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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1897-07-23, Page 6u1y aR, 1,$07 • to Spieler Growing Industry. When mine host in the ideal country !watt* wbivh all of us seek, but none of us l?l1d, bringa up a bottle of crusted wine ?►lam ed With cobwebs and dust, this out - and Visible sign is taken as oonvinc- evtdenoe of age. We grieve to have toiROOr d teat the trust may now be mite ?lased. A bulletin of the division of en- wrnology of the Bolted Spates department uarteulture says that in France and Pelineyleenia an industry has recently IIONEST pprungup, which consists of the farming AP anidere for the purpose of stocking wine Munyon's Motto Tell the Truth and Nothing But the Truth. tePliarree and thus securing almost imme• late coating of cobwebs to new wine bot ilea, giving them the appearance of great se. Tbls industry is carried on in a little French village in the department of Loire an14 near Philadelphia, where Epelra vul- elarle and Nephila plureipes are raised in ;]•erge quantities and sold to wine mer- 0hent at the rate of $10 per hundred. This lstlaplieation of entomology to industry is one whioh will not bo highly commended. .efeNature. TProminent City Official Minks as Highly of Paine's Celery Compound As He Did Years Ago. Mr J. T. Dillon, Chairman of the Board a Assessors in the city of Montreal, is one of the beet known and most popular citi- zens in the great metropolis. As Mr Dillon bad some years ago given public testimony regarding the life saving virtues of Paine's Celery Compound, he was asked recently if his opinions had in any way changed as far as the value of the great curing medicine is concerned. Mr Dillon's reply was prompt, and his asttetement as strong as words can make it. His brief letter rattle as follows: "I am in receint of your valued favor,and Would say that I most cheerfully testify elgain to the worth, value and merits of Paine's Celery Compound. "I am never without a bottle of it in my poeseesion. and 1 partake of it daily. This I have been in the habit of doing for .Seven years, and can affirm that, judging from experience, it is a most wonderful ,`tonic and nerve restorer. Hardly a day Masses by me that I am not asked tbo come cion, "What do you do to yourself to pre- erve your youthful appearance?" My re- pIe, "I take Paine's Celery (;omilotind,'i sBest Housed Community In the World. There is a greater concentration of ,+wealth In tbo state of New York than else - 'where, the average per inhabitant befog 40 per cent over that of the Union at large. This is partly shown in tho prodiglome 'value of house property, including public buildings, which averages $810 per inhab• itant in the state of New York against $420 for tho whole Union. Tho six mid - dila states taken collectively give an aver• e'age of $660 of house property per inhabit - '';.ant, which is double the ratio found In !,'::Great Britain, and hence it may be af- ?Itrnied that the people of these states are, e;lion the whole, the best housed community i, N;,." n the world. "1, : Tbe average wealth per inhabitant has ?i ,ailment quadrupled in 40 years, a marvel- ''4us proof of the progress of these states 'T.:grind unparalleled in Europe, for McCulloch y, , . asya it down that only prosperous options ` ,yttian double their wealth in that interval. ','The accumulation in the middle atstee per ,14;dnhabitant has been $10.20 per annum ;•yTrigher than in New England and exactly :,;!double the average accumulation yearly in { Great Britain in the interval of 1860-96. 1 .Agricultural wealth forms only 15 per ',=oent of the total in the middle states, ''+Iibereas it is 25 per cent in the whole of the Union.—Michael G. Mulhall, F. S. 8., 9 `in North American Review. 