HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1897-06-18, Page 3The Maple Leaf.
We will send the New Era to ne
The following is an authentic vera
C I SLOTH
H
Canada's National Anthem. The author,
Mr Alex. Muir, hae never had the wo f
the anthem published in full, and ae
receiving letters frequently for the co
version of hie popular composition, h
irevised the poem and made it final
kcads as follows:
on of AND SCIENCE.
rde o
he is I BONES OF THIS ANIMAL AID IN Ah
rreot IMPORTANT DISCOVERY,
e has 1
It
In days of yore the hero, Wolfe,
Britain's glory dud maintain,
And planted firm Britannia's flag
On Canada's fair domain.
Here may it wave, our boast, our pride,
And join in love together,
With Lily, Thistle, Shamrock, Rose—
he paple Leaf forever!
Chore:
The Maple Leaf, our emblem dear,
The Maple Leaf forever!
God save our Queen and heaven bless
The Maple Leaf forever!
On many hard-fought battlefields,
Our brave fathers, side by side,
For freedom, homes, and loved ones dear,
Firmly stood and nobly died;
And those dear rights, which they main-
tained,
We swear to yield them, never!
We'll rally 'round the Union Jack,
The Maple Leaf forever!
In autumn time our emblem dear
Done its tints of crimson hue;
Our blood would dye a deeper red,
Shed, dear Canada, for yon!
Ere saored rights, our fathers won
To foemen we deliver,
We'll fighting die—our battle cry:
"The Maple Leaf forever!"
God bless our loved Canadian homes,
Our Dominion's vast domain;
May plenty ever bo our lot,
And peace hold an erfdless reign;
Our -Claim bound by ties of love,
That discord cannot sever,
And flourish green o'er freedom's home
The Maple Leaf forever!
On merry England's far-famed land
May kind heaven sweetly smile;
God bless old Scotland evermore,
And Ireland's emerald isle.
Then
swell
t
the
song,
load
bothand
long,
Till rocks
and
forests quiver;
God save our Qt €en, and heaven bless
The Maple Leaf forever!
Belleville.
True Co the Last.
• One of the best and most popular Ehoe.
makers in Belleville givee evidence to an
important matter.
Mr Wm. Kemp, the well-known shoe-
maker, says; "My wife jCae been a great
'sufferer of nervous and heart troubles for
the last 20 years. She was in a very bad -
state, had pains in the region of the heart
extending up over her shoulders, end she
was so nervous that she oould not sleep at
night. Her appetite was almost gone, and
although she had taken many kinds of med-
icine
both from doctors and proprietcry art-
icles, she reoieved noxelief from them. See-
ing an t of Milburn's
art
and Nerve Pills, mIngot a box with the ffaint
hope that they would help her, She has
taken two boxes and the results are some-
thing wonderful. Her pains have all but
left her. Her appetite is good. She sleeps
well, which is one of the greatest blessings
she has experienced, and she has improved
in every way.
"I will recommend them nd
feel that no other remedy could have achiev-
ed a result in so short a time. (Signed),
Wm, Kemp, Belleville, Ont."
Laxa Liver Pills cures constipation, bil-
onsnes,s and sick headache; 25c.
AN ENGLISH VIEW.
Sof the Canadian peaking
(Eng (England) Telegraph says:— "In short, the Canadian Government,
so far as the
Dominion min'
to
n
,s
concerned,
me
d
tears u
the P eat
and y' claims the lib-
erty to fix her own tariff, and discrim-
inate, if she so chooses, as a right, and
we should like to see the Colonial Sec-,
retary who the claim.would
In the face venture ofto such lane
,guage there is nothing for it but to
tell Germany and p►otest,, that tthegtreaties
they
terminate. In the meantime however,
to smooth matters, the Canadian Min-
istry maintains that it has circumvent-
ed the treaties, even if they were held
to be binding. All countries, it insists,
are placed upon the same footing. The
privileges offered are accompanied by
a condition applicable to all. Those
who chose to take advantage of the
condition could do so, and those who
refused to accept he condition could
not surely ask for the concession. If
any
tariff country
aavabl as the to
re-
ciprocal tariff was to theirs, then they
Would get the benefit of the reciprocal
tariff. If they did not apply such a
tariff to Canadian goods, then they
would not get the benefit of the recip-
rocal tariff.
