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The Clinton New Era, 1902-10-10, Page 3WRY NOT CHANGE YOUR MEDICINE ••••••••••,, • If You Have Failed Up to The Present to Banish Rheu- matism and Sciatica, Try Paine's: Celery Compound There is but one tree and reliable aped& for the cure of all forme of rheumatism ; it ie Painen: Celery Compound. This decided and weighty awertism is hilly eopported by lettere from thonaande of cured men and 'Women, and prominent physioiene have ably and fearlesely eupported the abatement. f your effort up to the present with other medieines have failed to drive .the terrible 411Saltfie from your eystem, remain po longer .in agony and peril ; change "our medicine els ones. Prudenoe and wiedom will surely direct you to use ,Paine's CeleryCompound, the medicine that hes cured so many of your friendo and neighbore. The prompt and marvellous cure et Mee M. King, Cedar Hill, %Aerie, B. C., who endured the tortures and agonies of r en, math= for a lifetime, points uninietakably and truly to the fact that Painens Celery, Compound is the king of medicines for the cure of rheumatism ; she says: "I hate been troubled with rheumatism nearly all my life,and about eight yam ago .1 had very severe attack, Almost losing the use of my right atm. A friend recom- mended the used Paine's Celery Compound and kindly gave me a bottle, 1 was so muoh benefitted by that one bottle that I took three more, and wag quite cured. Since then it hae been almost my only med- icine for all the ailments from which I have aufferedauld all my family have found some benefit from it, I am sixty-five years of age; 1 live on a fatm,get up early in the morning, and am now equal to a good day's work." Wood is $7 a cord in Woodstock. Benjamin Denby is dead at Caledon. Be was GO years old, • The summer hotel at Delta, a Lake, .Manitoba resort, was bunted. • Luke Beach, the oldest Orangeman in !Brock ville,is dead at the age of 77 years. President Mills Of the Ontario Agri- cultural College at Guelph, had a bad .fall in his coal bin. • Rev. Dr. Aattisby has completed 21 years as pastor of $t. Ancleevv's Presby- terian Church, Chatham. A weed known as the deadly night- shade has been causing the death of a lot of cattle near (hien Sound. • The assessors' return at Kingston show an increase over previous years. The municipal population is 18,d63. A Stratford man, named Shore, was held up while driving into' the city and his moneydemanded at the Point of a revolver. ' • . T3 facilitate the Calling up of vehicles telephones are to be erectedon or neer all the cab ranks in 13erlin. • Jos Copp's barber shop. at Woodstock. was entered by burglars, and rimers. pipes and tobacco to the yalue of $45 removed. , • Thos. Wills, County Treasurer, Hist- ings, and his good lady, have lust pass- -ed the fiftieth milestonein their wedded life. Thos. Nash, sod of Dr.Nash,13tth,and Miss Mabel, daughter of Rev. J. W. German, Berlin, were wedded at Belle. ville. Jno Beaton, an, Ontarie farm land, employed in the west, was found dead on the road in Glenboro district. 'k is supposed he fell off a load of wheat. The Windsor Board of Education has decided against the employment of Catholic teachersfor the Catholic pupils who are attending the Public Schools. Geo, White, Summerside, P. E. I., is at VVinnipeg looking for his wife and 5 -year-old son. She Went west on . a harvester's excursion and has not been seen since. , • .ndemxis the Pollee. only 30 there Was fierce rioting on New York's east side, on the, occasion of the funeral of Rabbi .Joseph. The police used their batons with freedoin, and it was claimed then that they sig. nailed " out leading Jean, and beat them severely because they had complained .of previous incivility and harshness on the part of policemen. It was also ,asserted that the rioting on the day In question arose out of the Insulting epithets directed against and the mis- siles hurled at the mourners by em- ployees of. the Hoe factory near the late Rabbi's house. Mayor Low ap- pointed d committee of five reputable New Yorkers to investigate, and their report, just handed in, is a severe in- dictment of both the police department and the Hoe Company employees. The latter, the report says, have constantly insulted and attacked Jewish residents of the neighborhood, and "the police for a long time past have been