The Clinton New Era, 1889-12-20, Page 3oftle
tie) e4
1i.atid }
.0 rats a'ti
artmentis uouipasse in the
• A Christian life on earth sol
Diger
ressing� It r'e.
y#atn; promote;
eWth; prevents
e formation o
dandruff; makes the
laeirsoft and silken
and imparts a deli
vete but lasting per
flame.
"Several months
ago my hair com-
menced falling out,
and in a few weeks
my head was almost
hall. I tried many
gild no good. I final -
of Ayer's Hair Vigor,
Only a part of the eon-
' n a : covered with a
soy , f 1 ' . "I' recommend
s`o'tldeaesi ,f}'e 4 t':e best in, the
{ jiltl7 , i�l;aroit U r.OV. , Ky.
.1410-a,`p nl�g K?. 11! it las alwagivenair ys for a
lnes..r. fat t;Un. '1; ir, air c:::ellen t dress -
IIS, prerants t!;u hair from turning
ay, ittl!iti'tis. its vigorous growth, and
T'or't the?Atteip Irliite and clean."—
`t,t k:a-,a, "ulctu, Mass.
" ::are nso,', :1ver's hair Vigor for
r•'• c^'11:ig tho growth of the hair, and
nue; uale,l. For restoring the
'lr! ..a original color, and for adress-
'" •1 not be surpaSSed."—Mrs. Goo.
1f" _, -"_'aro1i Irapids, Mich.
For Sundae Reading
CUMBERED.
BY N. 13.
Christ never asks of us such a busy
• labor,
1 As needs no time for resting
At his feet.
" The waiting attitude of expectation,
He ofttimes counts a service
Most complete.
'4 Iruir Vigor is a most easel..
e ", • sem fur the hair. I speak
`'+.t 1 'rvn experience. Its use
pre- t!. • ;rurrth of new hair and
:'1! soft. Tho Vigor is
t'o';a ;n•.•i,a•,u..:,i� Bowen,
'•: ••.:r;i • t•' `,fcArthur, Ohio.
t' ' ' A ; • Hair Vigor for
' v, , . and found it all it is
i'•lri i tt. 1 restores the natu-
lza."i, t.) •• • , tiIses the hair
I•,31Y , 're't 1: ;,:) it soft and
. V. h;:y, C•.ioes, N. Y.
7 '.1,• r: 1(:r, lit muni+.'. the age of fifty,
1.: 'r ' aa. from 1 i;0 1.'1, of his head.
41a. wow •i,'1; crier of :1y er's Hair
Vitcer tl'" lair hewn!: corning, and, in
thrr:.• 'n ,11( 1', he 1,a,1 it fine growth of
hair ( ! the1, i (1 al color."—P.,J., Cullen,
-Serrau; S; inns, N. Y.
1i.ve7ie'ss Hair Vigor,
rEIirAELD IIY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lcwe1l, Mass.
t3ald by Druggists and Perfumers.
Rec. J. R. Kendrick, of Pokeep-
sie. N. Y., was found dead in his
bed by the side of his wife. Ile
was formerly president of the
Vassar College and widely known.
For Consumption, Sick or Bil-
lious Headaches, use Dr' Pierce's
-Pellets, or Anti -bilious Granules:
Pprely . Vegetable- and perfectly
armless. One a dose.
ROUNDS OF A FIVE CENT
PIECE.
A stout man' handed a dime to
,:.. the conductor, who, before Ieture-
ing the change, collected a nickel
from a female passenger, evidently
a 'washerwoman, and handed the
nickel to the stout roan..Turning
to a passenger, a friend evidently,
and who had got on before the stout
man, the latter handed him the
.„ nickle, remarking with e laugh at
the same time: "There Bob, I owe
you five cents, and that squares
us."
_.Bob;tosdr'the coin with a smile,
and leaning across the aisle, said to
it. an acquaintance with whom. he had
been talking, and who was accom—
panied by a lady, evidently his wife:
"There's that five cents I bet you
on Boer's majority."
The acquaintance flipped the coin
from his right to his left hand and
handed it to his female companion
with tire remark:
"There's that five cents I borrow-
ed for that cigar this morning."
