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The Clinton New Era, 1902-06-06, Page 7Jane 6th, 1902, .. • . Weak and Helpless Rave Returned • ito the iihuree ' met) pA The experience of the Fox Bay wpm*, "rbg *rt COMO Of are Wm Wens INJURE, TREES? The T/1 OUNTON NEW ERA Ott. SeefOrt# wir.0.1.11 Inifered From Ileaclichee end . "Could N'ot Wend the Let Arro.tt the au, est or , , teS a of Anticosti II d le t Ir a an ve 1 n rens- planted to Manitoini shows that, •gls tholagli the farmer may be a good fish er, the contrary is not the ease. M. cording to Mr. Jas. Osharne, he is the. . last of these settlers to leave Manitoba. * Ifre Wni Westrott is well krown to - nfrerly all the reeidents of Seafortb. It is *leo well known to her neightore and *feels, that she pesited throe& a trying *nese but la now beppily, in rObust . 'with; To tise editor of the San, Mra , Tgeetear keirently gave the perticulare of . kr emse ter pottlication, merely in the lops th ,t ber expesience might be Of seine Ilenelit Ur some other esfferer, She Bard:— *MU some time past ruy health was in a - -- -- -lad ssetes-inv„wholassysitem being badly ton down. I was troubled Withlieedealief.- mutat dizziness, my appetite was poor and " laton'a not steed the least I xettion. I : . thansnl'ed different physicians, but their *flatulent dia, nOt %lens .to benefit me, and • *gradually became so bad that I was un- able to attend M. my household duties. I Oen tried several advertieed reedit:dr:0e lint without any beneficial resulte, and X lbegva to (*Pair of getting. better. One of trosstighbore strongly advised roe to tte Ere Williams' Pink Pills, and soinewliat neluotantly I consentet to do so. After I bed taken the second box I began to note a. grist improvement in my condition and al, the tline I had used Ave bow. I was ihdlyresforel to iny teenier good health, mach to the surprise of my neighbors and vel.tione. I do net suffer the leaet now *OS these headachee and dizzy spells t soy app' tite is good 'lied I oan attend to Isny household duties with the greatest *sae. In fact I feel like a different woman, and all this I can say of Dr Williams'. ' rink Pills. All who suffer from a run - gown oonstitut:on should give these pills a trial" :When 'the vi-ality is low; when the 'blocs] needs to b3. replenished; enriched : A , sind ptirifief ; when the nerves are weak ' and require strengthening, there is r o other anedfoine car, take the place of Dr Wil- , s,:.. s Sams' Pink Pals. It is bedtime to their [ alert spemile action on the blood. and , e peeves that these pills euro such troubles te emia nervous headache, dizeness, . pelpitation of the heart, rheumatism, ' orsatice, partial paralysis, St Vito' sdance, kidney and liver ailments and the fano, *Mel troubles that make the lives) of so =any women e source of almost constant • misery. ro not take any but the sewn:ie.• - orbiela have the full name "Dr Rink Pills for Pale People.'" on the wrap.. per around every box. Sold by all dealers, tro aent postpaid at 50 cents a box or six eiratee far $2 50 by addressing the Dr Wil. * Maras' Me line Oo., Brookville, ' Ont. • OUPI NEIGHBORS IN klEXiC0 01.006111•111•11111 -• .1 , • . . Of work. .sit,fis strange that we knew %so ftttt " our neighbors; .the Mexicana'. Weals ago we were at war svIth thee& geeiele. We are now occupying some td their territory, Their farms_ a.d- loin ours, and yet we know as littlaot; inn as we do of the people in India • d possibly less. • 's .1 -The Mexicans are a peCuliar pectela it have queer ways of doing vartouni Wfada oe work and etteneher Vigo' ' er I lie says they worked hard as agrieul-, turiste, but their minds were conetant- ly revertiug to the freedom and charm of their former vortdition. In * few instances they met with fair mails ure of success, but in the end pined like chPdren fez. the salt breezes of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, end eventually one by one returned to the Atlantic coast. Ills story' of the failure of these frugal pea- ple to make a home on the