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The Clinton New Era, 1889-09-20, Page 3'1411111r" enesineniesiosserweniceaus 4 For the small sum of 35 cents cash, we will send the Clinton. New Era to new subscribers in any part of Canada or the United States, for the balance of this year. Now is the time to k (.:Loscribe for the largest paper in the county. Send it to your friends it is betterthan a letter, and contains a vast amount of home news and general information weekly. MMIN111:1M "Like Magic," THE effect produced by Ayer's Cherry 1 Pectoral. Colds, Coughs, Croup, and Sore Throat are, in most cases, im- mediately relieved by the use of this wonderful remedy. It strengthens the vocal organs, allays irritation, and pre- vents the inroads of Consumption; in every stage of that dread disease, Ayer's Cherry Pec- toral relieves cough- ing and induces refreshing rest. "I have used Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in my family for thirty years and have always found it the best remedy for croup, to which complaint my_ children have been subject." -Capt. U. Carley, Brooklyn, N. Y. "From an experience of over thirty years in the sale of proprietary medi- cines, I feel justified in recommending Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. One of the best recommendations of the Pectoral is the enduring quality of its popularity, it being more salable now than it was twenty-five years ago, when its great success was considered marvelous." - R. S. Drake, M. D., Beliot, Kans. "My little sister, four years of age, was so ill from ,bronchitis that we had almost given up hope of her recovery. Our family physician, a skilfutman,and of large experience, pronounced it use- less to give her any more medicine ; saying that lie had done all it was pos- sible to do, and we must prepare for the worst. As a last resort, we determined to try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and I can truly say, with the most haripy results. After taking a few 'doses she seemed to breathe easier, and, within a week, was out of danger. We continued giving the Pectoral until satisfied she was entirely well. This has given me u ti bounded faith in the preparation, and I recommend it confidently to my custoiners."-C. 0. Lepper, Druggist, Fort Wayne, Ind. For Colds and Coughs, take Ayer's, Cherry'Pectoral, PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Price $1 ; Mx bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. The Clinton New Era Is published every Friday Morning by the proprietor, ROBT. HOLMES, at hie printing establishment, Isaac St., Clin- on, Ont Teruss.-$1.50 per annum, paid in ad vance JOB PRINTING In every style and of every description executed with neatness and dispatch, and at reasonable rates. NEWSPAPER DECISIONS. 1. Any person or persons who take a paper regularly from a post office, whether directed in his name or an- other's, or whether he has subscribed, or not, is responsible for payment. 2. If a person orders his paper dis. nontinued he must pay, all arrears, or the publisher may continue to send it until payment is made, and then col-, ect the whole amount whether the pe- er is taken or not. 3. The Courts have' decided that re- fusing to take newspapers or periodicals from the post office or removing and leaving them uncalled for is prima facie evidence of intentional fraud. ADVERTISING RATES. Loess. NOTICES -At head ,of local column, 10 cents per line or portion thereof, each insertion. Articles lost or found, girls wanted, &cs not exceeding three lines, 25 cents each inserton. Five lines, 50 cents for one insertion, and 25 cents for each sub- sequent insertion. Houses to let or for sale,1 farms to rent or for sale, stray cattle and 'all similar advertisements not exceeding eight lines $1 for one month, and 50 cents for each subsequent month. Advertisements without specific in. structions, inserted till forbid. Special contract arrangements with business men. General advertising rate for unclassi- fied advertisements and legal adver- tising, 10 cents per line for first inser- tion, and 3 cents per line for each sub- sequent insertion. Changes for contracted advertise. ments must be handed in as early in the week as possible to insure a change that week. • RAILROAD TIME TABLE Issued May lst. The departure of trains at the several stations named, is accord; ag • to 'the last official time card: • CLINTON Grand TrunksDivieion Going East 7.43 a.m. 2.25 p.m. 1,55 p.m. G (nag West 10.05 a.m. 1.20 p.m. 6.55 p.m. 9.27 p.m. London, Huron and Bruc. Div:sion Going North Going Sorioh a.m. pan a.m. p.m. 