insult. •rng_and,'s,ptel....1re_their—teestanent of .Hebrews ;n the lower part of the city." .Even where specific charges of unpro. yoked and brutal clubbing are proven against certain officees, the practice of their superior is to simply reprimand or to impose a small' fine, but in no wise to suspend or dismiss an officer. The attitude of several city Magistrates in dealing with eases in which Jews were the 'complainants is condemned by the committee as tending to encourage the police in their attitude. The committee condemns the negligence displayed at _ .spnikes-headquattereFaild=difinviderthirts steps be taken by the proper authori- ties to hear specific charges against a number of officers and p,olieemen, and to decide on the punishment of those found guilty. . • TEE CLINTON NEW ERA New 7f3tanP4Hopis% By far the best advertised boarding. bowie in the United State* ;says the Washington correspondent of The New York Evening Post, is that which Dr. K. W. Wiley, , chief of the divisfon of ebelllietry, td the Department of Agri. culture, will ,on it the fall, under authority of an act of Congress, for the purpose of testing the effect of various preservatives, colorieg substances, and other food admixtures upon persons in health, Obviously, the boarders are 1 the most Important element in a board. 1 inghouge. Dr. Wiley will procure the most intelligent persona that he can find for his table* two in number, and , accommodating about six persons each. Yelled iiien in the scientific bureaus of the Agricultural Departnaent will be eta hetet: Ord, and after them the resident college etudents of the city. These tables will be kept up many months, end perhaps years. The neeassity of 'having men whose observations would be intelligent, men with power to expres,s with some ac. curacy their feelings and sensations so that these could be understood, is most manifeet. Each boarder will keep a diary' and record allsorts of facts con- eerning himself,. He will have to give his word of honor that he will eat no. thing anywhere else, and, that he will eat what is set before hint, in accord- ance with the seriptural injunction, ask-, • ing no questions for conscience's sake. But only a small part of the informa- tion will come from the records of the men themselves. By devices fully un- derstood in the medical profession, it is possible to tell something of the thor. oughneas with which digestion has taken • place,and to what extent it has been retardd, "if at, all, presureably by unnatural influences, . Every boarder will be weighed upon rising from bed in the morning. The clinical thermometer will three times measure his temperature for reeord. A careful account of water consumed will be kept, as well as of the food itself - 'The boarders will have no knowledge of when different things are being "tried on them"; for at least half the time they will be eating a diet 'which is thoroughly pure—«a. relaxation diet The object of this will be not only to pre- vent the system from real injury, but also to tell how far into a period of nornaal conditions; the effects of former harmful ones may persist. At each meal eorne men will be eating doctored food and some pure food, but they "will not know whieh is which. The quantities of adulterants employed will nowhere be perceptible to the senses, although when it conies to coloring matters, this rule may not be so easily inaintained. ' The persons •whe •will apply the pre- servative for these etperunental tables will be experts; and the quantity eni. ployed each instance will be mutant - ed to a nicety, Detailed effects toward which the inquiry Will be directed will nonCern. various organs ,of the body, . and known constitutienal tendenetee to- wards Certain diseases. &diorite Reid, for example, will be put through • all ' the tests which, in the commercial move- ment of food, it is ever likely to make , on .the phypical systems of American consumers. Then the tabulated resulta will throw light upon the degrees cf 'danger and of the limits of safety; if any, in the use of this 'acid. And so it will be down through the lint of the many inventions which man has ,sought out in articles of diet.' • An attempt Will be made to keep the, boarders • at the sande weight — during their entire -stet at the table, as any. • • A Ditrioutt rear.. A little while ago 'Canadians were re. ferring