'TESTIMONIALS From Canadian People Are Positive proof of the Suc- cess of His BROAD IIOM EPATHY What people who have been cured by the Munyon liemedjee Have to Bay about Tem. A LAME BACK, ETERNAL VIGILANCE Ia the price of perfect health. Watch care- fully the first symptoms of impure blood. Cure boils, pimples, humors and scrofula by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Drive away the pains and aches of rheumatism, malaria and stomach troubles, steady your nerves and overcome that tired feeling by taking the eame great medicine. HOOD'S PILLS are the beet family ea- tbartio add liver tonic. Gentle reliable, sure, Mr D. C. Nettleton, No. 41 Stuart St., Toronto, Canada, says:—"My son had a very bad attack of the croup and we used Munyon's Croup Cure with the best of re- sults. He was troubled with a bad cough and felt very badly indeed, so badly that he could hardly speak when he began using Munyon'a Remedies. One vial of Croup Cure improved him at once and the disease was completely broken np an two or three days. Tho medicines certainly have wonderful curative powers. Munyon's Rheumatic Cure seldom fails to relieve in one to three hours, and cures in a few days. Price 25e. Munyon's Dyspepsia Cure positively cures all forms of indigestion and stomach troubles. Price 25o. Munyon's Cold Cure prevents pneumonia and 'reeks op a cold in a few hours. Pfice 25o. Munyon's Cough Cure stops coughs, night sweats, ,allaya soreneee and speedily heals the lungs Price 25e. Munyon'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 bailds up the system. Price 25c, ilIanyon's Headache Cure stops headache in three minutes. Price 25. elunyon'e Pile Ointment positively cures all fornix of piles. Price 25c Munyon's Bleed Ogre ers,dioatee all im- purities of the blood. Price 25o. Munyon's Female Remedies are a boon to all Willed. Munyon's Catarrh Remedies never fail. The Catarrh Cure—price 25c—eradicates the disease from the system, and the Ca- tarrh Tablete—pirlce 25c.—cleanse and heal the parts, 1..iungah's Asthma Iteitibeiid5 relieve in three minutes, and ,baro permanently. Price $1. Munyyon'eeVilhiizer restores lost vigor. price $1, A. separate cure for each disease. At all druggists. Mostly 25c a vial, Personal letters to Prof. Munyon, 11 and 13 Albert St., 'l oronto, answered with free 'redical advice for any disease.. NE OF THE MOST PAINFUL OF . MALADIES. r. Peter Millar Suffered for Years, and Experimented with Many Medicines be fore Finding a Cure. From the Brookville Recorder. Perhaps no prettier place is to be seen in Ontario than that at Newman's upper iodlt on the Rideau Canal. At this station ,.,:.for a quarter of a century resided Mr Peter Millar, who during that period acted in the capacity of lockman, and was perhaps the F'" best known man on the canal. Mr. Miller id now a resident of Merrickville, having ,: retired from active life. To a correspon- dentof the RECORDER he related the follow- ing experience : "For many years I was ' ',troubled with a lame back, whioh gave nee ;great pain at times, and caused me mach JOSS of sleep. 1 tried different kinds of ea;medicine but found little or no relief. The dpyieg of 1895 I was assisting at getting out 'ice one day when I felt something snap or give way in myback, and it was some time efore.I could straighten myself up. I now became eo bad'titer widen `teleid" -d- t was unable to rise without assietanoe, and 1 fully made np my mind that I had be - dente a chronic invalid, and never expeot- ied to see a well day again. A couple of Weeks after my back had almost entirely given out, I saw by an article in a paper tat Dr. William's Pink Pills had cured a person troubled similarly, and I immediate- ly sent and procured a box to test them. Before I had finished the box I found my back somewhat stronger so I procured five boxes more and by the time they were used X found myself completely our d. Since 1 "tea the Inst box I have not had a pain or "'particle of lameness, and my health has been far better than it bad been for years before. To ensure obtaining the genuine always , tisk for Dr. William's Pink Pills, as there are many pink colored imitations. Bread Crumbs. Many recipes call for cracker dust in which to roll the food that is to be fried in deep lord. If these directions aro fol - lo od, the result will never be satisfac- toCracker crumbs soak in the fat and shoed only be used for any dish to be sot in the oven—us escalloped oysters or pota- toes au gratin. For deep lard cooking 'idly bread crumbs should be employed. If oysters are first rolled in the fine bread crumbs, then in egg beaten up with ono tablespoonful of water, a seasoning of salt, cayenne pepper and a dash of Worces- tershire Baum, then again and carefully rolled in the crumbs until completely cov- ered and finally immersed in the smoking fat—have plenty of that—they will be found to look and taste exactly like those served at the best restaurants. Any one who is familiar with the sticky half burned, half raw fried oyster usual to the private house should try this recipe, fol- lowing its directions implicitly and be thankful for it.