'Wingham 11.00 7.45 6.30 3.'0 Belgrave 10.42 7.27 7.05 4.00 Blyth 10.28 7.12 7.' 8 4.5 Londesboro 10.19 7.03 7.26 4.25 Clinton -.10.00 6.45 7.55 4, t5 Brucefield., 9.42 6.26 8.15 5.04 Kippen 9.34 6.17 6.24 5.12 Hensall9.28 6.09 8.32 5.19 Exeter 9.16 5.57 8.50 3.33 London8.05 4.25 10,15 6.43 Necessary information can always le secured from the company's agents. - The early mbrning train south on the London, Huron and Bruce, and the one east on the Grand Trunk, connect at Clinton, as do also the morning tee 'as west and north, the 4.45 roan. trains east and south, and the 6.45 p.m. train north and 6.55 p.m. train west. . Bobcaygenn Independent; It is &fa - Cult to imagine any greater folly than for a people to levy taxes on the food and fuel they consume with the object knOts1 ae ‘(emitha wen], oess,' 61 artificially increasing their price.- heri-lache, fniel a hos. of remale yet that is what is being done in Car iefe„ romplaints follow on. Fo: all da. The delusion is equally prevale, t such take Dr Plerce'e Favo. lte in the States. Here i5 Ontario the is anstrial classes are patiettly paying .1 cents a pound for sugar that in Englatal costs 8 cents!, and the tax on coal costs •the Grand Trunk Railway $280,00 a year. Now just think about this thino.. for a moment and then tell this jor .nal honestly if yon don't think yon nine's be a most precious duffer to tacitly con. WHERE TIME GOES. NEWS NOTES. A man whose head is bulging H. J. Clarke, P. C., a somewhat with mathematical problems has noted politican of Mauitoba, died figured out the disposition of ev- suddenly. on Friday. Alfred Gadsby, a Stratford youth of sixteenlyears, shot him- self through the head with a re- volver. Mr T. D. Craig, M. P. P., Port Hope, and Mrs Craig, who went to California last year, are about t return to Canada. Mr William Gooderham, the well-known philanthropist, died suddealy, at Toronto, on Thurs. day evening. Capt. Reese, who was the first ery hour of the daily life of an average man, and tells just how many hours a man of 50 years has devoted to his 'toilet, meals or newspaper. "Let us assume," said he, "that the sleeping hours of an average man will number eight daily. That is one-third of his time, so that in fifty years your man will have slept, all told, sixteen years and eight months. The man who is shaved daily at fifty years probably had his face scraped not oftener than three times a week at twenty-five years, manufacturer in the world to while (hiring. his first- eighteen make a steel plate boat, died on years a razor never touched his Thursday at Pittsburg, Pa , of face. Say that the semi-centen. asthma. ari• bas averaged two shaves John Grose, a young man who week for fifty years, thatwill give ' apparently belonged 4-) St.Mary's, 5,700 scrapes in the half centa ay. I jumped from the steamer Atha. At an average of fifteen min- basca near Owen Sound last Fri- utes per shaye; the time devoted day morning and was drowned. lo this one small element of Tho mother of the late Princi- will run up to fifty-nine days and pal Meller -y, of Cobouias, grieved nine horr.s. If a man should not so much over the deaCe of her shave in fifty years and then a' son that she took sick, dying on tempt to make up his proportion Saturday. She was aged 78 years all ate:ince, he would have lo shave and resided at Napanee. • night and day for nearly two The committee appointed to moatbs. U'he average man. who consider the proposal to admit is not limited to : wenty re nutes Rev B. Longley t the Del .oit for dressing, breakfast and catch- conf erence of the Methodist • ,g his train, eensurnes ai•tut Church have -advised that no ac thirty minutes in getting inside tion be taken. his cloth; ig in the moi n en hour per day for fiyea .s Charles Miguard, a compositor, would amount to one year ni teen of Bohoken, was ' recently ,bitten days and five hours, so that if a on the nose by a mosquito. He .man should dress himself at the rubbed the spot with hs hand