with pardonable pride to the splendid work accomplished one of their fellow -countrymen, Col. Girouard, as Director of South African Railways. The following from t.the New York Post is another evidence that, wherever they go, Canadians are usually equal to their opportunities and to the teaks, what- ever their magnitude, entrusted to theme -- "The biggest electrical power trent*. Mission works in Britain's Indian Erns Ore have just been opened in southern, India. The plant was constructed at Cauvery Falls, on the borders of the My- sore State, and is one of the great itiOts of the country. The natural dittle culties which bad to be overcome be- fore the 4,500 horsepower could be con- veyed over ninety miles, to supply the • force for ten gold mines, were enormous. Billy jungles' infested by tiger, panther and bear had to be spanned, and herds of wild elephants to be combated, be- fore the telegraph poste, carrying six strands of copper wire, could be setarp. The machinery had to be dragged thhty :miles front the railway station to the worka by elephants and the long -horned white draft bullocks for which Mysore has long been famous. Another and even greater enemy fought ° by Capt. aoly de Lothiniere, the Canadian offi- cer who initiated and executed the en- terprise, was the widespread imperial - tion that the god of the sacred Cauvery would annihilate all who tampered vvith the stream. Labor was consequently • most diMcult to obtain, and it was only by the greatest tact and ingenious ex- planation that the work was enabled to proceed. Cholera 'and malaria, always deadly in the river beds, particularly when freshly dug, also proved an ob. .staele. The Cauvery, one of India's ,secred rivers, sometimes called, the Ganges of the South, rises in a rugged " valley on the western borders of Coorg, and flows through Mysore and Madras, forming on the borders of the two States the falls and rapids which enclose the Island of Sivasamudram, where stands -a wonderful bridge, three- quarters of a mile long, built on piers of monoliths. The falls are two m num- ber—Bur Chooki and Gunga Chooki-- • and are somewhat under 200 feet in height. The former is particularly beau. Will; the spray of the latter, at the foot of which stands the generating Station, can be seen for miles." IRON -OX Tablets. • "I consider Iitort4:1z ' ratTe one of the • most thoroughly Satis- factory. PrOpnetary Medicm,es I have be- come fainiliar.with,- in • more than 25 years'. experience. • . " " pill or tablet that I have known, so well servep the purposes of an effective, yet gen- , tle 'tier pill and regu- lator',o f .t he bowels, . While at the Sank time ' acting ad a tonic to the blood andnervous sys- • tern." S. E. H rc ir • Druggist, Goderich• Ontario. fluctuations inst. is respect might add•a, confusing element to theresults. When it is discovered from' the daily weigh- ing' that nen is geinieg, little hire, retied. will be so adjusted in its. fat - producing elements that this' 'tendency will he corrected, and the food will at all times be 'so generally, whdlesome avid appetizing that no one hi ordinary health need expect to lose weight. A Rentanabie a6owtb. observe," remarked the Major, , as .rePorted by a Chicago paper, "a num- ber of stories from Kansas and Iowa eoneerning the remarkable growth of corn in those States. Ido not doubt the stories, as I have lived hi Nebraska, which'produces some extraordinary corn._ But I .have never seen anything in the . growing line that eomPares with the Nebraska asparagus • , "Last summer I operated a farm in Wahoo, near the Platte River, and my principal crop was. asparagus. I had sess—neensien to ritiRP my_fatmhouse, for the purpose of building a cyclone cellar, and conceived the idea of using asparagus statics instead of jackscrews. So I se- lected four of my best bulbs, and plant- ed them under the four Corners of the house. About 8 o'clock the next mem- lig (I, sleep late) 1 Was awakened bX . bay Wife, who . cried out in alarm that the house Was turning over. Hastily, . dressing, 1 went outdoors, and soon lo. catecl the trouble. The two asparagus bulb on the east side of the house had • caught the sun first and broken through stlie-sgralinds-anfiswera-seishig- called my men, and by feeding fertilizer and water to the other pair of bulbs I reanage'd to keep the house from ca. eitight the