Rev Dr Moore,
un-
aniimouslyelectpdo Ottawa,
nt of fs the
Presbyterian General Assembly.
A big gra horse. weighing 2,800 lbs.
owned by , Chapliw, Southwol, fell
into a ciste on Sunday. It required
fourteen men to get it out and they lab-
ored for an hour.
You think of Scott's
Emulsion as only for those
who` have consulnption or
who have inherited a ten-
dency to it. Almost its
greatest use is for those
VF` os- condition is so im-
not to be able to
e good they,sluould out
their ordinary food. In
nearly every case with these,
is Ethulsion of Cod-
, liver Oil brildps back appetite,
stimulates d4gestlon, restores
color and plumpAess, and
controls the diseases a( thin-
ness. Book about it, free,
softs. and $r,co, at ail druggists.
SCOTT & DOWN'S, Bellevtlle; Ont.
A First Link In Evolution—At First I1
Existed In North America and Thea
Emigrated to South America--Anolenr
Isthmus of !i'aaama.
Ono of the greatest mysteries of science,
a perplexity that has harassed the mindt
of the foremost scientists, staudsexplained
by a discovery recently made by Dr. S. Ia
Wortman of the department of paleontol
ogy in the American Museum of Natural
History. By it geographers must ohenge
theories that have prevailed as unchange•
able and alter their reckonings in one in
stance by 0
ears. In another do.
main of solence,that which deals with the
monster animals of prehistoric times and
their life, some interesting conjectures, act
Fepted almost as a fixed belief, must ix
dismissed when confronted by the cleat
facts set forth with,. indisputable evidence
by Dr, Wortman.
It there waseaso thmuus of ran Panamanhalf that
s
million years ago—not the neck of the
present day, but a predecessor, which in
the lapse of time carne and disappeared.
Geographers have contended that the thin
strip of land which connects North and
South America is about 60,000 years old,
and that before that time here flowed a
sheet of water 70 miles wide between the
two continents.
It shows that those huge sluggards, the
gigantic sloths, as large as an elephant,
carne from what are now tho southwestern
portions of tl, r, 1 •sees
fro
the
clu
the
—a
frig
Pru
FI
bee
via,
den
As
the
cod s
ther
betw
ou1
to th
taine
Nort
and 1
tient
coup
rope,
marc
Hent
Th
leen w
in the
by Dr
a000U
much
world,
and tl
origin
titled
tionsh
describ
In a
Juan
Lands
and fru
stant, a
sloth a
pally e
strous
ed. Th
point o
tire ego
the etas
of mam
Deep
one eku
eooene s
this pe
later tui
I
ass
th
a
reckons
ae
skull be
the past.
covered
through
came fllle
washed 1
is a mil
surface 0
This s
sloth, bu
defined a
that of
Here, the
and hero
moderate
came im
the lake.
this anot
body tum
one was la
lake kept
found hundreds of feet higher up in the
canyon. But there came a time when the
lake had risen so high that it overflowed
and disappeared. The mud that had ac-
cumulated in its bottom gradually turned
into sandstone. In this, water through an
almost endless procession of years cut its
way, and so formed the canyon In the
depths of whioh Dr. Wortman was enabled
to grasp the evidence scientists so long
have sought.
Thus the
st
sloth has been placed a ad inns putably hcestor of ad
his origin hero and nowhere else. Through
the whole of the vast e0oene period, which
endandod °volluted0untilsftgo, the became, th as otherred
e-
mainsfound by Dr. Wortman in higher
eocene deposits show, as largoasa yearling
steer.