—Now York Post. The small boy may belong to the rising generation, but his mother feels inclined to doubt it sometimes when she is trying to got him out of bed in time for break- fast.—Somerville Journal. The Buddhist monastery of Elaine, in Tibet, to the loftiest inhabited point in She world. It is 17,000 feet above sea loveL HE WENT WEST 0 The farms In Illinois upon which we were reared wore not far apart, but Doo, who lived with his uncle, left borne before be was 21 and wont west. 1 had been in town to get the plow sharpened, and on my way home I saw Doe climbing across a cloddy field behind a harrow, and he hailed mo. When he came out, ho hung his chin over tho top of the fence and said, "1'm goin west." "When?" - "Tonight," .' "Yes. W111 you Poe me?" "What's it cost?" I asked. "Forty-nine dollars second plass from St. Louis to Denver." "I -lave you got the money?" Doc shook his head. "Did you ever see that roue)) money?" "Woll, not at one look, but I've got it sill figured out." "How much have you got?" "Haven't got any, but I got a joh at Wbiticer's stable in Carr street, and if you go I'll sco that you nevor want. We cnn sleep in the haymow and board around." Hovv'll we get to cat. Louis?" I asked. "Ride when we're tired o' welkin and walk when we can't ride," was his reply. "I'm in the silk, and you're in the tas- sel," ho added thoughtfully. "Life is all before ue, but you can't get anywhere on o farm. Look at the jays around here. What do they knew? They eimpiy Itand round on ono foot like a gander till the beard breaks through the freckles, and then they push the old folks off and take the plow and in a little while got pushed off themselves. Life on 0 farm is ono con. J. W. Kennedy, Liberal, was elected to the Manitoba Legislative As- ' ,fiennbly for Dennis. '4 Thirty-five horses were burned to death in a fire at the Temple livery ettibles at Hamilton. CASTO R IA For Infants and Children. _:s.3L�rdh.i_ 14:‘,4‘,every al'ayyM Many a n, who would startled ate bare thou • of sittii down dtliherat, 1rin king dose of 0011, 'a110•' himself to 1 regularly a'-•1 systematic . ally poi timed driv after day by accttmulr' tions of bile iri"tYie lit`•""`-"`_`""` When the liver fails te. do its regular work of filter• ing this bilious poison out of the circulation, it goes on // poisoning the entire constitu• ," tion just as surely as if a man was drinking prussic acid, Every part of the body is polluted. The digestive juices are suppressed and weak• cried. The kidneys and skin are clogged with impurities and the lungs and bronchial tubes overloaded with morbid secretion which eat away the delicate tissue, and bang about bronchitis and consumption. All the diseases caused by this subtle pro- cess of bilious poisoning are cured by the marvelous alterative action of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It directly in• creases the liver's batural excretive and purifying flowers ; gives the digestive and blood -making organs power to manufacture an abundance of red, . rich, healthy blood'. It drives out all impurities, and vitalizes the circulation with the life-giving elements which restore perfect nutrition, solid ?nus• t:ular power, and healthy nerve -force. In August 1595, I was taken down in bed with s burning and severe pains in my stomach and tinder my shoulders, and dizziness in my head," writes Ira D. Herring Esq., of Needmore, bevy Co., Fla. " My home physician was called and he said my symptoms were more like consumption than any?' Ing else. T lingered 1 this way seven months trying different kinds of medicine. Noth- ing that T ate would digest, ane T had great dis- tress in my stomach. T was perstfaded to try some of Dr. Pierce's remedies or to see what he thought of my case, I wrote him and received an answer Stating that my suffering was from indigestion and torpid liver, and advising me to take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. The first bottle gave pleasing results, I have taken four bottles of the ' Golden Medical Discovery' and three Small vials of the ' Pleasant Pellets I am phle to do my work and eat what I could not j before I took these medicines." —_ .rr�. TRE mom g ! 