The Clinton New Era, 1888-04-20, Page 5e• -:.X" --
A !
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for $1 cash In advance. Now is the time to take advantage of this low
offer. R. HOLMES Publisher New Era, Clinton.
FRIDAY, APLIL 20 1888
ONTARIO TO THE FRONT
A Matter of Vital Iinpor-
tance.
The following unsolicited opinions
from your friends and neighbors, men
and women whom you love and re-
spect, ought to carry conviction to
any doubting mind. These words of
gratitude are from those who have
been afflicted but are now well, and
the persons giving them are naturally
solicitous that others, troubled as
were they, may know the means of
pure. There is no reason why you
should be longer ill.from kidney, liver
or stomach troubles. You can be cured
as well as others. De not longer de-
lay treatment, but to -day obtain that
which will restore you to permanent
health and strength:
'296 MoNab St. North, Hamilton,
Can., Nov. 2, 1886.—I have been suf-
- fering for over twenty years from a
pain in the back and one side of the
head, and indigestion. I could not eat
scarcely anything, and everything I
ate disagreed with me . I was attend-
ed by physicians who examined me
and stated that I had enlargement of
the liver, and that it was impossible to
cure me. They also stated that I was
suffering from heart disease, inflamma-
tion kidney disease
tion of the bladde d
, Y
I 9
bronchitis and catarrh, and that it was
impossible for me to live. They at-
tended me for three weeks without
making any improvement in my con-
dition. I commenced taking "Warner's
Safe Cure" and "Warner'sSafe Pills,"
acting strictly up to the directions as
to diet, and took thirty-six bottles, and.
have had the best of health ever since.
My regular weight used to be 180 lbs.
When I commenced "Warner's Safe
Cure" I only weighed 140 lbs. I now
weigh 210 lbs. •
St. Catharines, Ont.,Jan. 24th, 1887.
—About six years ago I was a great
sifferer from kidney disease, and was
in pain all the while. I hardly had
strength to walk straight and was
ashamed to go on the street. The
pains across my back were almost un-
bearable, and I was unable to find re-
• lief, even temporarily. I began to use
"Warner's Safe Cure," and inside of
one week I found relief, -and after using
eight bottles I was completely cured.
Manager for American Express Co.
Toronto,(18 Division Street,) Sept.
17, 1887.—Three years ago last August
my daughter was taken ill with Bright's
disease of the kidneys. The best medi-
cal skill in the city was taxed to the
utmost, but to no purpose. She , was
racked with convulsions for forty-eight
hours. Our doctor did his best, and
went away saying the case was hope-
less. After she came out of the con-
vulsions, she was very weak and all
her hair fell out. The doctor had left
us about a month when I concluded to
try "Warner's Safe Cure," and after
having taken six bottles, along with
• several bottles of "Warner's Safe Pills, •'
•I saw a decided change for the better
in her condition. After taking twenty-
five bottles there was a complete cur
My daughter has now a splendid head
of hair and weighs more than she ever
did before.
MAKING THE BEST OF IT. circumstances under which they had
__ been obtained. The judge submitted
"I am goingto make the best of a number of questions to the jury,
asking them, among other things, 1f
it." These words were tittered by
a great noble -hearted man in an
hour of deepest affliction. After
years of toil he had reached what
appeared to be the very climax of
earthly happiness. With a home
surr.unded by all that the lavish
hand of wealth and the tender min-
isteries of love could give, be seem-
ed indeed doubly blessed.