prairies le. --full of pathos. At: thes_first place the climate was unsuited to tlfe TLey had beens Accustomed to the salu- brious climate of the gulf, and the cold, dry climate of hianitoba Made them feel. as they themselves express it, like fish out of water. These 'islanders, too, had • spent their lives fishing and hunting; farming Ives new to them. Then it was so monotonous. Each morning they awakened, and instead of the ever- changing seascape they SAW nothing but prairie. They worked listlessly all day, and vowed to return to their native shores. But it was not easy for smelt people to pick up and get out, so they worked away 'until the climate and the Changed conditions began to tell upon thew health, and strong robust men and women began to pine and weaken. Then began the movement eastward. • reeee eettne.e. A lady tells in The New York ObServ- er how she keeps lettuee fresh : Last winter when letutee was a lux- ury, we had more on one oecasion than we could use at one meal, and 89 I. put what was. bit in a large dieh,sprinklecl it with cold water, and carried it down and set it on the .cement floor of our vegetable bellar, where it would be cool. Then I turned a tub over it and mine away and forgot all about it. A week more a er was in e .ee lar and I happened to lift that tub; Sou cart imagine my SOX:prise to See a dish ot lettuce as crisp as 'when the morning dew is on it. But be sure and :use a large dish, so that the lettuce out have iroom to expand, and stand it up if you can. not sprinkle very much and he sure it is covered air tight. Of cOutse if it is.hadly wilted, nothing will revive it again,but when it droops its head and is not _quite up to the mark this process' will freshen it every time. Last 'summer I heard a svoinan who had Met with reverses mourning her in- ability to take ice, sayino- "I 'would not min were not t ttt st 10 impossible • without -it to have nice crisp lettuce for the salads of which we are- extremely - fond and which nothing can take. the place of. • • • Their f told her that it was possible to have crisp lettuce sin July,. mines lee; and the how of it. •Last fall she •cenie to me' saying, "I owe you an everlasting debt of .gratitude for sharing your secret . with me. We have not bought it pound of ice during the summer, but we never before had Au& nice crisp lettuce for Salad." In the atinimer., I alinost 111ways pick it from the garden some • hours before I want to use it and cover ; • in the way I have told youIt will corne out fresher than when first picked., . tr. • • Dyspepsia and • Heart Trouble Mr. George Webber, St. George Street, - Chatham, Ont., states Ives very nen. ' ' vous, troubled some with my heart and • suffereda great deal fromnervous dyspepsia' and indigestion. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food has proven a thorough cure in my case. - -After having used it for some time I am pleased to say that I ant entirely restored to health. The indigettion does not trouble me, my nerves are strong and vigorous and the action of my heart is . • , . %Fs-, Mexican Poultry Carrier. DM, first illestratien renreeen,s$ 110 Siexican poultry carrier on . lila way efiesiit the streets of the city selling taring chickens. • . '• . is tar second illustration gtVes an leas id the peculiar plow used. in 'Mexico. . •Piude Iss tbis plow appears it Is a him- •fgredAld better titan the plow used in Palestine, or in the Philippine Wands. • ••• 'Pti .t--Froori Stexlean Plowing. • . • rim improved plow is -more .1n eel- „ ...71enee In the United States thatein any 'rather, portion of the world. Even is Ion* parte of Europe roao sows are *till he use. Banish summer Dyspepsia *ALT BREAKFAST FOOD Is Doing The Good Woih For • Thousands. ' • The hTeal ecd Per weekend Weary stefilachai atiramer dyspeitia and otoniach troublea 0010133ollivith+yeting and old are quickly ' lattished Mien a diet of delidioueMali etrealdast rood is adopted for a. few weeks. 