Smiling sweetly,
theladyaccept-
ed
,.ce
a'P t-
ed the coin, and reaching over, drop-
ped it into the washwoman's hand,
saying:
"There's the five csnts I owe you,
and that just makes us square."
It was all,done so quickly and in
such an off -hand way that it was not
until tie coin was in the hand of
its'first possessor that the passen-
gers whose ownership had passed
realized what a number of debts the
small piece had paid, passing in
turn through the hands of the wash-
erwoman, the conductor, the stout
man, the stout man's friend, the
stout man's friend's acquaintance,
the stout man's friend's acquaintan-
ce's wife,and t'.:e stout man's friend's
acquaintance's wife's washerwoman,
in all paying seven debts, and wow—
•g back to the original possessor.
It sent all hands into a brown
study, and the story is true, too.
CATARRH,
CATARRHAL DEAFNESS—HAY FEVER
A NEW HOME TREATMENT.
Sufferers are not generally aware that
these diseases are contagious, or that they
are due to the presence of living parasites
�in the lining membrane of the nose and
'eustachian tubes. Microscopic •research,..
�however, has proved this to be 'a fact, and
. he result of this discovery is .that a
iple remedy has beon formulated whore -
\catarrh, catarrhal deafness and hay
r are permanently cured in from one
three siilnple applications made at home
e patient once in two weeks.
.—This treatment is not a snuff or
. an ointment ; both have been discarded
reputable
:
ei ' s
clan as i '
byn pileus
P .e
� 1
Pamphlet explaining thio new treatment
it' -Bent on receipt of ten cents by A. 11.
JX0N & SoN, 803 West King Street,
OrontO, Canada.—Toronto Globe.
Inf%, rs from Catarrhal troubles should
full read the above.
He sometimes wants our ear, our rapt
attention,
That he some sweetest secret
May impart.
'Tis always in the times of deepest
silence,
That heart finds deepest fellowship
.With heart.
We sometimes wonder„.why our Lord
doth place us,
Within a sphere so narrow,
I So obscure, -
That nothing we call work, can find an
entrance;
It seems there's nothing but to suffer,
To endure.
Well God loves patience, souls that
dwell in stillness,
Doing the little things, or
_..Resting -quiet.• — •---
May_just.as perfectly fulfil their mis-
sion,
Be just as useful in' their
Father's sight.
Holmesville, Sept. 1880.
THE HARVEST IS GREAT.
There are vast multitudes with-
out the knowledge of the way of
salvation,wbo shall neve.: hear the
message of life, unless wo move
more rapidly than we have in the
past. A recent writer on mis-
sions, commenting on St. Paul's
statement that David "served his
own generation by the ;will of
God" argues that the church of
to -day ought to have an ambition
to servo its own generation,so that
the benighted legions who sit in
darkness /nay see the light, before
thisgeneration passes away. The
discoveries of science and the pro-
gress of' events hove given the
Church greater facilities for reach-
ing the unsaved world than existed•
in any former gencllration. The
railways of the world are high-
ways for missionary travel. The
printing presses of the world are
ready ',o publish the glad tidingsf
All, the wonderful humilities o.
modern travel are at our disposal.
Godly men and women are wait-
ing for the word sof command to
go. A11 thatis needed is to bring
tithes into God's storehouse to se.
cure glorious displays of saving
power.
MAKING BEAUTIFUL YEARS.
The swift years are slipping a-
vvay. • 'W hether the contemplation
of this fact "makes us sad or not
depends upon how we are living
them. Certainly they aro curry-
ing away beyond oust reach many
precious opportunities. if we
have improved their' as they came
into .our hands,we need not grieve
that they are gone. Years well
spent ought notto be mourned as
lost. They are treasures laid up
where we shall find them again.
But if we have let them pass with-
out accepting the blessings' they
bore to us from heaven ; without
eking up with heave and manly
heart the duties to which they
ailed us ; without grasping the
opportunities of service which
hey held out to us in passing;
well may we mourn the lapse of
hese golden years. Wasted years
re
dead witnesses n sses to have left be-
ind to stand against us in the
udgment.
WORDS OE WISDOM.
Tho truest and of life is to know
he life that never ends.
Peirce is the evening star of the
our, as virtue is its sun ; and the
wo aro never far apart.