But in the midst of all his pros-
perity' td happ'ness, with scarce a
moment's warning, death came s
his home and robbed it of his beauti-
ful, accomplished and idolized wife. ossible , however, appears from the
Yet he (17.d not sink beneath the f llowingby a coat router to Black -
terrible blow, as those who knew wood's Magazine:
him best thou wet he would; but lis- ; In 1851 I had occasion to visit a
ing beneath it, heavy weight with ed station ncattle. vrinI, a hich was ck-
stren;.h sublime, and an unwaver- kangwaroo dogs wiIh hadmecoupleAs I was
of
ing faith In him "who doeth all leaving my friend asked me to chain
things well " L. took up res life's them ender my buggy, as I had to
burden a; in—so much more a cross the P ,d Plain, on which there
were generally two or three couple of
kangaroos to be seen, and he did not
wish to have them killed. He had
often t i drive ace, a that plain with
his wife, and she sok a great de-
light hi seeing the creatures hopping
about. I respected his wish, and I
duly saw the kangaroos. That sta-
tion was afterward sold by my friend,
who stocked it with sheep. The
kangaroos by 1875 had become a
dreadful nuisance, not only there,
but on every place in the neighbor-
hood. It became necessary that they
should be destroyed. and in order
that the remedy should be efficacious
action was taken as nearly as pos-
sible simultaneously at the various
stations in the vicinity. Drives were
organized and the a -or creatures were
driven into strong yards and therein
shot.
On the station above indicated
more than 20,000 were thus disposed
of within a few months. Again, on
enite a moderate-siz 1 station with
aoout thirty-five thousand sheep,
Av A4-10-40
the notes were obtained by fraud.
The case was given to the jury about
6.45 p.m., when they were locked up,
and the judge and lawyers retired for
their dinner and returned at 9.30 p.
m., when the hungry jurymen came
into court with a verdict for the
plaintiff,
THOUSANDS OF KANGAROOS.
Kangaroos are such a rarity, even
in the menageries of this country,.
that it aeems strange to read of their
being so thick elsewhere as to become
burde i now—and pursued the even
tenor of 1 's life t i if nothing had
cceu. t .1 t+ Hot out the sunlight of
h'^ 1-ee • td ''.ave him in intermin-
able dal ess.
"I am going to melte the I est of
it." The s••s sprang into my eyes
es I h rd him utter the words, for
I l• new what h'' life bad be en, there
we s an int -r :e pathos in them. He
cl'd make the beat of it! Grandly
an I nobly 1 9 labored on for the
go• 1 of other -, and heaven Id sssed
6'. s . endeavors. The. , were those
who knew th •t grief •-alked hand
in heard with him a-1 ntinually and
claimed him as her oa.r peculiar
child; yet to the world he soon be-
cameagain the same ger'sl, affable
spifit'ttktient a zest to each c& •cle
he entered, and be was ever and
eagerly welcomed among the mer-
riest
Chatham, Ont., March 6, 1888.—In
1884 L was completely run down. I
suffered most severe pains in my back
and kidneys, so severe that at Times I
would almost be prostrated. A loss of
ambition, a great desire to urinate,
without the ability to- der so, coming
from me as it were in drops. the
urine was of a peculiar color and con=
tained considerable foreign matter. I
became satisfied that my kidneys were
in a congested state and that I was
running down rapidly. Finally I con-
cluded try"Warner'sSafe Cure,"
c uded to to
and in forty-eight hours after I had
e, taken the remedy I voided urine that
was as black as ink, containing yuan.
tities of mucus, pus and gravel. I con-
tinued, and it was not many hours be-
fore my urineiwas of a- natural straw
color, although it contained consider-
able sediment. Theains in mykid-
neys subsided as I continued the use of
the remedy, and it was but a short time
before I was completely relieved. My•
urine was normal and I can truthfully
say that I was cured.
Making the best of it! How few about fifty miles from the one above
of the frail creatnrt • of humanity referred to, I saw by the station books
that 6,000 kangaroos had been killed
and paid for within six menthe. Dogs
and rifles were used in this case, the
hunter retaining the skins. The
at
bunters were st`.li in full employment.