sun, and that end began to rise. Later in the afternoon the north- west, ball) got the sun and by night a liforiroelana as it is Known. . The Leeden Daily Express says President Roosevelt has been making important reference to the Monroe deo- trine within' the last few days. A re- , presentative Of The Express discovered yesterday that sionsiderable number of Englishmen have no conception of what that doctrine is. A legal gentle- man, interrogated on the subject, ele • served, with it superior emile :—"My dear sir, I have not the time to offer long explanation to a laymen. of the Jurispruderice of the United States as expounded by Mr. Justice Monroe," and waved his interrogator away. A city man, on being questioned, averred that he had but a poor opinion of "these confounded American quack medicines," while another remarked, with an air of profound wisdom, that It was one of Mr. Picrpont Morgan's lit. , tle games, no couldn't remember the exact detailg, though he had seen them In newspaper, A fourth tgentlenien believed that Monroe was the 'commander of a Unit- ed States' warship, When IiVerita Witte Wier 414,04, itet, atplain Otero wade . 1, ,,,orl.ail4.14 oizihg, Presently the southwest bulb • decent average had been struck. "The house was now some fifteen feet from the ground. This was Considerably higher than I desired, but I had to make the best of it. We worked all eight, putting in a stone foundation, and before the Min got another chance at the east bulbs we cut down the as- paragus stalks with ease and saws, and thus averted further danger of an up.. 0 The asparagus was fairly good for eating, but a little strong.," "I should think it was," commented the Colonel. "I'll take a Scotch high- . ball." "gee what, the other gentlemen will illtive,." said the Major. Swift& 0o.,Ch1eauo, have taken oyer the Fovileee Pork Packing Company at Hamiltowand will establith a large plant there. ' Nifty hatticle employed in Mertinnonrs dath works at St Catharines are out on strike. They wanted to return to day. Work after being on piece work. Tumettaffery, of Stratford, (ft . street car In Detroit and way hit tire • • 1 What are Piles Melt or hemorrhoids, ae they are Enna, times called, are small tumors, which form In and about the orifice of the rectum. They are caused by an enlarged and Inflamed condition of the vein* which are . very numerous in this part of the body. Asearuleevery form of pile* becomes at times acutely inflamed, and extremely painful. The itching and burning usually Increases at night, and the misery which many people endure is beyond deocription. There is no guesswork about Dr. Chase's Ointment, as a cure for piles. It hes been tried la the crucible of time, and gradually won its way into favor with the medical profession IS well an with the publics In general.' It has a wonderful soothing and healing effect, and wherever appliedsto burning, itching, inflamed skin It affords almost instant relief, cooling the fires of disease and healing the raw ulcer. one skin. Ask your friends and neighbors about Dr. Chase' Ointment. It is recognized by **surprisingly large number of people teethe only actual cure for piles. It will not fail you. Sixty cents a box at all dealers, or by mail post-paid on receipt of price, by Eclmanson, Bates 84 CO,. Toronto. Dr. Chase's Ointment Frenoh Lswer le filOW Inte elownens of the law in England Is proverbial, but France Must take the record for long. lawsuits. Three !mob eases have just been brought to the no- tice of the judicial authorities. • In 1254 tbe comaiune, or pedal, of Campan started a lawisult over some die puted land with the community of Quatre Veziauk d'Ame, which consists of four villages. The suit went on through several centuries before yarious courts in the southwest of France, was temporgaily suspended during the Revo- lution, and afterwards teken up again. It has been going on ever since, and is not yet ended. This same borough of .Cainpan, which Is in •the Department of the Haute& Pyrenees, had another latisuits *started in 1254, with the town of Bagneree de Bigorre, whioh only came to an end in 1884. The third case mentioned Is a law, suit started in 1210* between the Counts of Nevers and the inhabitants of Donny, in the Nievre. The cruse was settled definitely in 1848, and the tow* of Donzt. 