Then.canie a sudden and most startling
change. At the close of the cocene period
deposits all traces of the sloth 1n North
America disappear abruptly and reappear
in South America. This fact is full of the
deepest significance,
It means, says Dr. Wortman, that, not-
withstanding the theories of geographers,
there was an isthmus between North and
South America 600,000 years ago. Vol-
canic disturbances all of a sudden closed
the watery gap between the continents, and
over this land bridge the animals from the
United States and Mexico made gradually
a grand emigration. The sloths went into
South America in great hordes,
found things more congenial they Thtey
climate in this country was changinggs ape
•
idly from the tropical to the temerate,ap
Thfe isthmus, Dr. Wortman reasons,
was few hundred years. Then, due to vand doubtless voolcanifor c
disturbances again, it disappeared and an
oceanic stretch intervenerl'until about 60,-
000 years ago, when the isthmus of the
present uprole from.,the water,—New York
Herald.
not
in South America. Buo t all truces of
se animals were confined almost ex.
steely to South America. Nuri„ and
n u ekelctcn has been found elsbwhere
few romaicCs in this country and SOME
]neflta of sloth teeth at Egcrkingen,
8810.
ow those great boasts were bred hue
n unknown. That luck of knowledge
4
u serious
defect
in the chain Stn n
f o '•
vt
ce proving tho doctrine of evolution.
geologists resolutely held that during
whole of the cocene period, which end-
ever/it hundred thousand years ago,
o was absolutely no land connection
eon North and South America, how
d animals emigrate from one continent
e other? Some geologists have enter.
d the belief that they originated. in
h America, which then was tropical,
narched to Alaska, then over the an -
land bridge which connected that
try with Asia, then strode into Eu -
later visiting Africa, and finally
had across a sunken antarctic conti-
to South America.
o true solution of this profound prob-
es discovered in the San Juan basin,
northwestern part of New•Moxico,
. Wortman. He gave brief technical
nt in a memoir, and it bus excited
interest anion
g scientists all over the
upsetting, as it done, many theories
Crowing a strong flashlight upon the
of things. In another memoir, en-
"Tbe Ganodorta and Their Rele-
ip to the Edentate," Dr. Wortman
es bis find more fully.
canyon 1,000 feet high in the San
basin, which is part of the Bad,
of New Mexico, ho hit upon skulls
gmentary remains which in an in-
s it were, revealed the tale of the
nd armadillo tribe, bow they grad -
voluted from smallness to mon.
proportions and how they emigrat-
is discovery clears the long obscured
f the origin and descent of the en-
th group and brings it back into
est relationship with other orders
male.
down in that canyon he disinterred
11 and a foot, lying in the lowest
tratum in North America, Now, as
rtioular layer of sediment, whioh
ned into stone, was deposited not
n
500,000 , ear
Y sa o
Dr.
. Wortman
rim
an
the original nal
sloth th
who
longed lived that ma m thyears at
.All the region thereabout was
by a great lake, which gradnally,
the lapse of countless ages, be-
d by mud, stone and other matter
nto it. The lowest eocene stratum
e and a half below the present
f the earth.
kull is not that of the gigantic
t of his most primitive, oloarly
neestor, whose girth was abort
a bulldog --certainly not larger,
n, was the sloth's original home,
it first flourished. When this
sized fellow died, its corpse bee
bedded in the muddy bottom of
Tens of thousands of,,years after
bar sloth passed away, and its
bled into he lake and sank. This
rger than tho other, and, as the
rising all tho time, its bones are
Shady.
"I hear you were mixed up in a rather
shady transaction last week."
"I cannot tell a lie—I wata. I bought a
couple of blitids for the kitchen windows."
—Strand Magazine.
w subscribers for the balance of 1897 for 50 cents cash.
Mater THE OLD, OLD STORY.!
ABviee se Lore, Courtship and Ilisrr]
Gwen Fttty Years Asa
"The end
Marriage" Is the�tit Love;
of Oa little book
whioh, though published 60 years ago, oon-
tainekorroh advise that is as sensible now
as it Wee then. "Flattery;" says the au-
thor, who sex is not revealed by the title
page and is not easy to guess from in-
ternal evidenoe, "Is a powerful weapon in
the art of making love. Never lived there
yet man or woman but that in some way
or other could be flattered The great point
is to
know in what way to use it. A young
lady will Peel flattered if you get a chanoe,
young man, to tell her mother about the
gobut the daughter wilof her lhearIt " ThNever e
author dwells at Some length on the subtle
battery conveyed in applying what is ordi-
narily termed a "pet name" to the object
of one's affection and repeats with em-
plCasis the admonition that "faint heart
never won fair lady."