On my journey up the river I, mis-
sing the river road, got out into. the
sheep paddocks, and it seemed • to me
that there were still as many kanga-
roos as sheep within them. Atter
this kangarooing had gone on for a
time squatters b' ;an to hope that
peace and plenty would reign on
their holdings:
really do this! When sorrows and
afflictions come, the vast majority
bend beneath them, and 1: -e the
young pine of the forest which boa
under the weight of the winter's
snovte, never again endeavor '
arouse and stand .erect, no mater
what genial summer sun may smile
into their lives.
If more of us would learn the
noble philosophy— accept what
comes as best and make the best of
how different cur world would be!
We need to make the best of all
things for the sake of others as well
as self. There are little cares and
trials which crowd into our every day
life, that we cannot possibly avoid
still we worry and fret over them
until we make all around us miser-
able. We allow these troubles—be
they ever so trifling—to dignify
themselves until they fill our whole'
being, sap all the sweetness out of
life and make us perfect wreaks of
what we might have been. Then
when real troubles come we have no
strength to bear them with patience
and submission.
We should make the best of all
things, in that loved ones who may
be heavily burdened now, 'be not
weighed down with our woes. Be-
cause, •
"For us some sweet hope lies,
Deeply,buriea from human eyes."
need We ste-id - continually beside
the sepulchreind with bending form
and tear stained eyes proclaim, the
fact to the world, did we resolve it
into individuals, each
would have a
sepulchre of his own, which to him
held far more than any other on earth.
It is well indeed when it comes to
griefs for which the world has no
balm, t 1 play the miser's part. We
need to lock them close in our
• hearts and then w:th the help of
Him who 1-•ioweth all scatter all
that is sweet and fair into the lives
of other.. There is an abundance
of sunshine throw into every life,
and it' the metal of that life is kept
polish( 1 r1 it should be, it will re-
flect back this light to the glory of
other.
a
G1887.—For t U
nt
Jan. 2 7
.1.87,—For about
'a
five years previous to two yearso
g
last October, I was troubled with kid-
ney and liver trouble, and finally I was
most
and suffered
confined to my bed
excruciating pain, and for two weeks'
time I did not know whether I was
dead or alive. My physician said Ilhad
enlargement of the liver, though they
gave me only temporary relief. Hear-
ing of the wonderful cures of "Warner's
Safe Cure" I began its use, and after I
had taken twa bottles I noticed a
• change for the better. The pains dis-
appeared, and my whole system seemed
to feel the benefit of the remedy. I
have continued taking "Warner's Safe
Cure" and no other medicine since. I
consider the remedy a great boon, and
if I ever feel out of sorts 'Warner's
Safe Cure". fixes me all right. I weigh
twenty pounds heavier now than ever
before.
inventor of the Maple Leaf Lance -tooth
Cross -cut saw.
No mortal yet has e'er forecast
The moment that shall he his last.
but Dr Pierce's Pleasant Pellets has
forever settled the question of a com•
fortable existence until that moment
does arrive, and put to flight the
melancholy forbodings of sufferers
from biliousness, headache, indiges-
tion, constipation and 'kindred ail-
ments.
Man never is, but always to be
blessed.
The rabbits entered on the scene.
l N A DENTIST'S CHAIR.
The New York Sun thus recounts
the matrimonial experiences of the
daughter of a Parisian wine dealer :-
1 Married a singer. 2 He ran off
with an actress. 3 Divorced. 4
Married an ex -priest. 5 She elope i.
6 Divorced. 7 Married a mayor's
son, the officiating magistrate being
her second husband, who showed no
ill feeling and joined in the subse-
quent festivitire, after delivering a
touching exhortation to the happy
couple.
Francis E N Harper has been tell-
ing the intellectual women gathered
at Washington, that in her opinion
" the neglected rich" should receive
more attention from philanthropists.
She thinks that many people of
wealth are fast going to perdition,
with no one to arrest their descent
and give them a helping hand. How
would it do to form an Association
for the Moral Guidance of Those
, Whose Incomes are More than $20,-
000 a Year Apiece ?