Folks as have no mind to be of
se, have always the luck to he
ut of the road, when there's any -
hing to be done. •
When the rising sun fell on
Monnon's statue it awakeped
usic in the -breast of stone. Ro-
gion dons the same with nature.
To restore a commonplace truth
its first uncommon luster you
eed only translate it into action.
ut to do this, you must have
fleeted on its truth,
Some Socialists have discovered
short path to celebrity. They
t up for free thinkers, but their
ly stock in trade is that they
e free from thinking.
I{ind:lookskind words,kind nets,
d kind handshakes, these are
condary means of grace when
en are in trouble, and aro fight—
g their unseen battles.
If we do not know what the
•row of penitence is, we have
en living only on the surface of
cons,;ious of its grander glories,
, unmindful of its deep realities.
c
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t
m
lr
to
n
0
a
SC
on
ar
an
se
m
in
sol
be
un
life
nal EP THOUGHTS.
Life is a componnd of prayer
and work.
Conversing with God assimi-
lates the soul to Him.
Wild Cherry Bark, Eloeampano, Hoarhound
and
Senega, Those are the rn
o tom
cillos
with which
Dame Nature has sopplied Canada for the euro of
Colds, Coughs, Croup, whooping Cough, Cron-
chltis and Loos of Voice. Ail those are contained
In Wilion'a Wild Cherry In Chair most active form
and with other medicines constitute this most ro•
liable euro for all diseases of the Throat, Choat
and Lunge. Wilson's Wild Cherry la sold by all
druggists.
res
part', a Christian life in heayen
solves completely the problem of
perpetual youth.
Give me a praying heart, and I
shall be richer than I could be
with all the diamonds in the
world,
The Saviour intends that affec—
tion, passionate affection for him-
self, should be the motive power
in his followers' lives.
Better follow the sterness of a
Truth than glittering delusionof a
lie. Men often follow lies because
theyshine.
A man cannot be invested with
a higher dignity than that of be-
ing ehe priest of his own houshold
and no more fitly raises his posi-
tion in the family.
Progress is still, as in the first
age the essence of our faith. We
have together little by little the
fruits of victory in which Christ
has overcome the wo' fj
Every association men re.
quires for its maintenance the
spiritual principle of selfrenounc-
ing„love and requires it the more
solid ani 'tars t9OIli” Tifo ecomes.
Tho man who prays, in propor-
tion to the purity of his prayer,
becomes a spiritual power, a nerve
from the divine brain, whence
power anew goes forth upon his
follows.
Religion was severed from mor-
ality and morality from religion
and the outcome of the ancient
world was an immoral religion and
an irreligious morality.
Never tell a child he must bol-
ieve what you do not believe, nor
teach him that he must go through
any. experience which you are not
sure is necessary to his conversion
and Christian life
The most powerful revelation
will be that message which speaks
deepest love to those that wo
have known ; and if Christianity
has obtained the pre-eminence,it
is because pre-eminently it posses-
ses this quality.
Tho Secretary of the Toronto
St. George's Society states that
one in every 25 of the families of
that city receives relief in seine
form or another during the year.
It i5 evident that the policy ofhigh
taxatihn does not help the Toron-
to poor very much.. How can it?
Tobias Slaton, who died last
week in Fayette County, Georgia,
wtis'81 years.old, and had lived in
the same house for 61.yoars.. By
his first wife he had 17 children
arid by his second 15. Around
his bedside when he died were 17
of his 19 living children. He bad
grandchildren too, numerous to
mention. Ile bad given nearly
everyone of them some of the :and
which he owned, and his children
always lived close about him.—
He was six feet in height, and
had been sick only a few hours
before his death. Last Christmas
week he went to Palmetto and
went into a store and called for
10 hats, saying he wanted them
as Christmas gifts for his sons,—
The merchant said: "If you can
call your 10 sons 'into my store
now I will give each of them a
hat." Mr S1ato-n went to the door
and called the boys until the ten)
stood in a row.beforetho merchant
and received their hats.
People
Wolldr
HEN they find how rapidlyhealth
T. restored by, taking Ayer's Sar-
saparilla. The reason is that this
preparation contains only the purest
and mosq powerful alteratives and
tonics. T¢ thousands yearly it proves a
veritable elixir of'lile.