start to lire for Cie whole fifty it was stained with type - years ;le woule pass two weeks .lead. This caused blood-poisor- yond his birthday tomiversat.,, ing and he died Wednesday. and this means wo..l.ing tiveniy- At the meeting of the Ukited for . hours per dey. A bailsSia s Senate immissian onn.e shot. id Trcceue dresel hovvever, laLions with Canada, in Boston and twenty minutes nay for that fhe consensus of oninion was in rposewor ld put a man in ilio ttib :11V02 of closer relatloi 4 'A ;th Cr a. ior eight months, tui Weil days ads, though whether. it shor'd and eleven hout.s of the fi ".3/ ye take the form of annexe' ion or For other demands of the 1110t A- comme:cial union or reciprocity ing toilet allow. ten m antes per there was much divelsii.y of view. day, or iors mon, is, five &aye, a ad Jas Greenbank, of Norwood, .wen. hours la ha r a Y. Why Jast a single n;' ill' 3 spent was (1..awin.Ig (yin peas on his farm in hunt' )(:). for nearthe• I. on d Monday when means • v d days • and fon e a ' ml he suddenliyi . almot in - boa con ;se of fifty ye s, death wi neaxaPniare7eci,:on of the hoe. '-. e cause of Ha if an her' • for eakf..at, Thedw aceased gentleman was 70 mina • es for .0 uch nd r Dor • for years of acre. He was an E iglish- dinner amounts:to five months,five days ad nine banns of eitting Hmean and canetoCanada. 1838 was for five' years mrnieipal firty yeas of ^0 The in"k who • col ec (sr of A sphi lel. lives away up in 1,weaty-ei,gh'h A Galt exchange tatains the w•-• d and spenila P n r each d -v follow ig ,vo men Pad wo- jogging to and ".oin 'n a man went through Galt on Sato r - horse c^ • may not realHe it, but it is ssso ao,Ira • day in a wagon named by a singie mo,iths., one dial a -al ho' 's of wa).' thi-ty ye • (me. Yea , ee mak' orimiheDYahkoP`tira:1'n'invr wreille.10111° way the.. void home at b's time will go • .t way. When a man ec:ooq is time .:t ' ' The ion mey bad ea n • e Loa: s ens rather cu pied sixty days. Our informant Pays that the 1 ravellers have had ough to th'ile tb.it 's e.s $1 33.- - enough of Dakota and took this as 51)011,17.ithr,,,e:ch3ce"1:0:n),.'-'t,...,,.. their only available means; of gut- ° ' ting away '•om it. We did not eve, y day. HUMOROUS. Speaking of London, Cardinal - - Manning says; 'There .$) foe • It doesn't hurt at ell to aeo millions of lii•ing and dying and another man pound his finge s dead souls. And if' every chunch with the hammer when he k 1y- or chapel or place of worship of ing to di.ive a nail. every sort and kind were tilled Even Niagara Fans -does ot three times to the full on every look grand and imp.:essive id Lord's day, they could not :con- soul•sti ' the map whose tain more than, about 1,500,000. starboard suspender buttoa has There must be, the. efore, ),- just fetched loose. •000 who never can physically sot Gentle Sarcasm. -"Mrs Mulli- their feet in any place of Divine worship or any !lace where the gen, said Mrs Ginty, is it well yer name and existence of' Go v re- falin the dav ? Yes, very well. An' strong ? Yis, quite strong. cog .en nians ;t's able ye'd be 1 ) Matt ii taner, of Putman coun- br' i.ack the two washtubs yes, Iv, Pa., is over Si? feet tall, horned last Monday. weighs 285 pounds, is not a fat I love iyon, Emeline, ith man, but so strong that there are said as they s °Ili out East vv- bet the fervor at mV command, he men in 'he cOunee swtrscnitgeteot $1,000 that enuo. Yes, Georso, she 1, man in lie world; The day I know it, and yet I world that he raj& la largo 81 peclest ' you told mo of you,. love in some weighing 1,300 pounds, and hold other terms. 1 have been hay, 1 it auove his bead for several s with fervor, oh! so many times, eonds, finny -enily without much and I do want this match to etrof.. Tiiey say dow a the. e thi.t amount o something. - Mnt, c lel "tie thil'lvan with one hand end thrash the Boston baked " WHAT IS HOME WITHOUT beans out of him with the 'other.' les .'n their nam: A HOUSEKEEPER," Tho Port Hope Guido raises a is the degraded view taken by a very i'n' ir quesl 'on in • gruff old bachelor, of toe holy gal d to ' management of 'he s( office of wife and mother. Anil called panty. Rev. yet bow many mothers and wives Di.. Sutherland, general Revel v there are who ave simply 'house oftheMetohdist Missionary Boa•ad, keepers,' houaeholcidaudges,whoso has undei Hken ; ) become the life is workea out while disee-,0 i.. leader of the party. He bas been lot in, during the ceaseless ra-nd stumping the min' y fOr it, ar-' of wrshing and scrubbing at,i1 he e pt.