Pretty soon the dentist stuck. his
head into the door and told me it was
my turn. I asked him bow he had
disposed of the remains of my pre-
decessor so, easily. He smiled more
sweetly than ever and motioned me
into the operating chair. By, i13 side
was a little silver -mounted spitmon,
for use in case a vital organ is'punctur-
ed. I told him I wanted tee tooth
drawn .out front view, cabinet size.
He replied, that if I didn't like the
proof, I could sit over as many times
as -I liked. He had me there
I threw back my head and opened
my mouth. The dentist involuntarily
grasped the side of his chair and said
ne believed he wouldn't come in be-
e .use his feet were muddy. Then
he ran his arm into my face and tie-
pin to feel . around somewhere inside.
I seized hisarm,dragged it out of my
person, and explained that my tooth
was still in my mouth, that I had not
swallowed it. lie said yes, he knew
it. I suppose be had personally in-
vestigated. I never experienced such
an instance of fellow feeling in my
life.
I've found it !' he cried excitedly,
at last.
' I've known where it was all the
time," I answered with choked sar-
casm,
The dentist turned to
his chest of
gleaming tools and picked out a ma-
chine that I have seen a blacksmith
use in shoeing horses. The women t
the cold steel entered my mouth I
began to repent. It felt its fearful
way along until it got to a tooth that
suited it. The critical moment had.
arrived. The dentist leaned forward,
planted his head in my chest, braced
bot', feet against the writer,said' now
look pleasant—won't be long,' and
There
Ms a
amighty
'
gave�ark. w
racking sound in my-brain,a blending
flash of celebrial lightning, a sensa-
tion like the disintegration of worlds,
and the tooth was out. I think the
tooth was wrapped about the back-
bone, and had begun to sprout on the
shoulder -blade.
`She's a daisy,' panted the dentist.
' She's the best Cling out,' I re-
plied coldly.
INTERESTING NOTE CASE.
A big yellow waggon with the
name of the Ontario Grain & Seed
Company painted on it in conspicu-
ous letters, driven about the western
part of the province about eighteen
months ago, attracted a good deal of
attention. The scheme by which
wheat was sold was the same as in
the ' Red Lion' cases. It ,'took in'
some of the best farms and the farm-
ers too. The scheme was to sell
'armers what was represented to be
a very superior grade of wheat called
White Star. There was, strange to
say, little difficulty in disposing of
2,000 bushels s
of this wheat at the
rice
named. The wheat was gener-
ally bought in 30 -bushel lots, for
which the farmers gave $450 notes.
payable with interest -at eight per
cent. In a very short time there
were some $60,000 worth of these
notes, most of which were easily dis-
counted, Mr Roaf and Mr John
Dennis, of Parkdale, purchased notes
torlabout $11,700. The notes, at the
time of maturity, including interest
at 8 per cent., amounted to $15,000.
Messrs Roaf and Dennis decided to
test the liability of the makers of the
notes to redeem them.. An action
brought against W. W. Goodall, a
farmer, near Galt,to recover $450 and
interest on his note, was tried before
Mr Justice Street and a jury, at the
civil assizes. Mr Roaf, in his evi-
dence, stated that when he purchased
the notes lie was not aware of the
The case of the steamship Great
Eastern presents a good specimen of
bad luck. Men were killed at her
launch and she made her builder
bankrupt; she had an explosion on
her first trip from London, on the
south coast,by which men were killed.
Then her captain was drowned before
she went a regular voyage. She then
w
1 wrecked off the Irish coast,
nearly w ec
got aground in America and tore a
great aperture in her hull, and now
she is to be broken up as a useless
craft.
It has been learned that Conductor
John M' 'sic, fo-merly of the Grand
Trunk railway was shot and badly
wounded,on tee 2nd inst., at Madeira,
Cal., by a peddler named James H.
Myers, The peddler had taken a
ticket from a Chinaman on the train,
and when called on by Conductor
Massie to pay his fare and return the
stolen ticket became violent and,
drawing a revolver,shot and wounded
Massie. One bullett struck directly
over the conductor's heart, but was
turned aside by the books he bad in
his pocket.