Mrs. Jos. Lake, Brockway Centre,
Mich., writes : " Liver complaint and
indigestion made my life' a burden
and came near ending my existence.
For more than four years 1 suffered un-
told agony. I was reduced almost to
a skeleton, and hardly had strength to
drag out. All kinds of food
distressed if 40, said only the most deli-
cate could bo digested at all. Within
the time mentiefied several physicians
treated me without giving relief. Noth-
ing that I took seemed to do any per-
manent good until I began the use of
Ayer's Sarsaparilla, which has pro-
duced wonderful results. Soon after
commencing n5 take the Sarsaparilla I
coukl see an
Improvement
in my condition, my appetite began to
return and with it came the ability to
digest all the food taken, my strength
improved each day, hint ,after a few
months of faithful attention to your
directions, I found myself a well
woman, able to attend to all household
duties, The medicine has given me a
new lease of life, and I cannot thank
you too much.'
"We, the undersigned, citizens of
Brockway Centre, Mich., hereby certify
that the above statement, made by
Mrs. Lake, is true in every particular
and entitled to full credence."—O. P.
Chamberlain, G. W. Waring, C. A.
Wells, Druggist.
"My brother, in England, was, for a
long time, unable to attend to his occu-
pation by reason of sores on his foot
1 sent occu-
pation,
Ayer's Almanac and the tes-
timonials it contained induced him to
try Ayer's Sarsaparilla. After using it
a little while, he was cured, and is now
a well man, working in a sugar mill
at Brisbane,ueenslancr Australia." —
A, Attewell, Sharbot Lake, Ontario.
Ayer's S
PREPARED BY rho planot, as the &witness disap• wom
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. pears when,the sun rises over the taste
Price SI; pia bottles,$5. Worth td a bottle. hilltops.
emir
MAKING GOLD. I THE FARMERS AND MILLERS. NEWS NOTES.
r A Birmingham man, who (1oll1$.
not wish his name to appear bas
been experimenting for a year
on a metal resembling gold and
has his discovery nearly per—
fected. He stumbled on the com-
bination first while analyzing
some metals ; and when he real-
ized what he had found ho soon
produced a metal which puzzles
the best of jewellers. All the
aluminums before discovered are
lacking in weight or some other
essential point. This new metal
is as heavy as gold and in all ap-
pearance resembles the precious
metal itself. It can bo manufac-
tured at a cost of' about sixty cents
a pound and will make the best
;foundation for gold plated goods
that can be found. It is easily
worked and can be either ham-
mered or drawn. The metal is
no compound, it being only ono
kind reduced at its gold-liko ap-
pearance by the application of
certain chemicals. .The inventor
ye -there 'ueiiTtaking out
a patent, as no ono can 'discover
the secret -of its manufacture by
analysing it.
CONSUMPTION CURED.
An old physican, retired from prao-
Cce, having had placed in his hands by
an East India missionary the forumla
of a simple vegetable remedy for the
speedy and permanent cure ofconsump-
tion. Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and
all throat and Lung Affections, also a
positive and radical cure for Nervous
Debility and Nervous Complaints, after
having tested its wonderful curative
powers in thousands of cases, httil� felt
it his duty to make it known to hfb suf-
fering fellows. Actuated by 'this mot-
ive and a desire to relieve human suf-
fering, I will send free of charge, to all
who desire it, this receipt, in German',
French or English, with full directions
for preparing and using. Sent by mail
by addressing with stamp, naming this
paper, W. A. NOYES, 149 Power's Block,
Rochester, N. Y. 13012-y.e.o.w.
Gen. Goo. W. Smith, a promi-
nent attorney and member of tho
Illinois Legislature, was knocked
down and robbed by footpads
within a block of his own home in
Chicago, Tuesday evening. Ilis
injuries aro not serious.
Jtinnrd's Liniment relieves,T7'euraiga
• Mt' McCarthy, M. P., made a
number of important statements
at his meeting in Ottawa last
Thursday night. Ile announced
that he had resigned the Presid-
ency of the Conservative Union
of Ontario some months ago, that
the Northwest Council resolution
against the .French language .vas.
introdnced at his request, and
pledged himself to bring in a bill
at the next, cession of • the. Com-
mons to abolish the dual language
in the Territories. He paid a
high tribdte to Mr Laurier, by
saying that the Liberal loader's
broad and liberal sentiments, ut-
tered at Toronto, were used
against hien in his own Provi.aen,
and he was so badly beaten at the
bye . election in Richelieu. ----very
largely, Mr McCarthy believed, on
account of his Toronto speech.