'paid the lest instalment of ite cOste in january, 1901. ' Girls Lihe TwOKIng. The. girls. of Pennsylvania have a pas- tinae that to be popular needs only to be known. A young woman, just back complained that the place wan lonely., She said: "We had mooelight buckboard rides, pails and picnics. hut not a girl there did any twasiog." "Twesingt" some one asked. "What on earth is tyrosine Is it a new gamer 'It's old as the hills," she made answer. "Twosing is --well, tWosing is anything which has :just two people in it. You can twose on a hotel: verandah, or at picnic, if the chaperon isn't too wretehedly eagle- eyed. Youcantwose almost anywhere, except up in Maine, for a girl can't ' twose Without a niari. I suppose, you 1 , might call it just pairing off, but in , •Peansylvania we call it twosing, and -the I word Ate so much better than any other expression :for it'."—New York Tri. ebune. " • . from an outing at Kennebunkport, Me., • tillooligan” Come to Sttip. • 'A very few years haVe sufficed to in. corporate "hooligan" into the. English • language, remarks ; The London Daily Chronicle. Its nee without:a 'capital `411" ,is the beat of its fit and proper worth • and a"sign that. the word has come to ' stay. But it is, to be hoped that the . ' pests so named will be speedily eradi- The rr.oftta From Keeping Sheep. . The isheep is primarily e.nseretspresdees. Ing animal, and needs to be . bred ' and. . fed for that purees, It • •Iirvolves changes . in -Method, . , from these , prevailing when weer' did pay for the feed. There i no reason at all why nen who have been accustomed te keeping sheep and have their faring and their buildings equipped for their man- agement should not continue to keep them. They may need to chenge the type of their flock, but more probably. need to change their method of growing them. Mutton cannot be made profitably on the skiraping plan that did_secure_ profits' when _wool was 40 cents a pound. The profit is. in the Jamb, and the earlier in its life it can be marketed the greater the profit. There are thousands of lambs in this and ad - Seining States that should be marketed this month that their owners do not re- alize are ready, for market, and will keep r until fall, and probably sell for less than they eai. bring new, 'or tney vviu not • be any heavier, and, being older, will be worth less, because as an animal increas- es in age its ability to make gain mit of feed consumed decreases. - Lambs that weigh sixty-five pounds or • above shbold be emit to market at once. , 'A ewe old enough to produce a lamb can be purchased for what it will bring, and in that way the producing &sok be doubled. I know of tie other stock that brings returns so quickly and surely with so little labor and so little tisk as * good flock of evieo, irlitsifsstliesdramediate-dollarsiestets-alls to be considered in farm operations. A farmer's capital is not wholly gauged by his bank Recount. The improvement weesselee in fertility and' the character of the herbage of the farm are important re- • c.ateds even as the kindred Word hood- lunt. Ja the_Ameriestn vocabulary has .sureited the ruffian:vibe gave• it births . Thirty. years ago the Ca.hfornian cities Were infested by gangs of roughs, as . London is to -day: The leader of the 'Fritice ruffians was one Muldoon, and an, inventive• reporter, casting round for a , word to dericribe thein, hit upon the ea of inverting the naine, and dubbed them noodlung , The compositor mistook the "n" for "h," and set up the word "hoodlum," which henceforth passedInto current use, and ries• into the diotiota Mat.- . • • litarnor of the Hour. The Rev. Dr. Henson, formerly a well- known •Baptist clergyman Of. Mandel-. phia and now -of Chicago, several yeare . ago engaged a new Coold •He. told her the size of his family, and said els. that he was a preacher. Several days after the new cook strived she noticed Dr. Benson amusing his children by turning . somersaults on the lawn. 'Full of inffigs intibri; she hurritt.oionris.,.. le.Hmeenuasiout "I have alsvays lived with the frilliest people, and that man told Me it re. He eaid he was, a minister, and he's men in' but one of them circus Men." adelphia Tintee ABSOLUTE • 1 C • 7 &mane a ',sults that follow the keeping of eheep., They eat a wider range of herbage than the higher points of the field. It takes a rich corn farm to insure profits from arter s. any other animal, and carry fertility to grow more produetive under sheep. Two hog feeding, but a farm will constantlY Littlf V 0i rain 1,44 Ver rats. ewes to the acre will pay as good rent for land as anything eiee, and do it with very little labor.