Railroad'-rg in Montana in the win-
ter time seems to carried on under
difficulties. Not long ago the story
was told of water freezing in the boil-
er of an engine while the fireman was
steadily shovelling coal in the firebox.
and now another paper reports a stilt
more surprising occurrence. It says
in substance that the driving -wheels
of a locomotive, after standing for
some time,were found to have become
so solidly frozen to the rails that the
engine could not at first be started.
When finally it commenced to move
"a heavy humping sound on the roof
of the car led the engineer to suspect
that something ea s wrong, and he
found to his horror that he was tear-
ing up.the track as he went. The
rails were so tightly frozen to the
drive -wheels that when the engine
started the spikes were drawn sod the
rails wound '-n on the wheels." It is
a relief to be isformed that only a
few hundred feet of the track were
thus destroyed before the difficulty
was discovered and remedied.
NEWS NOTES.
A lantern upset in the barn of John
Hatton, near Iona, Wednesday night,
setting fire to the barn and stables,
which were burned with the contents,
comprising grass, bay, harness, wag-
gons end all the farm implements.
Loss, $1,500 ; insured for $150.
quite thefe
It is
n on tb other
fashion
side of the ocean to send gists of rare
flowers no longer in boxes or baskets,
as has been the custom, but arranged
in some rare specimen vase, ceramic
or silver, as the occasion warrants.
Not only are the floral offerings treat-
ed to this valuable conveyance, but
the receptacle is .atso adorned with
wide ribbons, jauntily tied. One of
the gift sent to the Prince and Prin-
cess of Wales on their silver wedding,
was a lovely vase of pure white
orchids, surmounted by an arch from
which was suspended a cluster of the
largest and most perfect black grapes,
tied with silver cord, with some
orange blossom e�t� yoduce . The
contrast of the Ain grapes, with
their lovely bl sons, against the mess
of white orchids, m' have been
ravishing. However, as few pocket-
books -••sanest tedestbise oet-sof—tleiogee
perhaps for a steady pr • the pure
s
and simple bunch of floe e wrapped
in white paper will do. Young.
men
may continue to buy three Catharine
Mermets or a clus r of lilies of the
valley for their best and second best
girls, and, unless the dear creatures
hear of this I nylon wrinkle, they
will be just as well contented as if
they�1 aa few yards of sash ribbon
cf a $10 vase thrown in.
Seeding has fairly commenced in
Manitoba.
A Chicago paper calculates the loss
caused by the strike on the Burling-
ton road at $2,700,000.
Over two thousand emigrants less
British ports for Canada,on Thursday,
the largest number for one day ever
yet recorded.
Oa Thursday, at Chatham, the jury
found James Macey guilty of dyna-
miting Inspector Evans' house and
the judge sentenced him to fourteen
years in prison.
Mr Benjamin Wilson, of Fergus
Falls, Minn., has returned home and
gives an account of the cold there
being 50 belol, zero. His wheat crop
of 900 acres only yielded him 15
bushels per acre.
George Green ,son of Richard Green,
farmer, township of Fenelon, was
killed Friday afternoon,by the falling
of a tree while chopping in the woods.
tie lived only about half an hour after
the accident.
A London dealer in birds prepared
for the adornment of ladies bonnets
makes the statement that last year he
sold 2,000,000 of them, ranging in
variety from the robin and the wood
pigeon to the splendid tropical bird.
A recent traveller through the
Chinese Province of Manchusia says
that besides havinga reverence for
animals the rustic anchus worship
diseases, and particularly the mien -
pox, which is represented under the
form pf a repetsive idol.
The first execution at Madrid, in
five years, took place on Thursday,
when a girl, her lover and an accom-
plice were garroted for murder. All
three were executed on a platform in
view of 20,000 persons.