( ;ses the determination to. dusting nod baking and cook' lg. continue carkpaigning. Or- con- flict, same clothes and floors sou tethporary, wail° bolding that a i'arnitese and dishes are gon clergyman hes a perfect right to over and over until the he. at is hold political principles, and hick and the body is broken wi lvocafe what ho believes' to be worry and disease. Amid O. 's right either morally or politically, toil nervousness 'begins bad di. has reached the conclusion that it gestion, iaregaleriCes ol the .-0. is not in the best interes s of ane reS0411CtiVO net;ens, prolapars or ch ch "'tat one of it 3 leading other displacements, popularly clorg.3 men -one whose mi sion rear 'es that he should score the sympathy and supi art of men ()- every shade of pay ical faith - hem Id go r ()Lively on 1 str mp /19 a poli ;cal leader. Its argument hat the -ids of the MisSiOn )s -d of filo Meth( -st Chit 'eh w '" stirrer if D. Sathe• land par.ssts •i bitch a course. JJ.. Suth- e:'-nd probably 1 lows his own bus'icas best, but there is it go deet in what the Guide says. Prescription, the only remedy sold by e ruggl8t9 roder a positive guarantee, • •om the meal, act!, '- ors, that it POI give sal sfac.:0 or money w•ll be rei'underi. The first snow of th sousan felt sent to have your food and fuel taxed. its Hope, Dakotajon bursday. 4 cr. ITP A.LO'S-B ti 0 N G FAIR I TIME LEVELS ALL. TO CLOW ON FRIDAY IN A B OF GLORY. • Our Correspondent Videx Overhe Conversation in a Street Car Gives Us a Number- of Useful po on the Success of the Exposition Astounding Aerial Performance ganged for the Last Day at the N'als.. LAZE , John Burns, the London Social- ist leader, who was in prison not .long ago, for disturbing the peace, has been brought prominent be- at* a foreithe British public in connec- Which tion with the great strike of dock Inters laborers, and the parliamentary -Au vacancy in Dundee affords an op- al"' portunity of electing him to the House of C0113111.013St. The success, of Burns and his associate ir is maintaining themselves at t but head of the strikersaind the peac ent. able manner in which the agit many tion for higher wages has bee conducted, has won .much sy znY Pa thy for the movement. Dun ncy dee is the most radical workin ger man's town in Scotland, if not i hou- the United Kingdom, and Burn is likely to be elected there with d- Jout difficulty. It is doubtful [From Our Special Correspondenta BUFFALO, Sept. 10. -The great Fa a week old to -day and at sundown three days will remain for its enjoym I flatter myself that, after the preliminary articles I have written cerning this event, the readers of weekly chats will be glad to know how in he ifn m 0 the the Liberals will oppose him, an the Tory vote in Dundee ,amount to nothing. Not long ago men like Burns would be regarded as intolerable nuisances in the Brit- ish parliament, but the deck la- borers and the farm laborers have votes now, and it is not safe for practical politicians to treat their recognized representatives and champions with centerript.. it has thus far turned out. I can fa myself the centre of a multitude of ea Interrogators who are firing off a t sand questions at once. One at a time please. Yes, the atten ance has been very large. Not quite large on the first four days as,it was those dates last year, but still enorm Saturday of course saw the big crowd. for that was Citizens' DaL the majority of the manufactories business houses of Buffalo closed t doors in order that all employes mi have an opportunity to enjoy the F The turnstiles showed an attendanc over 70,000, and did not of course re ter multitudes gi people who entered grounds in carriates. Is it as fine a show as last year? questionably finer in every departme Of course there are people who haveg away disappointed; but those are people who if they owned the wh world would sit down in a bog and r for the moon and stars. I overheard interesting conversation between one these discontents and another visi whose liver seemed in better order, co ing