EXPERIENTIA DOCET,
Sir J H Hourigan, after using Wilson's Wild
Cherry In his family for eight years, writes us
that'it has never failed to cure Coughs, Colds,
Whooping Cough or Bronchitis. Be wise, profit
by the experience, of others, and nye Wild Cherry
when afflicted with any such treul,les. Sold by
all druggists.
The strange case
of
William
Jackson, whose 'breath is inflam-
mable, excited a great deal of in-
terest in medical and scientific cir-
cles two years ago. At that time
Mr Jackson was a photographer
in' Fayetteville, N. Y. More re-
cently he has been engaged in the
same business in Middlebury, Vt.
One evening at ton o'clock he
lighted a lamp with a match.
Then with a breath of air sought
to "blow out the match." In-
stantly hisbreath took fire with a
slight explosion. Jackson gasped
with fright, and the flame of
the combustible air entered his
mouth and blistered his tongue.
His;lipe and face also suflored,and
his mustache, eyebrows and the
hair above his eyebrows were
singed to a marked degree. Jack-
son is etill.11,ving and about 30
years old.
STIX mends everything. 16e.
The Dark Continent is dark no
longer. .Te, Stanley and his un-
daunted comrades the world owes
a debt of gratitude which it will
be difficult to repay. Africa has
at last been opened to civilization
of the future. Its vast tracts of
wilderness will stimulate the on.
tepriso of the pioneers. and the
day is not far distant when the
shrill echo of the engine's whistle
will be heard on the rugged sides
of the snow capped mountains
which Stanley has explored; when
those illimitable forests will
resound with the woodman's
axe and when the law of corn -
name will change the tawny
native from a savage o n ge into a self
7 retire 1 omected litselast sstn. ingboldbarism wl
onThe
To the Editor of the Clinton New Era
Daus SIR,—I beg apace in your col -
limns to say a few words in reply to
"Farmer," in your issue of Nov. 29th.
I will not dispute the figures he uses,as•'
they are correct, but when he goes for
the farmers who were at the meeting
so strong, I think he does not know all
the facts, or he would draw it a little
milder. The meeting was a very small
one, all the more disgrace to the farm.
ers of West Huron, and not a single
local roller miller, which was as big an
insult as could be offered to the farmers.
I suppose they thought they were sure
of their victims, and did not need to
bother their heads about it. The mo-
tion was but very feebly supported.
The farmers were more in favor of tak-
ing the duty off wheat, than' raising. the
duty on flour. I do not think a dozen
voted on the motion altogether. As far
as giving Mr Plows a vote of thanks, he
was well worthy of one; he gave us s
great deal of information, and advised
us to take our wheat to the stone mills
and get it ground, and then buy from
25 to 33 per cent of strong Manitoba
flour and mix with it, and we would
have a good wholesome flour. Then we
could get out of the hands of the men
we think are dealing unfair with us,and
I think a great many will do so. But
our sympathy wars ith_Mr..Plews and
the wholesale millers, who have to pay
22 cents a barrel more duty on the raw
material than the finished article pays.
This is very ,unjust; lot the duties be
the same, or remove them altogether,
which would be far the best. I believe
the farmer is the sufferer in the long
run. The millers are. losing on the
flour they ship to the cities, and then
turn round and squeeze the farmers to
make up the loss. There are a few
thingitwhich an intelligent farrier like
our friend and hundreds of other farm-
ers could do to better things, they could
put off killing their pigs, or let that job
at the back end of the farm lay over
for a day, and when the directors of the
W est Huron Farmers' Institute arrange
for a meeting, they could make a point
to be there. It would be better than
staying at home, and then croaking
about things afterwards. If the farm-
ers could turn out they might demand
that if the tester is to be used, an inde-
pendent party should be appointed to
do the testing and grading, instead of
the millers having all to say. They
could demand the appointment of a
flour inspector, to inspect the flour, and
to whom samples of flour could bo sent
to test and classify the same, and do-
mand that all flour should be classified
at the mill, so that if the farmer found
he was having a low grade flour shoved
on him he would have the miller pun-
ished. We could demand thtrt the se.