31esk and weary storneoh ;i1soa. Malt ikeakfiet Food soothing and ooinforting, grand promoter al ellysiest strength. It notirishes the• Whitt tette bealth food is it I nerves, tissues and blood. The best- phyrt. Zane reoercinatted it. Sea your grocer... , -.1.1.•••••• . 4k6r "etegular•'.- ' ----• ... , Dyspepeia ana heart trouble- frequently • go hand. in hand. • When, the blood is thin and watery and the nerves are weak , and exhausted. every organ in theebody is • liable to get slow and uncertain in action. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food is the most pow - Mid blood -builder, and nerve restorative • that medical science has ever devised, It cures thoroughly and permanently by restoring the whole system to health and vigorso cents a box, at all dealers. or• . Eclinanson, Bates & CoeVoronto. • • Robert W, wureae Irettrasks Write tits raperientro. It hos been taught that an applice. Von of oil paint to the bark on the Allinit Of a Ina tree, will Injure the tees 1 recently we imee never Ben • tit questioned. liobert W. Verna; of lie braska, enthusiastic fruit Vow() of reliance, 'writes% to the Cotten:, andel/ten follows • +—Some twelve or fourheeti yeare ic /rabbits gnawed apple trees in my eur eery r owe badly. To indtice rapid an eound healing, I bad painted ent common lead and oil paint all th trees where injured. The result wee to tee" Perfect eatisfaction, wounde ware- not only pabated ov-r but to prevent further rabbit depre eations the bodies of trees were paint ed from the ground two feet up. TW year e afterward MY son called atten tem to the superiority of the ti.ea painted over those standing Ode b • side not painted. They were mor. vigorous and showed better growth Since then I have painted all •ni ,young orchard trees, for twe purposes —to prevont rabbit injury, and t stimulate the tree, Rabbits ewill no touch a painted tree, and I km con vinced that trees are tairaulated 1 growth and health. Do not under Stand that I paint the tree "Maly With a heavy coat of paint as I would wood- work—only a slight coating, out:sash barely to over the bark. • VOr many years when pruning tree; fruit, lawn or street. I have pa etre- heavily and thoroughly over the • 'Wounds of all limbs, large or smell, ith oti entoteertesie fellare Or %income Of the 'Yoe tree for tho firt two or, three sea. eons &Mir plantine out depend* lafre That th,ere lientethingrwrong with Ide . master. They have no more rotupa and rambles. He triea hi Vaht to ewer the listlese youth from We chair. When e wage is are diseased, . physical week - r nem soon, leegine jf to ellew and the aettve • eetdoor life is " given up. Dr. " Pierce's ()olden 4 Medical Discov- • ery cures dis- eases of the lungs and other e *rope of resphe etion. It cares - obstinate, deep. • seated coughs, o • bleeding lungs • einaciatien and „ ether conditions which if neg- .'. leCted or intake., ° fully treated • may And, a fatal • termination. in consumption O aefter using about t five bottles of Dr, Medieal Ag`.124.,1 • my boy seems, to be all rig h writes _ e p en o at. - I. have found nothing to produce sue rapid mad eatisfactory healing where eut I can (Mow where oak limbs; four inches in diameter, thus treated, have • healed over entirely in +eget. • years: I. formerly• used, to paint treo welinde, gum stheliac dissolved in ai- • ohol. That is too expensive,.• and Mr. w, atice, of Ozark Monroe co- oblo. tille was very bad coirrnenced to give 'him thieticeolden Med(caluta eelisftlinceirtn;nd ile ZigggdFwaig them • until he WaS past walking. It has been ten tiTasivirg!s4sATtritc.' We are very thaukfi4 to you for saving our son.,, Accept no substitute for Golden Med- ical Discovery:, There IS nothing 'lust as good for diseases of the stomach, „ s. h blood, and lungs. Substitution means a little more profit for the dealer but a loss for you. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets eure con- stipation and its consequences, eoce not serve the purpose desired. cracks andifalls off,. leaving wctind • hare,• Do not fear to use oil palet en trees. • a • • Doctors. and 'people agree that Scott's Bmul. • sion of cod-liver oil is the best thing to take for ."don't feel, well and don't knowwhy," especially babies --they like it --Men and women • don't neindit; hutebebies-actlielly • A • . enjoy it. • .