in from the Fair grounds the ot evening. The first speaker was the of a man wile, should his wife pres him with a long wished for son and h would grumble because the child hadn come into the world completely dress with a gold watch and„chain stuck in silken sash and a fifty dollar bill in chubby fiat. He ventured the remark a tone audible throughout the entire c that he'd seen plenty of county fairs good as this one. A gentleman sift m the seat ahead turned around asked politely, "Did you visit the Ho Show?' "Oh! I looked in,'' said the oth grumblingly, "but what's great in a of horses?" "Did you go -into the Art' Gallery said the gentleman in front. "Naw," replied the grumbler, wasn't going to pay no 25 cents to see fe'w' pictures." . - • "Did you see the Cattle and, Shee shows?" "Nothing great in them," was reply. "Did you study the machinery?" ‘.1'shaw, I dont care for engines," sal the grumbler. • "Didn't see the Poultry shoW, I su pose?" continued the .gentleman in t first seat, "or the trained seala, or t Palace of Illusion, or the Horticultur department, or the collection of paten or the tobacco exhibits, 'or the free A gallery, and didn't hear Cappa's conce Why you must have spent your time ea ing peanuts." This called forth a roar of laught from the other passengers, and when had subsided the last speaker continue "I'll tell you what I'll do, I'll bet yo $100 to $10 that the Horse show at th Fair is the largest and best ever held i America: that it's twice the size of an one ever held in the Madison Squar Garden in New York city, for which 5 cents admission is always charged. I' bet you another $100 to $10 that if th Cattle show alone were opened St. Louis, Chicago, New York o any other city, it would b crowded for a month at 50 cents head. Vice President Morton's Guernse cattle alone are worth a quarter to see I'll bet you another $100 to $10 that yo never saw at any County or State Fai you ever attended, two Corliss engines i motion at once running shoe factories ice:making machines and a hundre things of that sort. I'll bet you anythin you want, at any odds, that there are tw pictures alone in the Art Gallery, eithe one of which would crowd any hall in any city with visitors at twenty -fly cents apiece.. Perhaps that you don' know that the Russian Wedding Fees has for the two years been visited i 80 on OUS. gest an& and heir ght e of gia- the Un- nt. one the ole .e an of. tor her sort sort ent eir, 't ed its its in ar as 115 rse er lot 111 "/ a p the P- he he al ts, rt rt? er it u d: e n y e 0 ll e in e a y u r n d g 0 r t tt New York pasty people from all over the United States and Europe who have gladly paid a quarter to see it. I'll tell you what I think about you, I think your liver is out of order and that you need raedieine." It really is aggravating to see the smart, we-knowet-all, nothing -is -quite - good -enough -for -us air assumed by visit-, ei.s who can scarcely keep their jaws from dropping off in amazement at the sights they are 'beholding. There are people who really seem ashamed to be seen enjoying themselves. I trust the readers of this letter who come to the Fair this week will use their eyes to better advantage than our discon- tented friend in the horse car. The Art Gallery is certainly worth a visit, and the price of admission to it in almost any city will be 50 cents. But there is plenty to see for those who cannot afford any expense beyond the price of admission to the grounds. Hours can be spent with pleasure and profit in the Main Building or in any of the Live Stock shows,. and the open air programme, which is of course free, is very fine, including most exciting contests of hunters over Jumps, _alloon ascensions, colt races, fire depart- ment exhibitions, afternoon and evening concerts by the Seventh Regiment band, etc. Either Thursday or Friday will be a good day to attend. On Thursday the Hunters' contests will be unusually ex- citing, and on that day Belle Hamlin and Globe will be driven by their owner to beat the pole record. On Friday there will be a double balloon ascension by Prof. William Hogan and Miss Louise Bates. This daring couple are to go up in separate balloons and simultaneously leap into apace at the height of a mile, trusting their lives to their parachutes. I would advise all visitors to call at the Bureau of Information on the corner of Main street and the Terrace as soon as they reach the city and secure accommo- dations, of which there are plenty to be had. There is no reason why any persons coming to town for a day should not bring their own lunch with them. In the main tower a large mom is set apart for the use of baliket parties, and a THAT TERRIBLE PARESIS. Are the Canadian People Becoming a Nation of Lunatics 7 -The frightful increase of this most peculiar Insanity • and bow it is cured. Til E BRAIN (Irma a Photagra,a) IVith Paresis Lesions. 