About twenty years ago John
Langdon, residing in Lockport, N.Y.,
deserted his wife and family to run
away with another women. About
three days ago he returned to the
city and urged his wife to renew her
marital relation wtth him. This she
refused to do and he shot himsolf.
At a special meeting of the mem-
bers of the Paris Baptist church, Rev
James Grant, for ever twelve years
the honored and beloved pastor, ten-
dered his resignation and at the same
time intimated that he felt it his duty,
alter due consideration, and looking
for Divineuidance to accept a call
to the pastorate of the Parliament
street Baptist church, Toronto.
Last Thursday night as John F.
Brown, of Medcalf, accompanied by
Mr John Bairnes, jr., were driving
home from Strathroy, one of the
wheels suddenly dropped into a hole
in the road, when Bairnes, who woe
sitting on a barrel of salt, was thrown
out. The barrel immediately follow-
ed, falling upon him and crushing in
his ribs to such an extent that he
died about an our afterwards.
A lamentable accident occurred
near Carntown, Frontenac Co., last
week, which resulted in the death of
the 3 -year-old son of John Edgely.
The father carried into the house a
pail of hot maple syrup and put it in
a room while be looked for a strainer.
In his absence the little boy tumbled
backwards into the boiling fluid.
The woollen texture of his clothing
retained the thick syrup, and by the
time he was rescued he was so terribly
scalded that death ensued.
an
Advices from Bokhara say the
Grand Vizier has beep murdered by a
native. The Ameer ordered the
murderer and his accomplice to be
executed, and they were hurled from
a tower one hundred and eighty feets
high.
Says a Cincinnati newspaper:—
" Tuere is a wealthy young man in
this city, worth $150,000, who is con-
tent to drive an ice waggon for $9 a
week, and when he gets his'salary he
blows it in in one night, and goes to
work the next morning as steady as a
lord." •
John Camp is a well known farmer
who resides with his family at St.
Agar te,ab•tut 25 miles from Winnpeg.
Mr Camp came into Winipeg on bus-
iness, leaving the wife and children at
home, the only other occupant of the
bouse being a hired man man( 1 Alex-
ander McDaniels. On Good Friday
u o'clock. McDaniels
morning, about .
gr
went to Mrs Camp's room, demanding
her to tell him where her husband
kept his money. The frightened
woman declared she did not know.
McDaniels then produced a large
butcher knife and brandished it in
the air, announcing his intention of
cutting the woman's throat if she did
not at once give him the desired
information. The poor lady again
protested that she did not know.
The big brute then threw her on
the bed and bound her hand and
foot with cords, telling her that in a
few minutes he intended to murder
her Leavinghelpless in a
her her less state
,
McDaniels then proceeded to ransack
the house. He failed to find any
money, but helped himself to an over
coat and some other articles, and
about 7 o'clock left the house. The
fiend left Mrs Camp bound, and in
this helpless state she remained during,
the greater part of the day unable to
do anything for her children, the eld-
est of whom is only 2 years of age.
Finally she succeeded in releasing
herself, but when her husband reach•
ed home in the evening he found her
suffering greatly from a nervous shock
from which she is not likely to recov-
er for some time, McDaniels has so
far escaped arrest,
Mary Ford, a Reading servant girl,
loves all kinds of adventure. Recent-
ly during the absence of the family,
she dressed herself' up in her mistress'
best clothes and called on several
strange ladies living only a short
distance away. She introduced her-
self as the wife of the master of the
house ,and iuvit.d the ladies to call
on her, designating a time wheneshe
keew her mistress would be away.
When 'they called'sfie was dressed lin
her mistress' finest garments. She
entertained the guests handsomely,
showed them over the house and felt
a0lwokefcl°"-'ttecause the girl had
gone out. This continued i some
time and led to some queer complica-
tions before the ' uch wr ' discovered.