Then the author fits the shoe to the other
foot. "There is no impropriety," he or she
says, "in a lady's taking any reasonable
measures to indorse her bean to make his
proposal when he is either backward, slow
or bashful-" The advice of old Weller to
"bevare of viddere" is indorsed 1n only a
half hearted way. "In making love to
a widow," our author says, "you have
nothing to do but to answer her questions
and to return her caresses. In making
love to a widow, then, you must first be
sure that you want her for a wife, as ft
Will not be safe to trust yourself within
tho'pele of her inifuenoe If yon expect ever
to got off heart whole." She will certainly
catch you in her toils, if she pleases. She,
of course, does not give you much chance
to exhibit these romantic proofs of attach-
ment which young girls delight in, but
will dieouss the marriage ceremony and
plans for the future with the sante cool-
ness and deliberation as if she were select-
ing her furniture and household goods.
Considering all herpuculiar}ties, the conk -
ship of a widow is a mere formal matter
of business. Any man with soffiolent
nerve to use his own judgment in the pur-
chase
of.
a
horse may, la
our
Y. t a
widow with-
out t tic
ubl
.o and
without ut a
dvioe.
Twenty ways of popping the question
are advanced, and tho author concludes the
advice for wooers and the wooed with the I
following axiom: "As a general rult a
gentleman need never be refused. Every
woman, except a heartless coquette, can
easilyydlscourago a man that she does nut
intend to marry before matters come to fi
the point of declaration. It is very true I s
that some mon are woefully blinded in this
thing of lovepuaking and do not got their
eyes open until they aro `kicked.' "—San
Francisco Argonaut._
»ARK CLOUDS
ROLLED AWAY.
One of Death's Agents Subdued
Paine's Celery Compound
Brings New Life to a
Roxton Pond Lady.
and sve
a humanbeingaftter cdicine the n rbestescue effurrteaof
medico! prove uuavailin;{ should merit the
careful econsideration of very sick m
woman. Such a medicine is a boon
world, anchor of hope, protection an
to those who have been told that the
in a hopeless 0ondition and incurable.
devised but present,
one stemedye thalt
sciefully'nce hs
mets
the wants and desires of all sufferers. This
wonderful medicne is Palue's Celery Com-
pound to which thousands in Canada to-
day owe life and good health.
Heroidd
Marina Aa statement Bullock, of Roxtou Pond,m a ,P.Q.,
a eufferer from liver trouble,that is in every
way sufficiently strong to convince the des-
pairing, dtspondeut asd doubtful. She
rays:
l think it my duty and a pleaeeut'e t0
write and tell you what your !'Cine'„ Celery
Curnpouud hue done for 1110, u suffer from
liver trouble,
` Tj t o years ago I had u very bad attack
of it, and called in a doctor who relieved
me of my trouble, but 1 still remained
weak and ailing, and had another and
more severe attack. I was under the
doctor's caro for four mouths and rtecived
very little relief.
"I was vary weak, not able to sit up
more than 0 few minutes at it time. A
little milk taken at weal, would !distress
tae, and I was nervous and could 10,1 but
little sleep,
"Bearing what Pain.,'( 1 , 1.t•y Com-
pound had 'lone fut. a friend, 1 gave up
doctoring and u:<ed your nisaicitie,
rake
u I have
six , '
br
tilos an
dh
iDt ':
t ICf' •
C R tr(1
011
1011
d.
U(7
1. I a
to able to
eat 0 good meal, 1
sleep vital, seldom he down ti erica; the (ia1
and can drive six miles over tuup;h r(.ade
tt it 11(,ut getting tirsel,"
Body Used lis 11 Target.
, With the dead body of a woman for
a target, the bullet proof cloth invent -
eh by Lieut. Casimir Zeglen, of the
Chi-
cagoAusrran College of was the
Dental Surgery in the
presence of a number of professors,
army officers and citizens interested
in the science of bodily armor.
The body of a fernale about 120
pounds in
hd been
from thecounty
weight morgue to thetocol-
lege and was suspended in the custom-
ary fashion with the arms outstretch-
ed. The physicians present said the
corpse %vas not as stout as the exigen-
cies of the occasion demanded.
and t A ,t -f c•alibre Colt revolver was put
into the, piactice, after the upper portion
dijoy of the body had been incased lu all
GONE To SHADOW.