1 ERA fixed upon election night. ,A b man fanners, be said, would be in WW1'an� trade, and the people, being either drunk or tired, would. WO soundly when once asleep, and the gang voted that Doo was a great thinker. The time arrived, the store was entered, and when they were all la Doe dunked down behind the counter and reached the rear end of the stere. NowAette n eleeeye was turned upon the gang, wbo arose from their work to look down the dark barrels of a half dosen shotguns. One of the gang, seeing Doo with the sheriff's party, made a play for his pistol, but the sheriff shoved bis shotgun yet nearer the robber's face and said softly, Atfe quiet," and bo was calm. The next day the father of one of the gang, who was himself a bard man, made an attempt to kill the detective, and, hav- ing done hie work, Doo departed. Friends of the accused hired fi }Alig7er, vy+b4 ell?? beautiful pictury these innocent fids, who had lived INV lin In bhid deist country town, and who had never bbeon guilty of a wrong until they were encour- aged and trapped into it by the winked young detective, Alas for the criminals! One of the gang gave up to the sheriff, and by the finding of stolen goods and the property of a man wbo had been murdered, they wore all, Pave the one who had weakened, sent to Joliet, where they are still receiving their mull. Young Pippin's success in this now cele- brated case won for him the full confidence of the agency, and before ho had reached Chicago other important work was mapped out for him, but to the surprise of the agency he refused to accept another as- signment. "I could not bear," ho said to me, "the thought of living a whole life that was a lie; to appear always to be that whioh I was not; to mix and mingle constantly with the wicked of this world, in whioh there should be so much happiness. "It is a great and important work whioh ought to be 4,o, bub It is not for me." Returning to the west again, Pippin entered the service lief Uncle Sam as a Peetteleeterk. Ftndiag'b letter in the mail marked to me, ho roto on the back of the envelope: "Hello—Doc.—R, M. S." and' I knew then that he was in the railway mail service. tinual roupd of work and Went, Will you It was some time a ter the receipt of eine me?" this belei messa a he meeting in the The thought of getting up at morning sleeping car, alr ady e (erred to, odourred, and not knowing where I was going to tract it wee luring his many visits to pie sleep at night fr1(thtoned me, and I told et Deliver that lie related the detective Doo so, and we parted, stories herein retell "Soni tsT,rrrusked one day, "that you aro assistant superintendent of the mail s rvtco in the west when you are under 30 ani neve, comparatively new, at the busi- A few years hater, wben the west bound train stopped at a little bleak and dreary mountain town where I, having gone west, had elected to drop anchor, L looked nt out from the car window and saw Doo sit- nesse" ting oloae up to the copper of anal() sorrel �gad leek," said Doo, smiling sadly, horse that Woe hjtohed to en express wagon, bouts ing and thumping his chest. I wept over to him at once, iv. I ?vas Then it was that he began to tell me tonesoine. A motitbitli Eovv'1i is not a some of hie experience in the postal car, thing one is opt to love at first sight. Des- but be did not tell all. elle was as modest elate! That le better than four columna as he was honest and would not tell to me, of agate to describe the place. Tho dry his friend, the real take of heroism in March winds came out of the canyon and which he was himself the hero. He told swept the sand of the mesa up into eddies enough, however, to interest me anti cause that swished And swirled to and around mo to find out more from aMutual friend, your collar and cut your face. The sunlight and to verify the information by some of was so dazzling that 11 bewildered and the records and eorrespondonoe whioh I seemed unreal, and the cold winds were wee afterward permitted to see. I found constantly contradicting its warmth. that his loyalty, bravery and devotion to "Are you homoslok, Doe?" I