Dr Gatling has made •important
improvements in his machine gun
within the past two years. It is now
•a terrible arm. It can be pointed
down upon a torpedo:Pado boatfromm a
ship's deck, or upon a launch, when
it is ye.! n .r to the vess'c . The
English nays' officers are loud in the
praises of l 's gun. It throws- a shower
of balls w ,th a' •-rible force, as thick
as hr'l s' •les . r a bail storm. A
vessel's deck is swept by this great
force, and assaults upon harbor de
fen is, by scaling parties,can be over -
erne at once by a few of these guns
I sol ly p1: led in the fort. It is not
a c
a • i on but a gun throwing browin ounce
bullett in showe. „ Its force is fatal
for a mile, and for this class of pro
jectilra it is the most formidable arm
ever invented. It is reported that an
English syndicate desires to purchase
Dr Gatling's patents and plant.
Nevada horse raisers and ranchmen
on the Pioche and White Pine ranges
are complaining of the wild horses of
'-hat region. In the Shellback moun-
tains are bands of from 150 to 200 of
these horses, each under the leader-
ship of powerful stallions, and they
make regular raids on the ranches
and run off the horses of the is gone ranch -
men, A horse once gone
for-
ever, the Nevada men say, for the
wild horses are very cunning and
wary, and will not let a man get.
within rifle shot of them. The nuis-
ance became so great that last spring
fifteen experienced horsemen and
hunters started out with the object of
killing off as many of the ' boss stal-
lions' as possible. In a ten days hunt
they managed to kill just one horse.
The wild horses of Nevada average
about 800 pounds weight, and when
caught are about the most ugly beast
alive. But if they can ,be thoroughly
subdued and broken, they make the
most serviceable and hardy horse im•
aginable.
Every parson speaks highly of
Barktvell's Bronchial Balsam, it seems
to never faij•r'
Children Cry for
P itcheir a Castoria:
WE LEAN ON ONE ANOTHER.
0 come and listen while I sing
A song of human nature!
For high, or low, we'er all akin
To every human creature;
We're all the children of the same,
The great—the "mighty Mother,"
And from the cradle to the grave
We lean on one another.
It matters little what we wear,
How high, or low, our station;
We're all alike—the slaves of sin
The eons of tribulation.
No matter what maybe the coat
With which our hearts we cover,
Our hearts within are of one stuff
And linked to one another.
A fool's a foe!, the world o'er, .
Whatever may be his station;
A snob's a snob tho' he may hold
The sceptre of the nation.
And wisdom was ordained to rule,
Tho' knaves aside may shove her,
That all the human race might live
In love with one another.
A king may need our sympathy,
For all his great attendance;
For among men theta's no each thing
As perfect indepeudanco.
Tho' great is mighty England's hair
Poor Paddy is his brother!
And from the cabin to the throne
We lean on one another.
The earth beneath's our common
home,
The heavens bending o'er OF;
Aud wheresoever we may turn
Ete-nity's before us
By pride and eevy we have been •
But strangers to each other;
But nature meant that we should lean
!.n love on one another.
With Adam from the bowers of bliss
\Ve all alike were driven;
And king and cadger at the last
Must square accounts in heaven,
We're all in need of sympathy,
Tho' pride the fact may 'mother;
Aud it's as little's we can do -
7b comfort ono another
Want 'of Sleep
Is sending thousands annually to the
insane asylum ; and the doctors say this
trouble is alarmingly on the increase.
The usual remedies, while they may
give temporary relief, are likely to do
more harm than. good. What is needed
is an Alterative and Blood -purifier.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla is incomparably
the best. It corrects those disturbances
in the circulation which cause sleepless-
ness, gives increased vitality, and re-
stores the nervous system to a healthful
condition.
Rev. T. G, -A. Cote, agent of the Mass.
Home Missionary Society, writes that
his stomach was out of order, his sleep
very often disturbed, and 'some im-
purity of the blood manifest ; but that
a perfect cure was obtained by the use
of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. ,
Frederick W. Pratt, 424 Washington
street, Boston, writes: "My daughter
was prostrated with nervous debility.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla restored her to
health."