• • scrip eitri rpressaiorka.otria Trev IT, .eaerrr eow.N.F, eA$?`'‘'' E(‘'s , • roP eszoefecenere . • • Wort; -litovsea In seetnir. Iferees that have had it irea•sonabli amount of work todo 'through the win- ter, are in the best condition for the harder work of sittings but on many farms the number of horses employed in the spring'is Very large, and the Work for horses in the winter very limited, hence many horses Must be put at work when in a "soft" :condition; due to their leng rest; and often it seems necessary to put them at very hard work, with long hostrs, at the 'outset. This should be avoided, if possible, since tbe winter idle horse •is more likely to be *ableto do a greater amount of work in the ag- gregate during • the • season if it Can be gradually- accustomed to the haresest work. But where this einnOt • be, done, the next best thing is good eare which •not only .means ample food, btit good grooming ---which is always 'reatfal and refreSliiiig to a horsa--abd • well -fitting eolhir and harness. • This Instis very' esseatial; ranee it is 11 preventive, of .galls -WO may entirelydis 'tali iV the horse from work later oil, .n sli'ort, if good indginent, _patience, kiln-IT-J(1SAT and alt oronnd humane eOnsideration for the noble animal that is so vital to the stat- ues:a. Of the season's work are- • in the ,beginning they will prove i 0 be among the most profitable iniestmkte of the year.—Farms Steck and. Boma; •• , Dr. Chase's Nerve Food s • • ss. • • The milk of 'sows that have* long passed the iieaSOn of greatest produce • ton, which is moon after farrowing. • IS meek richer in butter fate thee thatwhich the same coves give goon after dropPleg theireal'veg 11 theZ • have not been bred the Milk else usual. ly containe more of the elbumelioldie aim For this reason it le herder to divot, and as COWS? 1lkIn at beet nniiiffited to the, stomach otilxounoisa fent, that •from ne'w zilch eetwe where. peocitrable, ie alwaysto be pre. toned. • The Milk of the erty, ia tote rich .1* fat; causing ite infant to •throw it up, soon atter taking a qualm,. ifty. It may be improved by diluting. It With 'warm water ma' quite ovteet tvithepure sum. Even farrow cove milk thus reared may be;eteed WItIt eafety if the Infant it °Wog to suck; It through a. tube, through Which it ten only get airmail amount at a tiraN - The milk trete Wrote owe Is 433!!,_, client for making into lee dream. is richer In treat:swats than °then , milk, and is, nearly a& good as reefare. I r some people spar their •e0W0 'when: they do not want the trouble of breed., leg and raffling calves. A spayed cow • that tie thie Operation performed When the goer of milk Is greatest W111 etaletaie her rank floW two, three or Oen. four nitre If thoroughly milked so as to get all that she produces. 11; Milk le lett In her -udder the cow Will coon dry and " bootee tee fat for further milking. After being spayed , elm Is no good for breeding end When ' fat entnigh ;to kin She mute be til bee Over to the butear. A, spayed young COW Makes as good beef AS a steer, places itt this country where :It is an advantage to spay cows; All the beet cows should be bred to hulls that -are os good milk stock, • while the poor cows are net woetie hoping rte minters under any cfroung t: rtees if others an be 114d. ° ' A The Whole Story 121 n. letter s • • . • .6 (mantle nevre.) • . From 09104,, ioye, ?Aloe Station No. t' __4 MOnitOil t% 0 frequently re ently not. DAViiVPAIN.X.211,91t respites, is eke elem. sok, Me/outlaws, PO8t toite$,..11.1(4 • ereekpat ited all aeliettonss which befaiirriett In our position, I have re heel. Wiwi saylag that P.tunatttar. t'AtertrOloffety to have near Athena," ;i Isterially and Etterrially. Otc. and tad. bottles. . , Th 1.1.11•11.1 0,0004 Farmer Itruinireft to Nolte a sew eess Jo Cultivating crops. • The failure or success of the young a eueoesa itecultivat:ng crops on eaady atiltThe EtlallUre "APPlie4 unitallY F"."