11 llealthy Condition. There are many well in our Asylums who but prominent among our circles. Why are they there? l'aresis! known men confined a shell time ago were business and social Did it come on at once? Net at all. It . was a gradual but positive growth. They overtaxed nature. The drain on their vitality, their nerve powers, their brain tissue, was too great, and they gradually but surely sank under it. The things they did to bring this sad end about are precisely d the same things that are being done by s thousands of men and women to -day. It is not necessary to name them. They all end disastrou,sly unless checked or regulated. Pref. Phelps, of Dartmouth College, knew - this fully when he began his experiments which resulted in the discovery of the wonderful Paine's Celery Compound. He realized that paresis (consumption of the brain) was our great National weakness. He knew that the brain and nervous system must be fortified to meet the great strains which modern life bring upon it. lie saw that men were becoming debilitated and women weakened by the pressure and demands of life, and he sought and discovered the remedy Paine's Celery Compound, if rightly taken, will renew the bram and build up nerve tissues as fast as they become exhausted. • It is not a narcotic. It contains no drugs, no, nostrums. It is nerfectly pure. It is absolutely harmless. The high character of its discoverer guarantees this, and the indorsement of the medical and chemical professions prove it. HE IS CANADA'S DARLING. Sir John is a great old man. His words conflict with high no- tions of statesmanly propriety just as his acts are often at war with all sound idea of public virtue. Ad- mirers.admit Doth these charges, and meet the proofs of guilt by the plea that • age and necessity saint the sins of Sir John. The Old Man has a way with him. He can say things and do things that no other man dare at- tempt. Imagine a Mowat or a Blake speaking. as Sir John spoke at the Indnstrial Fair. Their verbal indulgence in jokes that .are at once aged and silly would dis- gust the /community. But Sir John utters jests that have not the brilliance that could illumine their shady complexion. . The audience applauds and.the country admires the venerable speaker, . who re- freshes his hearers with the sup" erannuated jokes of the merry minstrels. Sir John is a privileged charac- ter. Canada has known him so long that it cannot judge [him by severe standards of right and w tong. Weakneds in other men aro virtues in him. Ho is praised for words and deeds that would ruin rivals. Whatever Sir John says or does itt right, by a suffit cient number of his fellowcoun- trymen to keep the Old Man in power until death calls him np higher. -Toronto Telegram. Stanley is expected, to reach the East Coast of' Africa about the end of October. Mr Sirton, a London township farmer, has had several cows and a horse poisoned. A gii.i who had got tired of' single blessedness wrote to her in- tended as follows : Dear Jim : cum rite off if you are comin' at al, Ed. IIilton is insistin' that I shall heve him, and ho bugs and kisses me so much that I can't bold out much longer. Appealed to thus pathetically it is only common justice to "Jim" to as.: sumo that lie speedily got there. The Safest A most powerful alterative is Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Young and old are alike benefited by its use. For the eruptive dis- eases peculiar to children nothing as else is so effective 4CIP's as this medicine, while its igreea- v issr ble flavor makes it easy to admin- ister. "My little boy , had large scrofu- n'eed ss. haus ulcers on his IsseSse'essessf".1‘, s neck and throat from which he