William F. Bowker, Erie, Pa., was
cured of nervousness and sleeplessness
by taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla for about
two months, during which time his
weight increased over twenty pounds.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
'PREPARED BY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Bold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5.
FARMS FOR SALE.
LPLENDID DWELLING AND PROPERTY
47 FOR SALE,—Subscriber wishing to move
west, offers for sale the property now occu-
pied by him, bei_rg lots 993 Rattenbury St.,
anti 675 Huron St. On the place is a good
frame cottage, with stone foundation all
round, hard and soft water, stable and good
bearing orchard. Easy terms. HENRY
BENNETT, Clinton, •
VA RAT Mir SATT .—LOT -7, 1i.P'FIEL'D
conceasiob Godes ich Township, 81 acres,
44 of which vie cleaaed, and the stamps out
of about 20 acres, 40 acres hardwood Lush un -
culled beech, maple, cherry and .ash, a few
acres good cedar at rear end of the lot, 2 acres
first-class bearing orchard • good frame
house with general outbuildings: few acres of
fall wheat,sp`i'rg crook crosses part of the
lot, 2 miles "from Bayfield and 7 from the
growing town of Clinton„ Prce •511 per acre.
For terms a.rd par ticrrlars Triply to JOHN E.
EAGLESO_N, Hayfield 1'. 0.
PROPERTIES FOR SALE IN CLINTON.
The undersi' ,red has been instructed by
his bro.her to offer for sale on very reason-
,• the
1 urs the following, ro Cities lug
reason-
able to
1
1st The property at rt
Town of Clinton: pre-
sent occupied by Mr, lames Walker, on the
soutu s'de of Huron Street, consisting of two
lots, on which is erected a frame house, sta-
ble and o.her outbuildings. 2nd, A house
and lo„ a. the ter',inus of Ratteubury St,
3rd, T.ie score and lot on Victoria tit.. now
occupied by M:.1, li, Crossett. • Full particu-
le•s on application. H. li, WALKER, (Tin-
ton,
$3,000 WILL lull' THE: ACRE
r e \J l/ Farm on die 2,1,1 Ilultett,
being, half of lot 20, situate r'nm, two tulles
from Lie thrivii'g town or Cl'.iton, All the
land clear, free fromstomps, dr'good state
si • acres r• wi-,itt 1n
v to a is 1 t ,hit i t i un:
ofcrlh a
iter fallow, Y r seeded down, tucln n to plowed,
Lot, ',louse, lar;'o trunk barn awl pod stabl-
ing. flat c -lass bearing orchard of I acres,
,taut} •of water., t..1111fe Ihotnvl.
stun . you i111711odinN4'•. \Inst be sold ht
fore the first of Aluil. 'Terms—s2,noo may
remain or mortgage at 0. per cunt, balenc'e
cash, or other good mortgage sccu:ity. MRS
EMEI:SUN, l'ropr.etor.
I+'11LM FOR S.1Lr'1 011 TO RENT.- THAT
1 •splei'did fa m o" 1,0 ae ts, of the Mait-
land co9ct•ss•0'.:Ir' In, 71. tod'ricb town-
&!u,si,rn.cil'. i,''Io.+f o a Ilohnesville, and
font miles 4 -out , u' town of Clinton, The
soil is a rood clay loam, wO,I n. neverfniling
spring c• eek running t.i,"oogh the place; also
good wells. There is about 8 acres of ouch,
which is one of the hest sugar bashes in the
county ; alsattwo frame bans, one a bank
barn, one fraena horse stnbic, with room for
ton ho-1ses, also two gcc 1 bearing Orchards,
being about six acres in all; two good log
houses. About 45 acres seeded down, Will
be sold on reasonable term", or reeled to
geot tenu t. ALEX BADOL'k,llohnesville
Poi sale by Worthington and Combe
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