verest penalties be inflicted on any
miller found dealing unfair. We should
demand the immediate removal of the
duties on coal, flour, wheat and sugar,
and the reduction of the' duties on iron
down to what tey were in 1878, and
*the the stoppage bounty of $150,000
to the Lower Provinces' fisherf ten, or
a booty on everything the' Ontario
farrrTer produces. If 800 or 900 farmers
in every riding were to meet in their
Institutes, and make these or similar
demands, they would soon get a favor-
able answer. But so long as we stay
at home, and let things go as they
please; little can be expected. We Want
free and unrestricted trade with our
own flesh and blood across the border,
and then we might put up with being
joined to a race of foreigners, whose
language we know nothing of, and
whose ways we have no sympathy with.
Hoping I have not taken up too much
of your space, I subscribe myself,
ANOTHER F,1rtSiEIi.
A story is told of Mr Barnum,
which may or may not be true. It
is said that some five and thirty
years ago he delivered a lecture
at Oxford before an audience com-
posed iargely of undergraduates.
The subject was "Humbug," and
the students were very unruly.
In fact Mr Barnum shared the fate
of many other entertainers in
those days, and could not obtain a
hearing. At length ❑
th rho
e was
a
sa
1
all and.tho
speaker, seizing the
opportunity, nhonted out, "Then
you don't want to hoar anything
about humbug?" "Wo don't,"
was the immediate reply. Mr
Barnum looked steadily at his
audience and returned, "Well, I
have kot your money, and there's
no humbug about that ?" Peace
with honor was immediately pro7,
claimed.
A Pittsburg dispatch to the
New York Tribune says :—Mr
Schambery, the Austro-Hungar-
ian consul there, expects to re-
ceive orders from the Govern-
ment of Galicia to collect evidence
and probably forward witnesses
for the trial of 500 Government
officials who are charged With
making common cause with steam-
ship and railway lines in forcing
men, women and children tt emi-
grate to America. These officials
some of them of high rayls, re-
ceived a bonus for each emigrant
transported. Treason was the
favorite charge on which the
heads of families were frightened
into selling their homes an flee-
ing the coentry. About 15,000
of those people have come, to Pitts-
burg within the past two 'years
and the majority aro working in
the Connellsville coke regions.
Tho gendarmes at the four points
on the Galician frontier were
Dither bribed or their imprison-
ment secured on false charges
and through those four outlets the
poor peasents, Without passport
were driven over the mountains
in droves, put on freight trains
and carried to Hamburg where
they were shipped to America.
y marched 100 miles, mon,
en and childrod, and never
d Mood or water clueing the
o trip.
A Winnipeger,just ari ivod from
the Pacific coast,tells of a thrilling
accident to the Canadian Pacific
through express in the mountains
on Saturday last. A rail gave
way at a point on the mo'ansain
side, high above the Columbia
River. Tho engine passed over
safely, but the two coaches follow-
ing swung about and toppled over
The bank was very perpendicular
and the cars would have tumbled
several hundred feet below into
the flowing river had it not been
that the coupling twisted around
and held the tremendous weight.
There wore the two cars, ono with
its load of passengers, suspended
between heaven and earth. Tho
weight of the engine and tho bal-
ance of the train prevented the
suspended cars from drawing the
whole train down. The suspense
was said to bo dreadful. The
frightened passengers were com-
pelled to remain in their perilous
osition until the train hand
s
ui taP£form around and under-
neath
de -neath the hanging cars, enabling
all to make their escape.. The
place where the accident occurred
is considered the most dangerous
in the mountains.
The darkest hour which Cen-
tral Africa has known since the
work of Moffat and Livingstone
began, is that which she is now
passing through. Tho whole
country from the confines of
southern Egypt to the Zambesi
is given up to Mandism and the
slave raiders. The withdrawal
of Emin Pasha and the mission-
aries, the massacre of Dr Peters,
and the activity of the slave-raid-
ingArabs. everywhere mark tilt
femporai•y disappearance of• the
influence of Europeans which' used
to be dominant. fine darkest
hour is just before the dawn, how-
ever. _H.uropaan nations aro clos-
ing in .upon Central Africa frorn
all directions, and a few years
will see the occupation, if not the
subjugation of Central Africa.