* -11. P. Miller, in Ohio Must Beer Signature of Farmer. 111111 1 ' 111 11 Moldier* as Labor The potion of Sir George White in Min ploying soldiers to take the plane of the Gibraltar coal -porters who were lock- - ed out by the Shipping Federation last April and the dockers and bakers who struck in sympathy with them is looked upon by the trade unionists of England as a menace to their organisations, hardly second in importance to that of the Taft Vale decision, says a London "Ailyieading Midland representative of the Miners' Federation is quoted es say- ing ; "If the Government persists in its war against the trade unions it means revelation. Sir George White has used I the soldiers to take the place of men on 1 strike in Gibrattar. Lord Roberts has ' sent tinse-served men to take the place of strikers in the Fletton briekfields. Mr. Brodrick has refused to recognize the men's union at Woolwich. We are compelled to ask ourselves what this means." The answer which the trade unioniets propose to nialce to the mili- tary authorities will be nothing less than an attempt to stop the export ef coal from this country to , Gibreltar. Can this be done Mr. Fernandez, the de- legate to the Trade,: Congress from the Gibraltar strikers, believes that it can and will be done. One of the leading organizers in England is prepared to go to Gibraltar and form the strikers, who are all British, sulsjects, into a branch of an English union, They will then demand reinstatement, and if this ie not done they will call upon the dockers of Cardiff to stop leading vessels with steam coal for the Gibraltar depot. Should the Government meet a strike of dockers itt Cardiff by the employment of military or other free labor the next step would be to call upon the Miters' Federation for help, and a strike would be declared vvhich would paralyze the coal trade of Wales., and effectu.ally se- oomplish the desired boycott of Gibral- tar, one of the most important eoaling stations in the worlds, and the key of the Mediterranean. This startling • pro- gramme is, of course, dependent upon the sympathy of the English unions, but in their present temper the latter are quite equal to it: •They • would look upon such a shrike as an answer to the attitude whieh they conceive has been adopted by the civil and military authorities Of late towards trade union - Ism. , • ' ' October 10th, 194 Or eespondency °aura eak unheelthy nerve* are responsible mr more eiekness aint suffering than any other di ',as% If you have a *secret drain from early abuse, later ex. cesses or exposure, YOU cannot egpeet healthy nerves whim your vitality la being waited - no not eke out a miserable existence on account ot Your tomes, you are •not• sate until cured—natere never excuses—no matter bow aoung, old or unmeant one May no, KIDNEYS .AND BLADDER. . • .▪ - 'lave You pain in the back, a dull feeling in the reelen or the kidneys? At thine your - wagtumee treeiy, a tame quantity light in color, while at other times you do not =Int freely,• It it is dark in color, you make a small quantity. or you may eves mucous deposit or brick dust colored sediment; give your condition iminediate attention or more ; serious complications wilt set in. tia treetment guaranteed as a positive cure for suchcoa• ditions, and remember you - Tot:need/my nothing until you are convinced that a thorough and complete cure has PAY WHEN CURED. _ been established. Surely this is fair, as you run no chances. CONSULTATION FR= If you cannot call, write for blank tor home treatment. nerteet system of home treat. • ;sleet for those who cannot call. 1300K FRE. Medicines. for Canadian patients Shippee ▪ trOM Windsor—Au testy aud transportation charges prepaid—Everything .eonfidentlat— ••Isto names on envelopes or packages—Nothing sent 0.0. a s. DR. GOLDBERG goa wOODWARD AVE" Cor. WollEoToxreolltrrlopati • .