..-'- quiet effects but the rertil- _ — on how this work is done. nut Qua; tree OM It comes from the- nnr. eery row has been deprived in digging of probably half Be roots, *hose °to *Ices it la to supply nourishment to • the top or to the branches and loaves, The supply thus diminished tio consid. • erably necesoltatee a rather eevere pritigng or the tore Cutting AWAY an amount proportionate to the aneemt of mote or rootleto left "Whine in dig. ging.. Tlaift pruning AMU be done just before p/antieg the tree, usi g a sharp knife. Cut away about three* , fourths of the top, preserving. a (strong centre shoot or leader,. which should 7 be cut beck well. The lower lateral branches 0010111d be left longer than the upper, which oltrield be pruned. back tither severely. May broken or 5n3u.eti. roots should be pruned 90 tliat tk made will be smooth. 1 • • In plaeting the ree in the ground set it no deeper than it grow in the nursery, which depth may be deter- mined by the dideoloration or the bark • at the, base. Let the roots rest fet 11." bed of well -loosened soil, • Replace the subsoil or clay at the bettora of the excavation with top :soil, and 1e5 the ekes:ratan be somewhat larger than merely necessary to aecontme. • date the roots. Fill in about roots , with pulverized soil, using the hand to perform the work. Mter the room are covered tread the sod well with: the feet. All, the soil used for filling ' eliould be trodden down (Mite Annie'. • After the tree Is planted:Wake it, ale tie to tho stake, or. betteretill, make a • compact, hard mound of soil about ttie • base of the tree to prevent the WSJ, . frOm whipping itabont, In the' sprtng remove this mound. During the. first few seesone the young -tree shclued be well mulched with manure or grassi clippings winter and summer,—Bob. ert R. McGregor, in the •%MAW* Mega. golapanbatee . F• ive little minutes are all the time Perry 'Davis' Painkiller nee& to stop a °Loma° - ache, even when it is sharp enough to make • &Aron man groan. Don't be fooled by im • tations. 25o road 500. ity to be restored before It .can pro- duce anetherLnch ofits minerat fertility is lea,ched down bite the heel pin ef the Subsoil, and it Is this m n- em) plant food Wbicl . has leached in,t0 the olaY, rather „than -the °lair itself, that molten- • its vaine as- a fertilizee when .brought to the surfacefn. some places blue 0*y...is foiled under • a sandy sail. This. Is a ,favoreble dication, for this blue dee ustuely tont-dint" cho.sphate ot lime that when • ix dwith the dmakse which almost anything can be grown. Where the subsoil is itself sandy it • needs to be seeded with, clover ine r... der to supple the eoli with vegetallle • matter, without "which the sand wouie quickly become a harten waste. • All plants of the melon family do well on sandy soil, but it Is not a 'apts ed to . growing grain crops,. except when the seeding of grass or clov.‘r rtins out, and it becomes necessary to "'sow graee, to renew the seeding. Ye5. when the soil was newly cleared of Its thin forests there was a streak of vegetable humus on • the surfaee that •'would bring a clover •.seeding, By • plowing under clover 'ear h alternate • • year and sowing wheat with a el ret seeding again, g,od wheat erses c .0 d be grOwn for a few.years. But after a. ....Alt. vaaws..,* • While the ,small amount of pi ospha.e '• F, onint. ns orLeadini Physicians. I have used W Stone's Pile let.rnedy in my practice with most setisfeceory results, wonaan cheekfully recommend it. James • SUTTON, N. A ; • — P .OOq Por sale by druggiots, or by maii.on receipt of price. • W. T. STRONG! In annfacturing Chem , ' let, Lonclon.:Ontario. ow Spring Goods Dress • Goods Prints • a Muslins Gingiaarns 6aces and *Embroideries • of all kinds • R. Coats *Sou N A For years 1 had been a sufferer with 011r011Ie stomach trouble, ressure of gas and:distress of my bowels. I contracted what the doctors faro— flounced a low