Racked By Paih, Bed -Ridden, Life De
spaired of—South American Rheumatic
His Experience
"I1 ain't nu sig;:i I f bravery ter abuse
tiles; ver a high fence 01' t;tin 'Int her
tic the rhea' captain 1111ing
,e keg on which he was sitting 50
tat his hack aright rest, Against the
sh-huuse. His companion sa•t hv,
tending the nets. ",Now when I Was
rite a lad," he went on, "[ had an ex -
'Hence that showed tile) what 011-
,1111nun poor policy It is 10 be too
1' %'--('yen ata distance."
"How was that?"
"Well, I Was put in alternate cap's
one of theta steamers that tuns in
en(hrnan'a Baty. an being young an'
lerable successful, 1
got
t
!; to th' n
uki '
I
utvad pretty much the whole of it
Cure was the Good Angel Which Stilled 1 k,),
th T
e empest and Piloted Fafely Into the
Harbor of Health •
"I was so troubled with sciatica that at
tines the pain and suffering; 1 experienced
was excruciating. I failed in flesh' to al-
most a shadow. I was almost continuously
in bed for over a year, and 1 had spent
hundreds of dollars in doctoring. Thad al.
mose
f a
whothaden up been curedeof the same diseasebve
ySouth American Rheumatic Cnre, induced
me to try it. The first dose gave me in-
stant relief. After using three bottles,I was
compiney P. 0., Ont. tely cured." Sold by Watts & Co. Var-
ney
A
Mrp(sal Latimer now retire frtive om pouar lis
-
tics tics and accept the Chief Justiceship
of Canada,
'Woulldn t you like ilt?'col lMr
response,e
Laurier may be a great jurist. He is
certainly nl
a r'
eats
Y tat
esm
g an in
the ful-
ness
of his powers, and quite young as
modern statesmen gc, being only fifty-
five years of age. To ask hirn wilfully
to leave the great service of ruling his
country, for which all his antecedents
have been training him, and in which
he has proved so remarkable a success,
is too preposterous to be intelligent.
It has been his by strength and suavi-
ty to harmonize the great personal
forces of the broad Dominion m a way
that could hardly have been hoped
for. and the eminence of his position
has been an important factor in the
forward movement now so nli(•eithly
going on in thisprovince. It would
be criminal for gr Laurier to despise
his 'country's mandate and to desert
her just when he is able to do so much
for her.—Montreal Witness.
" Sweet Bells Jangled Out of Tune,
How much of woman's life ha;,;, ::• •. ,
Lost for lack of harmony. A leu„silt ; ;,1.1,1:
melodious
tones ruined
by one little
note of dis-
cord. Wo-
men who
ought to en-
joy the per-
fect happi-
ness of love
and wifehood
and mother-
hood are mis-
erable from
year'sone
end to the
other, be-
cause., of sotne weakness
or disease of the delicate
organism of their sex.
These delicate com-
plaints, which make a
jangling dissonance 4f so
many twee, are not by
any means a necessity of womanhood.
The may be overcome and completely
eradicated under judicious treatment.
There is no need of repugnant examina-
tions. There is no need of resorting to any
unauthorized
byan unskilled, medicament
compounded. co
Pierce's Favorite Prescription cures the
troubles of the feminine organism
tively, completely and safely. posi-
tively,
nearly 3o years Dr, R. V. Pierce has
been chief consulting physician of ,the In-
valids' Hotel and Stirgical Institute, of
Buffalo N,Y. He is an eminent and expert
specialist particular eld ipeAywoman may tohim with perfect
confidence, and will receive, free of charge,
sound, professional advice and suggestion
for self -treatment by which co out of too
cases of female complaint, even of the most
obstinate kind, may be completely and per-
manently cured. Address him as above.
Co., ane writesliMrs. G.
ng at A. Cone nor, of A11eg1t•.•--
friend came to me and Enid: ' My daughter, aged
and has nevertedhadthe necessary indisposi-
tions
of womanhood.' 1 advised her to get Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription, The lady pur.
Chased one bottle and it cured ber daughter.
She was well and happy when 1 left there.''