During the last ten yea::; the
population of Japan has increased
voryconsiderablyand appearances
justify the policy ,of expantion,
under which this strange •island
empire has been transformed ilut'
ing• this time. By.a recent cen-
sus the population has been found
to number thirty-nine and a half
millions, of which some six
thousand are nobles and two mil-
lions are gentry. In 1S70 the
population was estimated at
•twenty• millions, but it is evident
that this' estimate was much un-
der the mark or that the present
census is an improvement upon
the last census of Canada, as a
means of showing an apparent
large increase of the population.
There is, however, a wide margin
fur error between the two sets of
figures, and the internal condi.
tion of the country shows that the
increase has been a large one.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF HENRY
MEDD, LATE OF TIIE TOWNSHIP of HUI,-
LETT, IN THE COUNTY OF HURON, DECEASED
Pursuant to Chapter 110, R, S. 0., 1987, no-
tice is hereby given that all creditors and
others having claims against Henry' Medd,
late of the Township of Hallett, County of
Huron, farmer who departed this Moven or
about tho 9th day of October, 1889, are re-
quested to send by post prepaid, addressed
to William Medd, at Loudesbor•o, Ont,, on
or before the second day of January, 1890,
a statement of
their
names and yq
adaresses
with full particulars of their claims and thti
securities, (if any) held by them; and that
after the day last aforesaid the Executors
under the Will of the said Henry Medd, will
proceed to distribute the assets of the said
deceased among the parties entitled thereto,
regard being had only 10 the •claims•of which
notice ,shall have been received, as above
required, and the said exebutors Will not be
liable for the assets or any part thereof to
any person or persons of whose claim or
claims notice shall not have been received
by them at the time of such distribution.
Dated this 22nd clay of November, Erbil
MANNING Bt SCOTT,
Solicitors for the Executors,
WILLIAM MEDD,
EDWATID MEDD,
EMANUEL MEDD
Executors' Notice to Creditors
•
IN TIIE Marren Or THE ESTATE OF CHAIII.Es
MASON, LATE OF THE TOWN Or CLIN•roN,
IN THE UOUNTY OF HURON, DECEASED
l'nrsuant to Chapter 110, Section 36, of the
Revised Statutes of Ontario, notice is hereby
hiven that all creditors and other persons
aving claims or domande against the estate
of the above named Charles Mason, are
hereby required to send or deliver to the un-
dersigned Executors of the last will .and
testament of the said the late Charles Ma -
sou, Clinton P.O., on or before the 20th day
of December, 1889, surnames, addresses ans eir christian nddescriptions, ns with
full particulars of their claims, statements
of accounts, and nature of securities (if any(
held by them, after which data the Paeocu-
tora1
u tiler tho will shall distribute the as-
sets of the estate of the said Charles Mason
among the parties entitled thereto, having
regard only to those claims of Which they
s11a11 than have notice, and the said Execu-
tors will not be liable for the said assets, or
any part thereof, to any person of whose
claim notice shall not have been received
by thorn at the time of such distribution
JAMES HOWE, Executors
HUll7'. MASON,
C A HARTT. Solicitor
Dated at Clinton this 13th day of Nov, 1889,
BUSINESS CHANGE.
Eureka Bakery and Restaurant,
Sabi eribor desires to Intimate to the people
of Clinton and vicinity that ho has bought
out the Baking and Restaurant business of
Mr Ring, and will continuo the same a t the
old stand, OPPOSITE THE VCST Orr'' 1UE
Being practical .ra tl
cal m
P at>r his customers may
rely on getting a good article.
BREAD, BUNS, CAKES, &c:
always on hand. Oysters, Ice
Cream, Sze. in season.
Socials supplied on shortest notice, WED-
DING CAKES aspecialty.
W. Ii. BOYD.
AT.LASTx
A. Wonderful Vegetahle Discovery TLS'
Removes the Terrible Repeltei
of Overwork.
A True Invigorator.