type of malaria, 1 could not take solid food at all and only a wily little of the ligtest of diet -would create fever mid vomiting. The druggists sent me a box of Moms gabules; • saying he sold more Itip• ans that! anything else for stomach trouble. • I not 014 found relief, . but believe I have been permanently mired. CRAMPS 7 • Pain tathe. see - .t` Stomach, Diorama, Dysentery, ' Colic, Cholera,: • .Morbus, • Cholera hifantinn, Seasickness; • -.In the sandy soil . would b.ecome • ex-:, . hausted„ and then even . when stable 7 if* ,141. lifild.5 of Summer 'Com- '• ' ;•. would preduee Only a rank gtowth o •plaint • are quickly cured by • straw, which tutited, and the hea.'e • would not ' yield any grain. It-wes on taking • • sandy Sell that the grain first fslist• • . . • . : . , . . . . . , • in the locality in eesterri New. York' • " where Our fIrst farming - e?cp.rienCO • ' The 0,Nie!**cent paeket: . is . •eziough for , an Dr Fowler's • . wail a heavy elae, and after a feet 041 ga ne . oat o our own atm : pitrict of • °, ' . :,' . . p.'" , a,ry.oceamon. The family bott* Wit), • years' cultivation became veri wst. The sandy soil, because easily Worked,iitiPPIY for a ' • ••. _lid -Strawberry --cep* contaiS n. Wan ale the narlY eettlen3ent ;thought AT DRUGGISTS • . Slug to ft Kicking -Cc.nv. • E. M. Wentworth of him-A:1(11ton, Iowa, is authority for saying that mnsit hath Omits. to soothe .a cow's breast. He had a cow that was particularly via. lolls tit milking time. • At the Missourl Dairy Convention he told how im ninil aged her :— It was necessary to tie her in the .etpy while his two boys milked her. vim Mr. Wenttvcirtlet boy's are .good singers, and cannot resist the teiaptatiou to indulge in song while at their work., One day they started up 'f‘ltly* Old Eon- tucky Rome' while milking Betsy, and ere surprised to discoycr thatthe cow suddenly became 4oeile, . After that they found that it was not no.cessary to tie her,arid she Would stand pati- ently in the yard while the milking was .in progress so long as she heard the refrains • of "blade," "Take Me Beek to Old Virginny," and other 91d melo- •gles, TbN inspired A Mali ‘;',10 a foreign vs- -bent to rise and giee his testimony. "In Switzerland," he said, "the man . or woman who can carol best always gets the most pay. They milk the wildest coin!, and ' they always stand quiet. .thielr singing is geed." It's alt right to hum a ditty to a Ing cow, but it is well, too, to • wateh her feet the vsklie—ahe might dances da or Noe Ultde., The London C'broniele points out that the dead -set that seletee has been mak- ing of late against the mosquito seems to be provoking a' sort of resetion. Des 'fenders are arising to declare that the mosquito is not ttlWeys the criminal be I s painted, and that , there is a. strong Jakyll as *ell as a strong flyde element In h1s composition. A abort while ago Professor LOeilier declared that mos- quito-WM. Malaria appeare to have it preventive and curetiVe effect on ealn Cert. and now another partisan has stret- ch m the person of it lieW Jersey leg- falator. New Jersey IS famous for the vigor of its Mosquitoes, and the State entomologist reeently eante before the Legislature With a request for $10,000 to exterminate the pest. The /*pre - striation, however, Was opposed by one of the asseinblymen, on the ground that it- Mosquito bitts, if taken regularly, be- • most valuable. " It could be More eagle cleared • of forest,' but this. was more • than offset by the greeter durabiitty of fertility in the Clay land and Ito much greater productivenea after it *bad been undirdralited. • A great deal ot sandy land loset /with peach trees wherever this fruit miceeeds. It needs extra supply . of phosphate and . potash on such 'land to grow the peach, and It needs some • kind of orgaaic manure to keep these Minerals ' •in available Conditio.a. Strawberries, and all small fruits Mil be grown .successfutly on sandy soil, provided Itis well tiupplied with min- eral fertilizers. They can usually be ripened earlier on