askod'as 1 duty had been warmly commended in au - rode up town with him, far he was there tograph lettere from the highest officials to haul peoplo and their baggage upto the in the mail service. hotel. "Nop," he said. "It's the dry wind. It's busted my lip so that I look like I'm goin to cry wbon I'm tryin to laugh. I'm gain back home this fall," ho added after In any number of wrecks, for many of the a pause, "to get my money. I'm 21 now, ! western roads were new at that time and but I'm oomin back out here. Thle Donn- railroading was not safe as it is now. Once try is all right." there was a beadend collision, in which Doc, wbo had earned hie title by dootor the wreck took fire. Doc was dreadfully ing his nnole's horses). had inherited a lit- 1 bruised, but he bad all his limbs, and as t1e fortune of $1,800, and when the sum- the flames crept closer and closer to his mer bad Dome and gone he went bank car ho busied himself parrying the mail home in a Pullman oar, for he had saved matter toa place of safety. When hie work $60 out of his salary of QFi0 and board ev- had been completed and the flames 111 up ery month. the canyon, they showed Doo lying upon Rive years later, in the dawning of the his mail bage, apparently dead. The train - morning, as I wee climbing out of an up- men found him and soon restored him to per berth at another mountain town, a consciousness, for ho bad only fainted from man caught hold of my coattail, and 1 overwork and the pain of his many found that tbo "man under nay bed" was wounds. Doo Pippin. Be said he was living in It was nearly a year before he was able Denver. So was I, and in a few days he to take his run again. and this time his came in to neo me. Re came often and route lay over the Saabs Fe system. told the best stories I had ever hoard. He One night, when the train name roaring was thin and pale, and I noticed that he down the canyon, the engine jumped the coughed and pounded bis left lung when track, the mail oar went to pleces against he did so. These stories were not told to the locomotive, the eoaohes piled upon the mo for publication, but I know be will not pieces and the wreck began to burn. caro, for ho is careless now. When the trainmen and passengers came Doo went to Cbteago after receiving his forward to 'look for" the fellows up ahead," money and became acquainted with a well they saw large and small envelopes sailing known detective. I think ho said tt was out of the burning debris, and they knew Billy Pinkerton. It was like the Pinker. at once that the moll agent must be fast tons to detect In this almost beardless boy a remarkably inteNigent person. Pippin got an offer of employment. He accepted it and was sent of once too small town in Illinois to find out a band of thieves who were stealing hogs and rob- bing shops. If Doo had tried, ho could never have dressed well. Even clothes that were made for him didn't fit, and be worn his hat crosswise, like the leading man at a French funeral. His appearance upon ?hie coca• sion was in his favor, and he woe not Long It was indeed hard luck that brought him promotion and an easy, place, which he could not have gained save through the kindness of higher officials. He had been 13OO41t. RFLATiVHB. , We prove to double kinship, he and L fleetly she lies fersotten er deth seem The fluttering gileat of some star netted dream Aad vaguer than the unsubstantial eky. So distant strange so far I peer unmoved Into her pioturod'eyee and wonder if I ever spake with her, or did she live &ewe, and hath she conversed, reasoned, loved? And thorn ere hours when the diviner wit Stirs in her slumber laden seat and takes The deep of hidden things. Then, each with each, Soul worshiping, together we do alt, Ev'n I and she; and our long silence shakes With glory into silver winged speech. —Pull Mull Gazette. ITCHING, BURNING, CREEPING. Crawling or Stinging $kin Disease Reliev- ed in a Few Minutes by Dr Agnew's Ointment—Price 85 oeutd, Dr Agnew's Ointment relieves and cures Salt Rheum, Eczema, Tetter, t3arber's Itch and all like skin diseases and eruptions. It gives relief in a day. Ito cures are legion; its failures are few. Years of testing, and grows daily in favor of suffering humanity. Good for Baby's Skin, good for young, middle-aged or old folks. 