Constipation is the all -embracing cause
of ill -health, Dr, Pierce's Pleasant Pellets
cure it, They never gripe.
•
One harf
lacus' the freight on,we was an' l
an' fsee yin' at ta%little
roan welkin' 011100' down, waitin' ter
i udiv idit 1, ad. he was an' fullerin' an hau'gi0' on
his words were two or three men that
seemed ter consider what he said as
golden speech.
"I kept it
would comeltimke to stCar t whenat I wished
was
'way tip'tother• end of the wharf, an'
sure enough, just as he got much as a
rod away it was time ter pullout.
"1 pulled 1' e >histle an' waited fu 1
time, but he turned rcurid mighty
moderat an' clone The uIenecomrnenced ttoward
thaul itpl00,011
we l ithe wharf. Then
he
broke into back run an' waved hisQ at ar'
sh Cured.
"When I hollered back ,e 1''Ht r clears y of everything
little tchap
or'
ors>
11
hey y ter�
walk?'
an
ago
to
f
seeeh
talk, 1,
when n
I
got a signal n Otte
cap'n an' findin'some! hire unusual iwas
up, I hed to.
"The men lowered the plank, an' the
likrle an walked on board and come
right, ii p ter the pilot -house an' passed
me his card.
"He was the owner of the whole
line of steamers, an' he says, very slow
an' kind, °'Speakin' of welkin', p'r'a•ps
you'd better go ashore now 'fore they
draw the plank in. We eha'n't need
you on this trip.”
"What did yon (lo?"
"Do? Why, I went of 0010se, an'
my assistant run the trip, The mat ter
was fixed up, but, when I inakie a joke
MAY hake keen that ain't curnill' home
ter roost."
impenetrable cloth. Thirty shots fail-
ed to pierce the "pannier," or cloth,
fired at a distance of of from three to
fifteen paces.
brought b was
ght intouse.
.33 calibre revTwo rr•ibs on the
right side of the body were shat tered
by he
e
frome force of these bruises therewasno indica
tnindica-
tion that, bullets had been directed
against the body.
THE BEST REMEDY FOR CORNS
Is Putman's Painless Corn Extractor,
rapid, painless, its action is a marvel to all
wbo have tried• it, Fancy getting rid of
corns in 24 hours. "Putman's" does it.
Montreal Chinamen ride bicycles.
What next?
New York city consumes daily 3,1100
carcasses of butcher meat.
lieu Bir Anderson, Baptist minister,
Si, Marys, is said to have received a
let tet•frotuJ.Fare well,0Ow in Kingston,
asking !tint to draw ftp a petition for
his release and have it signed prepar-
atory to sending it to the Miniet('1' of
Justice. While P'ru•ewell lived in St.
M1
.tau '
ys he sought prumir,('Itt'e in relig;*-
i is eir('les. His ltubtly was faith, MA
he
developed c
many-
peculiarities
the
led I() the supposition that he was not..
Well balanced. •
II1Ha4 iliamoillIl u1„11H I I I In111111111111IIIH1111nM
rnuawwunawmsu, p i,mnN1
,muum,mmwnwlbwunw,uu
9 —
ww,=UMW
AVet; z table Prep oration for As -
simiiaLing the Food and Reg ula-
1ing the Stomachs andBowels of
THAT THS
FAC—SIMILE
SI GNATUB�
OF
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful-
ness and Rest.Contains neither
Op1upi,Morphine nor Mineral.
NcrrNARCOTIC.
It
Recrpao/'Olrlllr.FilMI/ELp1Tt'[Id-R
J'rwrp,Tan J'ard -
JLc.rr�uum. ,
li'otlitfte Jahr -
.xce <p'eed .
1t ;urn. Tart _
rn Owrdawle a..
r r:c -
i/K'-G,vrirerl ,&rev
IS ON THE
WRAPPER'
OF EVERY
BOTTLE OF
Aperfect Remedy for Constipa-
tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Norms ,Convulsions,Feverish-
mess and Loss OF SLEEP.
TacSinule Signature of
NEW YORK.