sand than on heavy • edit Tide 10 not so great an advan- tage as it used to be before the early • Market for e 'small frs was supplied from the South, and be Oro the bulk • of early vegetables fer rAy sesrkets. was grown in greenhouse's. * , (ore or after food. Vas sovereige Sure DPaeans., WOrOnto, Ons. r'Stet rhetimatiatzt. • • • ' this is the USW acieatific remedy lei• ; fiaokashe, hune or weak back, gravel, Bright's disease, diabetes dropsy, and all .kidney, bladder and emery troubles of young or old. If yeur back or kidneys% bother you, just try DR. Piressall BACZ, ILOA* Korn Tolima. They II cOnVinte athey're good by curing you. *)Price . ifOX at all druggists' or senstbyruall,. .1 11 It has been uSed by. thousands for • nearly sixty years—and we has, yet ' e"4"1114"14***20:440.4****4144.444g to hear a complaint about its action. -) " " 7 "" The Novelty Bakery A few doses have often cured when entral • . all other remedies have failed, Its • . and Restatrad • actipn is Pleasant, R.apid, Reliable MeatMa tket and Effectual. '• ' Dr. Pt:T][0es Extract or Wild Strawberryis the original Bowel COMpIgillt Cure. • Refuse SUbstitutes. They're Dangerous., • 1Cotice to ereditoi?4 • Notice is herebr giveo thst a'iPtiraOnS hav- ing °tabus against the estate of alaraaret Gibbings.iate of the town of °Waft, in the County of Huron, married Woman+ who died on or about the 27th dr,y of August 1901, are_re gutted on Of befOri thel4thaaY Of June, nun, to deliverto James Sdoti, 9, Ontaet selloitor for tife executor of the .vrili of the said dereased, their tames, addresses and diseriptions and, the full particulars of. -their olefins. And furthrr take notio,'that after outih last mentioned date, tlte sixes 'itor win proeeed to distribete the assets the said deceased amonethe peruse entitled 'thereto, .having rinutedonly toile eleirriaof whit hhethali 'then have notice and that the. said Meet:Atoka will not bellablefor thw Bahl smote or gialr Dort • thereof to ads perssn ttr persons of whose claims notice shall not h been, re., eeivedby him at the timrrof such distribution. E. 0,-niittetirci too! "otV; tit isbAh6MithnteS'42.80E; Foefolitatoyr..1002. • Mar 0th -9 s • Staving purokasecl the butchering • businese of • Powelit am pre- • pared to furni▪ sh the people oe Clin- • ton with all kinds of Fresh and hand,. . edMeans • Elamage, bologise, _ lard, butter and eggs always ke•pt on; • • Fit• zsimons a Son. Telpbone 76. , • ' Ordere delivered promptly to all Paris of the town. • • reft—rereana having hogs for shipment will miter 5 faVOe by leavitur word it the Ether. • se*.•• 1,000411060.111/0111•80000alloyeale MAttallittoORAtiffE ONUMENT). a 4,1 • New BlacksMith' Stanscriber lureine rented. the shoo adlOin : Ritteibiul SLAtoriti „. but Carriage Shoo, oreette ste is rive pared to de an workiu his lino, lie hoe had a geed many Yealkol* eStoetionce in . the butsi; ens. and will give ersonal attention tO all work entsusted to h et. Special attention ,i,iven to liorseshoeing and- the care °I gorses' feet. 11149110U (t tel fleas; Charges reaStinallie •Patti 4.1.0kr5', (Minton. Moot linporiera. Workout:NW and Materiel guaranteed.. US. O. SEATS° 1- are,PrenereST for ,_.the coin- ing minion to Serie sodi Water in all flavors, We elect haste' CrUshed fruits itt efook, Ice iori.sem end ell kinds of 0001 ermIts.•• • le the place tobey choice • eh000lates, We tamale Me, •Cotirdokai choice .klarkisibo chocolates, a 1 90 Paterson s creams end buret almonde sea • Other 00109 aesortmente. , Kaholoe Stook of orangest and loeumtonatd, ibtienamet and all kinds ‘40.0.00041,4tageee Fan,c,yt bread'and calsee ttlwaya of fruit in . • -.14Clay,. Wddin4,4 cakes a woks stdocis 010. Specialty. CANVASSER WANTED to sell BBINTEWS /Nit— a journal for atiVertigeres published weekly at liVe dollars a year. It teachea the science and practice Of AdvertialegrAnd le highly esteemed. by tbe roosb sue. cre•ful'advertisers In this routfiry and Great Britain. Lib•bral COYOroisslon al- inwed.A.ddrese PRINTERS INE, IA Spruce St., New York. ' ,