35 cents. Sold by Watts & Co. in the wreck. The whistle valve had beon forced open, and now the wild, ceaseless cry of the wounded engine drowned all other sounds end made it impoestble for the men to hear the cries of the imprisoned postal clerk. All this ho knew, and while the hungry dames were eating their way to where ho lay be pulled the register bag to him and began to eby the valuable mail out into the sage brush. When tbo steam was exhausted and the cry of the ongino had ceased, there Dame no sound from the engtnemen, for their in forming the acquaintance of the tough, voices were hushed in death. Above tho est lot of loafers In the town, They liked sound of the crackling flames they could Doc, as every one did who knew him, but boar Doc calling to them from his plaoe it was a long time before they would trued below the wreak, and the train crew bim. Doo'e money gave out, and ho triad worked desperately, right in the very face of the fire, to rescue the unfortunate. Gradually the voiceof the prisoner grew fainter and fainter, and before the rescuers reached him it hushed entirely. Eat-last;lusteasetheyeateraeabontetoagiam "See that jay Adis] out o' town?" said him up, as ho was now apparently dead, CONSCIENaa o PROMPTINGS. Govan". Who Have Defrauded the Gover mont Have Sent Back 8800,000. "So strong Is the influence wielded by conscience and so frequently dons it cause the wrongdoer to atone for hie sin that for the -past 85 years the conscience fund has been officially recognized as one of tho rog. ular sources of revenue for the United States government," writes Clifford How, and in The Ladies' Home Journal. "Dur' ing this time the oonsctenoes of the Amer- ican people have added to Uncle Sam's re• sources at the rate of about $300 a month, or a total sum -up to the present year of pomething over $300,000—the amounts of the individual contributions varying from a few cents to eoveral thousand dollars. "Tbe ema1)es,p contribution ever made to the conscience -fiend vette reeeiveel is May, 1806, and consisted of a g tent stamp, wtll0A ITeelelorigled In tiro following loiter Of eiplafia ion: 'I once sent u letter in with a photograph (unsealed), whioh 1 have since learned was not lawful. I in. close stamp t'o make it right.' By a curl• oils coincidence the largest sum ever con• tributed reached the treasury department about the same time that the stamp was received. This wee a bill of exchange for 614,296.16, which had been sent to the sec- retary of state by the consul general at London, to whom the money had been given by a clergyman on behalf of a per. eon unknown, no name being given." ,s to borrow, and the gang gave him the laugh. "Get out an turn a trick—work I" said one of the men. ,, _•,;'What, can I do? Show me and then watch mo " said Doo the tough, noddtng down the road where a they succeeded in drugging Doc from the lone horseman was going away with the sunset at his book. " Yoe. " "Well, he's goin out to hie place in the country—goes every Sa0'day night and comes back Monday, Hold 'ire np." Doc knew the man, as ho knew nearly every man in the place, by the desoriptlon given him at Chicago, and by the middle of the following week this wealthy citizen had been notified from headquarters that he would be hold up on the next Saturday night. Doo was at his post, and as the lone horecrnan Came clown the road the highwayman stepped out from the shadows of a jack oak and covered his man. That night the gang drank up the best part of the $28.60 aced voted Doc "a dead game toucher." The verdancy of the gang he had to deal with made Doe's work comparatively easy, Be invariably drank gin and water, and by a simple trick that a child ought to have detected—the trick of drinking the water and lcuviag the gin—he was always sober. When the proceeds of Doe's raid had been expended, together with the $7 re- ceived for the "jay's" watch, the gang de- termined to rob a hardware store. The job had been undertaken onee, but bed failed. The time, at Doo'e suggestion, was The fac- simile ansimile lignstar* Gram lgi'i' IMIN10111 is to svory wrapper. wreck, and to the joy of all he soon re- vived. Ito was yet alive, but had breathed se much of the flamee that his left lung was almost ruined, and he was'never able to resume hie plane on the