suffered terribly. Two physicians attended him, hut he grew continually worse tinder their care, and everybody expected he would die. I had heard of the remarkable cures effected by Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and decided to have my boy try it. Shortly after he began to take this medicine, the ulcers com- menced healing, and, after using several bottles, he was entirely cured. He is now as healthy and strong as any boy of his age." - William F. Dougherty, Hampton, Va. "In May last, my youngest child, fourteen months old, began to have sores gather on its head and body. We ap- plied various simple remedies without avail. The sores increased in number and discharged copiously. A physician was called, but the sores continued to multiply until in a few menthe they nearly covered the eh ild's head and body. At last we began the uge of Ayer's Sar. saparilla. In a few days a marked change for the better Vas manifest. The sores assumed a more healthy condition, the discharges were gradually dimih- 'shed, and finally Ceased altogether. The child is livelier, its skin is fresher, and its appetite better than we have ob- served for months." -Frank M. Griffin, Long Point, Texas. "The formula of Ayer's Sarsaparilla presents, for chronic diseases of almost every kind, the best remedy known to the meeltical world." - D. M. Wilson, M. D., Wiggs, Arkansas. • • person can enjoy the Fair just as extra's•IJVU 4P UI UUjJUlIIlU - sgantly or cheaply as he may desire. ss" PUPA= BY • VINDEX. • Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Priced ; six bottlea, $5. 'Worth $1 a bottle. IANO SON THE 3 YEARS SYSTEM A regular monthly, quarterly or half -yearly pay- ment (a slight advance on the rental rate) buys the instrument. Any piano may be chosen out of a magnificent rlsortment of Uprights. Squares and Grands, un- surpassed in quality and value, Ministers, Teach- ers, Government Officers, and those in receipt of regular incomes will find this a convenient and ad- vantageous mode for securing a first clue instru- ment. When :the instrument is used for practice, our Soft Stop or Practice Pedal saves wear on the nerves. as well as Presentes the tone of the Piano. Our Patent Foot Pedal attachment, for Pianos ie invaluable to organists, students and teachers. Prices on application. Inspection invited. OCTAVIOUS NEWCOMB& CO. warereems-107 and 109 Church St., Toronto, Factory, the finest in its equipments and appliance in the city, 80 to 97 Bellwood,. Ave. The Meet letteeemsfaI Remedy eve. die. Covered, as 11 18 certain In its effects and does not blister. Read proof below. SYngurtivitact, P. Q., May 8,1889. Dn. 8.3. ICENDA2.1. Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vt. Geatiemen have used item • dales Spavin Cure for Spaying and also in a case of tameness and cure In every respect. I cordially StlifJoInts and found itasure recommend It to all horsemen. Very respectfully your', Casae J. BLACRALL. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE, Sr. Taoism, P. Q., April NOM. Da. 13. Ittatua,r, Co., En013burgh Falls. Vt. • ciente:-1 have used a few potties of your Ken - 4 dall's SpavIn Cure on my colt, 10` which was suffering from Influ- ents In a very bad corm, and can say that your Kendall's spavin Cure made complete and rapid cure. I can recommend it as the best and most effective liniment I have ever handled. Kindly send nie one o your valuable hooks entitled "A Trea- tise on the Horse.", Yours reepectfull7, • L Wn.xigeog. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. FORT Ewer, Atm, May I0, 1889. Dn. E .7. EssnaLE Co., Enosburght. Gentlemen:- I always keep your Kendall's Spavin cure and Blister on hand and they have never tailed In what you state they will do. I have cured a bad case of Spavin and also two cases of Ringbone of years standing, on mares which I bought to breed from, and have not eeeri any signs of disease In EireittfijkENDALL CO., thPreiri:elilrinpegr. oorurssixt rbuol Yules for 6$. All D. J. O'Keerri. druggists haven or can get lt for you, or ftwill bo sent to any address on receipt of price by the Enosburgh Falls, Vt. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. A COOK BOOK FREE By mail to any lady sending us her post At t address. Wells, Richardson & Co., kiepireal. o 1i