+/ 1
f Y '
ti. .
rb
p 7
7.' r N_..NG IAY
-•)D TI;REATENED
Oastoria is put tip in one -size bottles only. Ii
is
no
tdin bok. Don't ,
s l
t alio
w anyone t
osell
ell
on
S anythmg also on the plea or promise that It
is"just as good" and "will answer every pure^
pose." .'See that you get 0 -A -S -T -0 -It -I -A,
The, fav -
simile
signature
et
i - BALDNESS
t -y L'an-; er :,; Averted by Using
1''';(':1'h' forty years ago, after
;;o i (' W(', ks of sickness, my hair
turned gray and began falling out
so rapidly that I was threatened
with immediate baldness. Ilearing
r.% ar's Flair Vigor highly spoken of,
I commenced using this prepare^
■
is on,
every,
tion, and was so well satisfied with
the
resulth
t a t
I have never
tried
anyother kind of dressing. It stop.
ped the hair from falling out, stimu-
lated a new growth of hair, and kept
the scalp free from dandruff. Only:,
an occasional application is now
needed to keep my hair of good,
natural coktr. I never hesitate to
recommend any of Ayer's medicines
to my friends."—Mrs. II. M. HAIGIIT,
.Avoca, Neb.
Ayer's Hair Vigor
PREPARED nY
OR. i, C MER & CO., LOWELL, MASS., U. S. A.
dyer's Sarsaparilla Aemoveea Pimptea.
Special 6 TEAS! TEAS 1
arga,inS I
CEYLON, ASSAM and JAPANS.'
8 pounds good Young Hyson Tea for t$1.
Just to hand, 1 car (SUGARS ! SUGARS!
SU
Montreal Su
gitl' (j No, 1 Granulated, Coffee and Raws inGbare ls, one
hundred pounds sad dollars, et special prices.
We keep the} best Dinner, Tea and Bedroom Sets, Fancy China
assorted stock of Wed- and Lamps. 25 per cent less than regularprice.
g;
dinPresents in Ruron. • Call and see our goods and get prices.,
FRESH SEEDS—Timothy, Red and Alsike Clover, Turnip and Mange!.
41 Cash paid for good Butter and Eggs.
J. W. IR WIN, - - - - Clinton
The partnership existing between 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 0uatomers,'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 stock.
Bargains for a few days in Dinner
Tea and Toilet Sets. Cash for Eggs.
H. \AT I L T S E, CLINTON, LINTON, Phone. 40
Rudy for Business
SHEPPARD & BEACON
The Clinton Family Grocery,
Are now ready for business with a new and elect stock of Family Groceries,
Flour, Feed, Provisions, &c. We guarantee our values to be the very best in
the market, TEA S a specialty. Te, ms Cash or Produce.
SHE •thPARD & BEACON!, Ontario Street,
Opposite Combe Bloc,., Clinton
\VhyDoat You
USE
AFo1FrA I
PEN
THE SAVE TIME AND TEMPER
We Handle the Celebrated Laphaln'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. °
L1PYlAWS 'RIVAL
If your Stationer does not handle it write us and will send you;.
our reduced Price List.
The Copp, Clark Co., Ltd., Toronto'
Clinton Sash,!DoorB1jnd
FaCtOry,
S. S. COOPER -' PROPRIETOR,
General Builder and Contractor.
Thio factory is the largest in the county, and has the very latest improved ma-
chinery, oapabie of doing work on the shortest notice. We carry an extensive
and reliable stock and prepared plans, and give estimates fortand build all
plass-
If ugsinotice and
prices.sest lraps" cod n amechanical way and satisfaction guaranteed. Wesell all kinds of in-
terior and exterior material.
Lalnlrer Lath, Shingles, Lime, Sash,
Doors, Blinds, Etc
Agent for the Celebrated G•RAyBiLL SCHOOL DESK, manufaotcred
at waterloo. Call and get prices and estimates before planing your orders';:
CA4LiIAGES AND WAGGONS
We Keep in Stock and snake to order
Carriages and Waggons of all kinds.
MRS. JOHN
CASII.
F. RIJMBALL, - - CLINTON
My husband has been
troubled with dyspepsia,.
and finds Rip fns Tabules
the only relief. Ile has
been troubled with indi-
gestion for the past fif-
teen years.
.:w
5,
tglis