road. It was ?hie unfortunate wreck and the story of his herolera that gave him the im- portant place of assistant superintendent of the western division of the Unitod States mail service when ho was not yet 80 years old. 11 was the burn in hie breast that -made biro cough and beat his left lung; that pinched his face and mode his eyes look larger than they were, He went on silently—almost eboorfally—doing what he could, but we wbo wotohed know that the hidden scar he had there was wearing hie life away. Not long ago I returned to Denver and tnoetina the chief clerk in the street asked him about Doo. I had boon wandering over the face of the earth for nearly two years and was behind the times, and now as my friend looked at me }deface took on n sadder shade and he answered slowly, — "Doo died six menthe ago."—Cy Warman in New York Sun. Literary Methods. "Mnrgaret Own ye reads the end of a nom el first." Why?" "So he Gan lie awake at night wonder. ing bow it Bogan. "—Chicago Record. CANCER CURED —AND A— LIFE SAVED By the Persistent Use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla "I was troubled for years with a sore on my knee, which several physicians, who treated me, called a cancer, assuring pie that nothing could be done to save my life. As a last resort, I was induced to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and, after tak- ing a number of bottles, the sore began to disappear and my general health improve. I persisted in this treatment, until the sore was en- tirely healed. Since then, I use Ayer's Sarsaparilla occasionally as a tonic and blood -purifier, and, in- deed, it seems as though I could not keep house without it."—Mrs. S. A. FIELDS, Bloomfield, Ia. AYER'S The Only World's Fair Sarsaparilla, Ayer's Pills Regulate the Liver. SWEET CAPORAL AND ATHLETE DERBY AND 10 cts Per Package Cigarettes OLD GOLD 'ackage Ciarettes RETAIL EVERYWHERE It is a Pleasure (1 To keep your lawn looking beautiful if you 12ave the latest thing in Lawn Mowers A cutting way is a habit our .Lawn Mowers have, and a cutting way is our habit of reducing prices on Barbed Wire, Cut and Wire Nails, Paints, Oils, Screen Doors and Windows, Milk Cans, Poultry Netting all sizes up to 6 feet in width, Paris Green, Calcined Plaster, Thorold Cement, &c. We have pleased thousands, w can please you. Try us. HARL A.ND LR Sr, Stoves, Hard ��!are, &e Cli For the balance of this month WE WILL OFFER TO CASH PURCHASERS Beautiful Decorated Dinner Sets, Handsome Toilet Sets, China Tea Sets, . . . Fancy hand painted Chinaware Call and satisfy yourself that this is a bona tide offer. Having bought Sugars since the decline in price we'll give our customers the benefit. "Butter and Eggs taken as cash. At Cost and Under, N. ROBSON'S, - Clinton. THE, BEST PHOTOG RAPHS ARE TAKEN BY HORACE FOSTER Businessk., Change . Tho partnership existing between J. McMurray and H. W iltse has been dissolved, and the business will bo carried on by the undersigned, who will be pleased to receive the support of all old customers, and as many uow 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- Tow—days .i.n. Dilater, Tea and Toilet Sets. Cash for Eggs. H WI LTSE CLINTON, Phone 40 oneuesarmatamosermasit How much of your Shoe 1. 'i BABY WAS CURED. ,l. .a, r)FAn SIRS,—T can highly recom- .. ,,• u 90 Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild + 1 St, wherry, It cured my bah of '1- -1f. dial.'to'-aafterell other means failed, .1' ei en T 4, ve it greet praise, 1t it, excel- .. A° ',:o* ft. all bowel corn plat nts. 'r ji".I,IS. 'NAS. 140'FT, Harlow, Ont. ti tt- 'DME 'SEAD MASTER @, '5, ' "M, a,—I Have found great "} ' ° arta.act:cr 1 tt ^.ase of Dr. Fowler's ,i. lExtract of N"i, S'rawberrv, end von- , i sider 1' +n•:: 14 ble in all Cas,,K of Idiary . ,tn t 'ismer complaint, '� It la t r I ,,e to recommend "r itto,h p r „p R. B.,'. ,'ER')' -., Principal, soHigh .5chr , River Charlo, N.B. is leather,--workmanship--and how much of it is profit? The Shoe you should buy and the Shoe most dealers sell, differ as these propor- tions differ. Your next pair will have more leather value, and less profit for the dealer, if you see that it's Goodyear Welted, and stamped on the sole, $3, $4. or 85. CATALOQUt Face "The Slater Shoe." W. TAYLOR & SONS, SOLE AGENTS FOR CLINTON