, A.15.,1897
the names, addresses and descriptions and full
particulars of their claims, duty varifed and the
nature of the securities, if any, held by them,
and the executors will, on and after the 80th day
April, lust„ proceed to distribute the assets of
the said Estate among tele parties entitled there
to, having regard only to the claims of whioh
they have then notice, and the said Executors
will not be liable for the assets of the said estate
or any part thereof so distributed, to any persoh
of whose claims they have not notice at the time
of such distribution.
Persons indebted to the estate are hereby no.
tilled that the same must bo paid before the 80th
day of April, 1897
JOHN WILSON, AtetunN, Executors
Dated' hi 26b day Z f March, 1897
.}Executors'
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AVegetable Preparation forAs-
similaling theFoodandRegula-
ting the Stomachs and Bowe of
Promotes Digestion,Cheerf'ul-
ness and Res t.Con tains neither
Opium,Morphine nor Nlneral.
NOT NARC OTIC.
]&s ole a'Old.Dr&IMlTA'LPlY/SKR
dirmpTin .feed -
i liff
Alxdenna
Rocidie sdu -
0 ;r6 pica e
1l ets a e.foht •
�lQnfrr dSugar
Inkvyrev Floral:
P. -::Sect Remedy for Constipa-
tion, Sour S to mach,Diarrhoea,
Worms ,Convulsions ,feverish-
ness
Fever/sh-
fess and Loss OF SLEEP.
Inc Simile Signature of
NEW YORK.
itEXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
%a im ,, ;,,,,,e //;
A%months :cold
35DOSES — r"CE.NTS
SEE
THAT THE
FAC -SIMILE
SIGNA'TUR1
Is ON THE
WRAPPER.;
rOF EVERY
BOTTLE LE OF
CASTORII7
•1
dastorfa is put up in one -size bottles only. I ,'
is not sold in bulk. Don't allow anyone to ae
you anything else on the plea or promise that 4 tir
is "just as good” and "will answer every par«'
pose," 4uiT-See that yon get 0 -A -S -T -0 -R -I -A`;,;;'`.
The fate
simile
signature
of
.2C arapp�i.;,
Business1i.._
Chge •
•v
The partnership existingibetween J. McMurray and H. Wiltse has been;
dissolved, and the business will be carried on by the undersigned, who
will be pleased to receive the support of all old cuotomera,' and as many
new ones as may find it to their interest to give him a trial. All goods
to be found in a first rate Grocery, as good and cheap as any, will be
kept in stook.
Bargains for a few days in Dinner,
Tea and Toilet Sets. Cash for Eggs.
H. WILTSE
CLINTON, Phone 40`
3;.
R2ady for Business SHEYPA[ID & SEACQM
The Clinton Family Grocery,,
Are now ready for business with a new and select stock of Family Groceries,
Floor, Feed. Provisions, t@c. We guarantee our values to be the very beSt.iA
the market. TEAS a specialty. Teims Cash or Produce.
SHEPPARD & BEACOM OnrarieStreet,
� Opposite Combe L•lod,., Clinton•
lVhy Don't You Ubu; <„ a FU
\FAIN PEI
THE SAVE TIME AND TEMPER
We Handle the Celebrated Lapham's Rival. It has ' the, -
Slotted Capillary Feed Piece, therefore will not flood
or drop ink.
Do not allow Dealers to press upon you lines "just as good,
but get the best.
LAPHAH'S RIVAL
If your Stationer does not handle it write us and will sen
our reduced Price List.
The Copp, Clark Co., Ltd., 1-'orontoU
KO
,474
MRS. JOHN CASH.
(
My husband has been
troubled with dyspepsia,
and finds Ripans Tabules
the only relief. He has
been troubled with indi-
gestion for the past fif-
teen years.
(
0