„ Cluallty theBestN Prices the Lowest Tit J. Wo IRWIN'S • Redpath and St. Lawrence' best granulated and coffee sugar ab 'esti than wholesale prices. $3.85 per cwt by the barrel, °maned goods cheap—Delai and Kent Can Oorn de a. can, Canned chicken 10e, Roast Beef lb tine 15c each. Teas—Black Japan and Young Hyson from 10c up, our leader is 25e per • pound. Raisins, Currants, Prunes, Dried Peaches, Apricots and Cooking Figs cheap. Crockery—I have just .paned out 3 crates of Dinner,Tea and Toilet sets • and fancy china, new patterns direct from the factories in England, selling from 10 to 20% less than regular price. Call and examine ualit and i Wanted good butter and eggs. Phone 45. .1'. W. IRWIN. Clinton • Another Drop in Prices The undersigned is offering- his $60 Buggies for $65. They are his own make, and are made from choice material and. by first class mechanics. All the latest improvements used au( are up -to date in every respeCto They cannot be surpasset and we guarantee them. JOHN LESLIE* Huron Street. Clinton. • opinions oraeadinierhysicians. Pries $1.00. For sale by dr:veleta, of 6 u. ail on receipt of pri This certifies] that [have need Strong Pilekone in the treatment of pilee, both exe tereal and internal, and have found it an invaluable remedy, and can recommend it with confidence to anyone requiring treat- ment for this meet distreashig affection, J. ,D, Balfour, M.. D., Ned. Supt. London General Reviled. • W. T. STRONG, Manufadturing Chem. at, LondensOntario. . ekes .short roads. • . ' Our GRAIN BAGS at $2.50 and $3 are - I are prepared to sell at 01030 prices for cash or produce, soh as butter, egg's t • large, tallow, &o ' ; ito we carry a large variety of goods, and. , always take the eyea of visitor& to the . inporium. HORSE BLANKETS. and ROBES • Our MILLINERY and FANCY GOODS A. trial will prove that you ean do Well here, See our handsome BUGGY RUGS, also • R. ADAMS • • f3ept. 28rd,' 1902: • . A very fine line of DRESS GOODS is what our on:do:nem say, . . Stich beautiful WRAPPERETTES att 10 ,Circular WOOL SHAWLS & 'SQUARES PRINTS that pleaee .Tlifoenr:en3eeeo.nr$S, WATE: RPROOF •COA.`113 • Great Value. it, READY MADE SUITS, also Cottonade PANTS and SMOCKS NEW AND . EP. TO DATE* Londesboro Emporium, nd light loads. Ood for everything that rims on wheels. t Sold Evc rywhere. med. by titan \inrAr. ore, co. MAKEILL Nip GRANITE ONUMENTS. iattenbtry . St. Viraks eLtivroiv, Direot importers. , Workmanehin and Material guaranteed. JAS. G. SEALE --ITIalTovettrilaakery aud Restaurant • She Woo a Gem. • The following remarkable obituary no- tice appeared recently in an English provincial paper :— "On the 21st hiets Of pneumonia,' Maria, the Meat devoted and affectionate wife, companion and comrade In the battles of hte 13f Sohn 13awdon since February 15,°1870. A model housekeep- er, clever, eompetent, thoroughly unself. Ish; a good woman, and a tender moth. et to two stepchildren from their in- fancy. Practice, not theory, was her Mettle, and her pthies were practical Christianity tether thatt dogma. Con. Mitted to the ground, to join her step daughter, on the 215t1u inst. lfay she teat In peter, 111.1).* Ses PaceSuille Wrapper Below. Year matt *mews lo tattensmadani , • . FON NEM) C1114 no FOR tint:EILIOUSNEtti FON,TORPIII LIVER. • tlift•CON$TIPATION. FOICSAIIOW SKIN., FOIMECOIMPLEXION r.:..iewiftvoritiag444=67.1 OURS t%1014 HEADACHIA cd akisiiree..dinintileerstermamealesse ^ ie the plitee to buy choke chocolates. We handle rite- Cormiek'e ohoioe Mark:sib° chocolate* al so Pateroonie creme and burnt almonds and other &Mae assortments. We are prepared for the cont. Ing season to serve soda water 0 In all flaverie We else have omitted fruits in stook, ice cream and all kinds of cool drinks. Alilicifee Moak of Orangee and 'elven:chansons' and all.kinds of fruit in season. ' Fancy bread and:oakes alway on hand. . Wedding Cakes a Speciaity. TOM ***Hotly cash. IteClay) Clinton. Bargains on Furniture A large assortment of fall goodsijust arrived. con- sisting of Bedronm Sets,' ..Sideboards, Ditension Tables, Fancy Rockers and .Couches, *ices all marked down to the lewest:pointe If dissatisfied • we return your money. Bring in your pictures and get them neatly framed. • • • . • . • • • • thi doctored for a year and a half for :what e doctors told the was gall stones. .Ittad. read so much about the relief Ripens other people 1 thought, I would.* Iget-sothe..*---1-have-used-eightvf...6tvent-baxes- , and have not had a spell since. AT DRUGGISTS ' r The threocent packetis enough for a* ordinary occasion. The family bott10, shtr „ cents, contains a supply for a year.