Weakness and prostration of the nervglle
system surely follow that overworktiand+
worry which brings sorrow and suffering to
so many Canadian homes. The terrible'
results of nervous weakness, are seen on . •
every hand. Pains in the back, poor and
unrefreshing sleep, lack of appetite' dys-
pepsia, and lost energy and strength, are the.
first symptoms of more serious and danger_
ous trouble. This is the way that Paralysis,
Paresis and Insanity begin. Do not delay
a moment longer, fur some time it will be
too late to regain your lost health and,
vitality. Use Paine's Celery Compound
now, and the dull eyes will regain their
brilliancy, the cheeks will grow rosy, the
brain become clear, the nerves strong and
steady, your sleep restful and refreshing,
appetite good, and health and happiness
will take the place of misery and suffering.
A. Sabiston,-the well ksoow-n• l ithographet•„
of„Montreal, writes : " In the -summer of
Ib
JI had. to work very hard, and -was
troubled considerably with insomnia (sleep-
lessness). I resolved to try your Paine's
Celery Compound, and after taking the
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instead of being about to commence one.'
I started out in good spirits, feeling fresh,:i
and strong. My wife and various friends, i
to whom I recommended the medicine,
have been benefited greatly, and in fact'
' Paine's Celery Compound is a household
word in our family."
1
ranted Flit;
tint, pl•011 re(l)ic positions fr
Goon sal n cit, ;tn,i
Lib,rnl;; ,,lir.,,,•::,..
ions e,Meri• n• 1' 7U•l9:Atit
1Vrite f. ',•, ,;sir
CHASE, , :; 11. •,,',I,it„
"•Itis;, ti:
SALESMEN
to sell Nursery
'. (,Stock, All
Goods War
ernutnent, pleas
r the right men,
e,' paid weekly.
No prey -
.y. Oe tilt free.
rill\Irl illi If.
N. Y.
aIn r.
to
U e
f r rave•0it' itt
Ft
a l'
40':
�wMtal'P• aF'•
d+bo ".Qea 4.-2;
'.AO '.C12
�yF.bu5.s.0 d,r
cr 00 Gi 14
„ate iz..
t: "'
•
„'
The Most
Successful ssful
hem
e
d ever
dis-
covered,
a
9It19
certain In 1te effects and duce not
blister. Read proof below.
Office of Charles A. Snyder,
BREEDER Ois
Clovelaud Bay and. Trotting Bred Ilorses
ELniwooD, ILL„ Nov. -29,
Da. E. J. KENDALL Co. always
dells Spavf, C:ire by 5110 half purchased
would like prices in larger quantity.
one of the best liniments on earth. I
in my stables for three years.
Yours truly, Cries. 'A.
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE
BROOKLYN, N. Y., November IT, ISI
DRQ B. J. KENDALL Co.
Dear Sirs : 1 desire to give yon testimonial of r
gond epinion of your Eendall'a Spavin Cure. 1 ha
used It for Lamedcies, sow Joiute at
Spavins, and I have found It a sure cure, I cora..
ally recommend It to as horsemen.
Yours truly, A. H. G+ti.tsr•:RT,
Manager Troy Lauudry Stable9.
KENDALL'S SPAWN CUREit
SANT, WrpT'oN COUNTY, Orad, Doc. 19, 1538.
Dn. E..7. KENDA,.r. Co.
Gouts: 11001 I1 my duty to say what I have done
with your Kendall's spavin Cure. I have cured
aims Bone,, nine afflicted with Big Heed ant(
seven of nig Jaw. Since I have had one of your
books and followed the directions, I have nevem
lost a cane of any kind.
Yours truly, ANDISW TURNRR, -
Horse Doob
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CUR!
Price e1 per bottle, or 91x bottles for E5 A11 On
gists have It or can get It for you,oor It will be se
torn. B ny B J KENDAALI. Co , En0ssburgi, Fall& propr
B Y ALL DR UGGIST,S
WANTED
Men to take orders for Nur:ory Stock, on
Salary or Commission. I ea't nuke a nue
cossfal
ALES MAN
of any one who will work and follow my in-
structions. Will furnish hand tonne outfit
free
and pay
•our
1 ti salary or
once
every work, 'Write Porter s atonennl�ip1
GRAHAM, Nurseryman, Permit), Ont.
ht
0.
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at: