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The Clinton New Era, 1890-01-24, Page 14i• Jobblng DeparttaE---In-t is IMPORTANT! iemterfart ie Itesteratlon to Health of WeIllignown Canadians whose Oases - were Given up as incurable. From the few of thehundreds of letters ave have received from those who have i'•1been restored to health and strength by the use of that wonderful discovery, Paine's Celery Compound, we make a Mil extracts. We hope that the thou- sand3 of Canadian men and women who aro suffering from nervous and wasting diseases, will profit by these true and plain statements of facts. D. S. Davidson, of Montreal, suffered for years with nervous dyspepsia, pain in bis back, and sleeplessness. He tried doc- tors without relief, was losing flesh rapidly, and had about given up heart when he commenced the use of 1'aine's Celery Compound. "Now," he says, "l am a new man. I sleep well and my food dues not hurt me." Mr. Jas. Johnson, 302 St. Ch''hrle, Bor- momee Street, Montreal, was weal: and • nervous, had no appetite, and could not %est at night. His nerves vele soothed stud strengthened by Paine's Celery Com- pound, and he soon became Neil and strong. Annie Gout ley, of River Beaudette, P. Q., found the Compound a certain cure for v3eal:ne.s, and [him, Ieels as well as she ever did. A custc'n, 1 e' Harrison tiros., drug- gist, Hamilton, On:,, add them that he WAS entirely cuied u! nervous \\eak'less by the use of two bottles of the Compound, after everything else has tailed. The little child of Mrs. G. E. Meredith, 76 D'Arcy St., Toronto, was cured of St. Vitus' Dance by Paine's Celery Compound. AL ANTED Stock. All to sell Nursery Stock. Al] Goods War ranted FIRST-CLASS. Permanent, pleas Ant, profitable positions for the right men. Good salaries and expenses paid weekly. Liberal inducements to beginners. No prev- ious experience necessary. Outfit free, Write for terms, giving age. CHARLES H, CHASE, Nurseryman, Rochester, N. Y. Mention this Paper. ESM EN WANTED. Having done business in Canada for over SO years, our reputation and responsiblity 18 well known. We pay salary and expenses from the start, if everything is satisfactory. Norevious experience is required. Write us for terms, which are very liberal, before engaging with any other firm, REFERENCE S.—Bradstreet's or Dun .Wiman & Co's Commercial Agencies, well known to business men ; or Standard Bank, Colborne, Ont. CHASE BROTHERS' COMP AMY NURSERYMEN, Colborne, Ontario. 4RENDALL' SPAVIN CURE 'The Most Successful Remedy ever die. 'covered, as It Is certain In Its effects and does not blister. Read proof below. face of Charles A. Snyder, BREEDER OF Cleveland Bay and Trotting Bred Horses. ELMWOOD, Iii., Nov. 20,1-888. SRL B, J. KB:NDALL Co. Dear Sirs: I have always purchased your Ken - Spavin Cure by the half dozen bottles, I *Mild like prices In larger quantity. 1 think ft f- .;ritle of the best liniments on earth. I have usedi :'.7amy stables for three years. Yours truly, Cnn.n A. SNYDER. IENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE BRooRLVN, N. Y., November 8, 1888. H J. Emmett CO. Dear Sirs :I desire to give you testimonial of n't yp(�idd O$ inion of your Kendalls spavin Cure. I has auied ifor Lameness, Stiff Joints ant. t3 avins, and I have found It a sure cure, I cordl- ,atly recommend 1t to an horsemen. Yours truly A. H. GILBERT, Hager Troy Laundry Stables. ENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. Rom Wnerox Doerr?, Onto, Deo. 19, 1888. DsttB, J. KENDALL CO, BOMB: l feel It my duty to sa what r have done rth-,your Kendall's Spavin Cure. I have cured weniyave horses that had Spayt!nn, ten of fait done, nine afflicted with Ili Read and ; Yen Of 111g Jaw. Since I have had one of your ksand followed the dlrectlona. I have never tti case 01 any kind. Your truly, ANDREW TvRNaR, Horse Dodd KENDALL% SPAVIN CURL iii0641l r bottle, or six bottles for es An Dri have, it or can get 1t for you, or It will beet r my address on reeelpt ofrlee by the props ';i B. J. RANDALLCo., Enosburgh Fails. V Z 13 Y ALL DRUGGISTS TSVOLUNTEERORGANIST. A WOMAN'S LOYALTY TSB The gret big• church wuz crowded frill uv broadalotlband of silk, An' satins • rioh as cream that grows on our of brindle's milk ; Shined boots, biled shirts, stiff dickeys, an' stovepipe hat were there, An' doods 'ith troaserloons so tight they couldn't kneel down in prayer. The elder in bis poolpit said, as he slowly riz: "Our organist is kep' to hum, laid up • 'ith roomatiz, An' as we hev no substitoot, as Brother Moore ain't here, Will some 'un in the congregation be so kind's to volunteer ? An' then a red nosed, drunken tramp of low toned rowdy style Give an interdnotory hicoup, an' then staggered up the aisle, Then thro' that holy atmosphere there prep' a sense or sin, An' thro' thet air of sanctity the oder uv ol' gin. Then Deacon Purington he yelled, his teeth all sot on edge : "This manlprofanes the house of God ! W'y, this is sacrilege!" The tramp didn't hear a word he said, but Blenched 'ith stumblin' feet, An' sprawled an' staggered up the steps, an' gained the organ seat. He then went pawin' through the keys, an' soon there rose a strain Thet seemed to jest bulge out the heart, an' leotrify the brain ; An' then he slapped down on the thing 'ith hands an' head an' knees. He slam -dashed his hull body down kerflop upon the keys. The organ roared, the music floed went sweepin high and dry. It swelled into the rafters and bulged out into the sky, The ol' church shook an' staggered, an' seemed to reel an' sway. An' the elder shouted "Glory 1" an' I yelled out "Hooray 1" An' then he tried a tender strain that melted in our ears,, Thet brought up blessed memaries an' drenched 'em down 'ith tears ; An' we dreamed of ol' time kitchens, 'ith Tabby on the mat, Uv home an' lav an' baby days, an, mother an' all that ! An' then he struck a streak uv hope --a song from souls forgiven— Thet burst from prison bar uv sin, an' stormed the gates of heaven ; The mornin' stars they sung together no soul was'left alone— We felt the universe wuz safe, an' God wuz on his throne ! • An' a wail uv deep despair an' darkness come again, An' long black crape hung on the doors uv of the homes uv men ; No lav, no .light, no joy, no hope, no no songs uv glad delight, An' then—the tramp he staggered down an' reeled into the night ! But we knew he'd tol' his story, tho' he never spoke a word. An' it wnz the saddest story thet our ears had ever heard ; He hed tol' his own life history' an' no eye wuz dry thet day, W'en the elder -rose and simply said : "My brethern, let ns pray," —S. W. Foss, in Yankee Blade. SOFT WHITE HANDS. A little of Guibourt's1Parisian Balm applied at night, will soon render the hands soft and white. Parisian balm is delightfully perfumed. Sold by all druggists. The prize of $500 offered by an agri- cultural paper of New York for the largest crop of shelled corn grown on one acre in 1889 has been awarded to Z. J. Drake. Mariboro County. S. C. The crop was within a fraction of 255 bushels, green weight, which shrank to 239 bushels when kiln dried, and when chemically dried contained217 bushels. The South Carolina Board of Agricul- ture doubled the prize, making the award $1,000 in all. The yield is near- ly twice as large as the largest authen- ticated crop ever before reported, the $500 awarded for the largest yield of wheat last year goes to Henry b'. Barton, of Salt Lake City, for a yield of 80 bush- els on one acre. STIR mends Crockery. Ch' la, Glass are, Furniture, etc. Sold by all drug-•' The Ottawa Citizen—which of all the Tory organs sits moreat the fountain of inspiration—has a vig- or oustediorial lately on"Aneexa- tionist White." It begins by quo ing from Mr White's utterances when inaugc-•ated Mayor of Wind- sor, and asks: "Has Mr White the brazen eff-onter•y to contend that Ise can be a loyal Canadian and at the same time advocate a polies- of wiping his , country out of existence and handing it over for absortion by a foreign, 'ewer?" After lec„,lring the erstwhile lieu- tenant of Mr Meredi th most severe- ly- it closes by saying that"it is tue bounden du,y of the Conse- : a- tivos of the county of Essex to remove the name of Traitor te from its list of members. In ad• vocal' ig such action by the Con - se, natives of Essex we do not in the leasil©groe advocate restric- tion of any man's right to think or speak anything he will, but be- tween the exercise of the full[ st f:'ec Jom of opinion and the pi o- clamation of disloyalty to one's country we draw a distinct and well-defined line. Let Traitor White be removt 1, and that too without ut.. ece»'"try delay." Minard's Liniment is t'le best. When Baby was stok,we gave her Comae*. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she 'became Miss, site clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castorit • I -well remember a visit to the New Hampshire stats -prison at Concord which I made a few years ago in company with several friends, says a correspondent of the Angusta Journal. One little incident of that visit made a vivid impression on my mind. In the horse cars with us, on ode- way. to the prison, sat a quiet, sad -faced, little woman- She was neatly and plaiuly dressed, and had a cer- tain air of refinement about her which showed her to be a lady. idhe came into the prison guard room with us and was at once shown into the warden's private office. A moment Latter, as I stood looking through heavy .-bar- red windows, across the stone - paved prison yard, at the plain, gloomy -looking stone buildings containing the workshops, the door of one of them opened and an officer, holding in his hand a heavy revelver,stood out upon the granite steps. 1 e A moment latera tall, finely formed man,clad in the black and o red suit of the prison, passed out in, front of him. As he came slowly across the prison yard I saw that his face was a handsome and an intelligent one. There was something in his appearance and bearing which, despite his rough garb, proclaimed the trainiug and the instincts of a gentleman., I watched him as he came up the steps to the guard -room, and a moment later, through the partly open door of the warden's office, I saw him clasp to his heart the wo- man who had been our fellow pas- senger,and who threw herself into his arms wtth a passionate love. Then the door was closed to shut out from curious oyes all further sight of that interview. I looked again across the prison yard, but there was a mist before my eyes that seemed to shut off everything. Later I learned that the man was a forger. 'He came from a good family, I believe,' said 'the guard, in answer to my lequiries. 'That little woman is his wife. She has been as true as steel to him through:it all. He's one of the best behaved mentin the pri- son,and will get considerable time off his sentence on that account. He has two years more.' Some- how I couldn't help feeling plat when that man came out from pri- son he would go to that little wo- man and, with her help, lead an honest life. Any community which would deliberately add one pang to those already endured by that woman would be worse than heathen. sur • assed in the• County • and comforting to the memory. It is this : To make a mixture of mole's fat, calcined human hair cumin, and bear's grease, and swallow a pill Sf them about the size of a hazel nus at bedtime.—P%m Blackwood's Magazine. .A Strong plea for unrestricted reci- procity of trade between Canada and the United States bas been made by Mr Wilmot of Kingston, brother of the late Conservative M. P. P. for Frontenac county. •At a recent meeting of the Midland Central Fair Association, of which be is president, Mr Wilmot said the time had arrived when the farmers of Ontario must lookout for themselves. Agriculture, he said, was in a depress- ed condition, and it would still be more depressed if farmers were deprived of their natural markettthe United States. Where, asked Mr Wilmot, would the farmers have been last winter but for the American market? In it the farmers had to dispose of their cattle or bay powder and ball and shoot them,as they had not the folder nor money to pur- chase it. He did not endorse all that Mr'Wiman had said lately in Kingston, but he believed the present federal gov- rment'e policy was a failure in that it depopulated instead of populating the oun!ry. Mr Wilmot is spoken of as a andidate for the House of Commons in.Frontenao county 'at the next Do- minion election. A strange story is told by Mr Attrell. of Bismark, Dad. About six weeks ago her hubsand went to Potage la Prairie to finish the sale of some land there. He sold it for some $1,000, and wrote his wife that he would be home at Christmas. He did not come, and soon after the first of the year she heard he was insane at Port- age la Prairie. She went after him and found him in a most pit- iable condition, his reason gone, the money lost, and even his clothes had been taken. Mrs At- trell says that her husband never drinks, and does not indulge in dissipation of any kind. She be- lieved he was robbed in a system-' atic mantle], but has not yet ob- tained all the facts. At times when violently insane, be will beg not to `be killed, and he will cry, "let them have it." This is sup- posed to refer to his money, At another time, when partially sane he told his wife that he was lock- ed up in a room for four days without food because he would not do as somebody wanted him. Mr Attrel l's . lawyer has ascertained that he sighed cheques on the bank, and that -the ani•lunts were after -wards put in and thecheques paid. His bank hook for -the Portage la Prairie bank, at which he is in the habit of doing busi- ness, are both missing, and have not yet been found. The case will be pushed. MARVELS OF MEMORY. There have been stupendous memories enough in ancient and modern times to stagger belief= - such as those of Theodoctes and Hortensies and Cineas, of whom Cicero speaks, and in our later days, Pascal, who it is said, never forgot anything be had seen, heard, or thought ; and Avicenna, who re- peated by rote the entire Koran when he was 10 years old ; and Francis Suatiz, who, Stada tells us, had the whole of St. Augustine in his memory—enough, one wonld thing, to distroy all his mental power of digestion ; and Julius Lipsius, who, on one occasion offered to repeat all the "History" of Taci- tus without a mistake on forfeit of his life ; and in our own days, Jedediah Buxton and Zerah Col- burn among others, who had such a prodigions power and rapidity of of calculating in their minds. Col- burn, it is said, could tells the num- ber of seconds in fifty-eight years almost before the question could be repeated. The story is told that Jedediah Buxton was once taken to the theatre to see Garrick and that he was observed to pay an unrernit- ted attention to the great actor, throughout the play. When he was out his friend,who accom anied him, asked him how he,:ba been g, impressed by the actin and Jede- dish answered by stating tfle num- ber of words and syllables that Garrick had spoken. His mind had been interested (solely in the enumeration. I dare say it was a purely mechanical operation of mind with .him, and I rather think. thatwith all. these great memories it is the same. As I have not a good memory, I wish to decry it, out ofipure envy. I wish I could say that great men never have great memories. Un- fortunately it is not true. The names of Pascal, Avicenna, Soaliger who committed to memory the whole of the Iliad and Obyssey in three weeks ; old Dr Thos. Fuller, whose memory was eivally remark- able—to say nothing of Cyrus,Hor- tensius, Mithridates—are so ter- ribly against me that I give up such a proposition ; and I have ser- ious thoughts myself, despise its digusting ingredients, of resorting to the learned Grataroli of Bet- gamo's recipe far improving my own memory. He gives several, but one above all others of efficacious A DRUNKARD'S DEED. The Atlanta Journal tellsthis:— The most terrible story I ever heard,said Rev C.A. Lane, in a ser- mon ha preached at TrinityChurch was told me by a man who was addicted to drink, and it but serves to illustrate with what terrible fetters the demon of drink can bind a man. ,The fellow approach. ed me and said, I am ashamed to tell the story I am going to, as it reflects on my manhood, but I want you to know to what depths of infamy the force of habit will drag one. My family had been begging me to give up drinking and I promised my dear old mother on her death -bed. I swore to her that I would never drink again, and to make the oath more bind- ing I crept into the parlor in the still watches of the night when the watchers were in another room and, kneeling beside her coffin, I renewed my oath, with my hand on that marble brow in cold death. In leas than a week I was as drunk as a hog. Some time afterwards my little daughter was taken sick. She was sinking rapidly and beg- ged me to give up drinking. -I promised her I would, and in or- der to make my promise more sacred I took the wasted hand in mine -and promised her that no more drink should pass my lips unless it came through that hand so dear to mo. With a sweet smile she passed ovgr the river, and I thought I was saved. She was laid out in the parlor, the blinds were darkened and the door shut. That night the terrible cra- vings for whiskey came over my soul. Securing a wine glass and a flask of whiskey I sought the death chamber. I'poured the glass full of whiskey and unlocked the icy fingers. I closed them over the glass, and, raising it to my lips, I drained it 'to the very dregs. I reclasped the cold hands and silently left the room, and God have mercy on my soul. On Tuesday the store of Mr Walker, a leading diamond dealer in Montreal was broken into, and jewelry to the value of $8,000 was stolen. The burglar, with an ac- complice fastened the door and broke the window with a hammer. .Friday morning in the police court the prisoner pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 14 years in tho Penitentiary. • For Sunday Reading LODE FoltWAiD. ' Tis the pari of a coward to brood O'er the past that is withered and dead; What though the heart's roses are ash- es and dust ! What though the heart's music be fled! Still shine the grand heavens o'er - head, When the voice of an angel thrills clear in the soul. "Gird about thine armour, press op to the goal 1" If the faults or the crimes of thy youth Are a burden too heavy to bear, What hope can rebloom on the desolate waste Of a jealous and craven despair? Down, down with the fetters of fear ? In the strength of thy valor and man- hood arise, With the faith that illumines and .the will that defies. "Too late 1" Through God's infinite world, From his throne to life's nethermost fires— "Too late 1" is a phantom that flies at the dawn Of the soul that repents and aspires. If pure thou haat made thy desires, There's no height the strong wings of immortals may gain Which in striving to reach thou shalt strive for in vain. Then up to the contest with fate. Unbound by the past which is dead What though the heart's roses are ash- es and dust! What though the heart's music be fled ! Still shines the fair heavens o'er head ; And sublime as the angel who rules in the sun, Beams the promise of peace when the conflict is won, , —By the late PAUL H. HEYNE. SALVATION. Salvation—what music there is in that word ; music that never tires, but is always, that always rouses yet" always rests us. It holds in itself all that our hearts would say. It is sweet vigor to us in the morning, and in the evening it is contented peace. It is a song that is always singing itself deep down in the delighted soul. Angelic ears are ravished by it up in heaven; and our eter- nal Father himself listens to it with adorable complacency. It is sweet even to him out of whose mind is the music of a thousand worlds. To be ssved I What is it to be saved in the fullest and utmost meaning ? Eye hath not seen nor ear heard. It is a res- cue from such a shipwreck. It is a rest, and in such a home. It is to lie down forever in the bosom of God, in an endless rapture of insatiable contentment.—F. W. Faber. POWER OF PRAYER. There is a mightiness in prayer. George Muller prayed a company of small boys together, and then he prayed up an asylum iniwhieh they might be sheltered. He turned his face towards Edinburg and prayed, and- there came a thousand pounds. He turned his face towards London and prayed and there came,a thousandpounds. He turned his face towards Dub- lin -and prayed, and there came a thousand pounds. The breath of Elijah's prayer blew all the clouds together and it rained. Prayer in Daniel's time walked the cave as a lion -tamer. We have all yet to try the full power of prayer. The time will come when the American Church, and the Eng- lish church, and all the churches, will pray with their faces toward the west, and all the prairies and inland cities will surrender to God, and will pray' with their faces toward the sea, and all the islands and ships will become Christian. Parents who have wayward sons will get down on their knees and say, "Lord, send my boy home,' and boys int Canton !shall get right up from the gaming table, and go down to the docks to find out which ship starts first for Anieaica or Britain. Not one of us knows yet fully how to pray. All we have done as yet has been potter- ing, and guessing, and experiment- ing. A boy gets hold of his fath- er's saw and hammer, 'and tries 1 , make something; but it is a poor affair that he makes. The father comes and takes the same saw and hammer, and builds the house or the ship. In the child- hood of our Christian faith we make but poor work with these weapons of prayer; but when we come to the stature of men in Christ, then lender these imple- ments, the temple of God will rise and the world's redemption will be launched. God cares not for the length of our prayers, or the number of our prayers, or the beauty of our prayer, or the place or our prayers; it is the faith in them that tells, Believing prayer spars higher than the lark ever sang; plunges deeper than the diving -bell ever sank; darts quicker than lightning ever flash- ed.—T, DeVY it r Talmage. Rosaderzt a acts like magic.— Cures chapped hands, sore lips, roughness of the akin, beautifies complexion, whitens the skin,delight- fully perfumed, not sticky or greasy. Large bottles 25c. Sold by J. H. Combe. Jessie Dean Reynolds, 28 years old, the wife of Wm. R. Reynolds, of New York, committed suicide on Thursday at her home on Ninth avenue by shooting herself through the heart with a revolver. She was a daughter of Andrew Glais- ford, an actor. Mrs Reynolds went on the stage when she, was a child under the name of Jessie Dean, and was known as "the child actress." She grew into a beautiful woman, and five years ago married Reynolds who was then an actor. Mrs Rey- nolds has for a long time been in- sanely jealous of her husband. Peter Oglesby, a nephew of ex - Gov. Oglesby, of Illinois, accidently shot and killed himself on Friday while out hunting five miles from Denver, Col. He had laid his gun on the ground and when he picked it up he took it by the muzzle, pull- ing it toward him. The hammer caught in'the grass, causing the gun to explode, and the charge entered the unfortunate man's side. He lived but a few minutes after the accident. The funeral of one of Mr and Mrs Frederick Payne's children took place at Chicago on Thuesday Mr and Mrs Payne, their 9-yoar old daughter, and Mrs Reprogal followed the hearse to the ceme- tery at Rose Hill in a carriage driven by Simon Anderson. At the cemetery gate the Railroad crosses the Chicago and North- western Railroad tracks, and as the carriage was passing over the track a passenger train struck and demolished it. The occupants were thrown 30 feet. Payne and his wife were killed: Anderson and Mrs Reprogal died of their injuries soon after the accident. The child in the carriage escaped with slight scalp wounds. Is it any wonder 'the country suffers when so much of its annual income is taken to pay the Goven- ment's extravagance? asks the Galt Reformer. Since they ob- tained power they have increased the gross public debt from $170- 000,000 (in round numbers) to about $285,000,000. The annual expenses of the Dominion they have run up from $23,500,000 to the large sum of $37,000,000! When so much of the annual earn- ings of our farmers, working and other producing classes are ab- stracted to this extravagance, largely the result of railway and other bribery ec11emes, it is no wonder the wheels of business creak and nearly all classes suffer under the excessive burden. A fatal accident occurred at Strathroy, on Thursday, on the farm of Wm. Humphrey, 2nd line, North Adelaide, in which a young man named Joseph Anderson lost, his life by falling from a tree. It seems that while Anderson along with Humphrey and his son, was in the woods felling trees, the tree that was being felled lodged in a limb of another tree. Ander- son immediately went up to cut it down, but just as he got up he slipped and fell to the ground on his head, breaking his neck. He only lived a few seconds after- wards. A shocking case of cannibalism occurred at Callahan's ta' ern, Melrose, Tyendinaga, on Monday night. John Egan and Thomas Doyle, neighbors, who live in that vicinity, had been applicants be- fore the Township Council that day for the position of pathmastor on their road -beat, with the result that Egan was appointed. The parties met at night in the tavern, and after some words on the sub- ject Doyle -threw Egan to the fluor and fell on him. Egan cried for assistance—that Doyle was biting him—but before aid could be given Doyle had bitten off a portion of Egan's nose, which he spit upon the floor and attempted to seize his victim's ear, in which be left the marks of his teeth. BUSINESS CHANGE. Eureka Bakery and Integrant. Subteriber desires to intimate to the people of Clinton and vicinity that he has bought out the Baking and Restaurant business of Mr King, and will continue the same,t the old stand, OPPOSITE THE PCST 05'rf CE Being a practical man his customers may rely on getting a good artiste. BREAD, BUNS, CAKES, &c: always on Band. Oysters, ice Cream, &e. in season. So`oials supplied on shortest notice. WED- DING CARES a specialty. W. 11. BOYD. • TSE NEW PRIZE pWEHIERY is eor appposnttment, is theht n read t teased asideandtor� ten. But ladies who read of Dr. Pierce's'vorite Prescription, read it aga(g, tor they dia• cover in it something to prize --a messenger of Joy to those eujlerfng from functional derange. menta or from any�of the painful dleorders ob pwpeaknesses peculiar' to their sex. Periodical. leucorrhea hea amend kindred ailmentsd ulceration, to its wonderful curative and healing vers. egg Pow by' It IN the only medicine for women, sold-- by druggists, under a positivega tee from the manufacturers, that It will AVE' Esetts- faction in every case, err money will be re- funded. This guarantee bas been printed on the bottle -wrappers, and faithfully carried out for many years.�$1.00 by druggists, or six bottles for $ri,00- Copyrlgbt,1888, by WORLD'S DIS. MED. ABM. • DOCTOR. WeemetiS PIERCE'S . ®O Q� PELLETS ���tg Purely Vegeta- - Harmiesg. cheapest,Unequaleeasiesst as to take. PM. Pellet a Dose. Does not gripe. Cures Sick Head- ache, Bilious Headache, Conaa tto , Indigestion Bilious Attac1sa and all derangements of the stomach an bowels. Put up in glass vials, hermetically sealed. Always fresh and reliable. Gently laxative, or an active cathartic, according to size of dose. 25 cents, by druggists. WANTED 11Ien to take orders for Nursery Stock, on Salary or Commission. I can make a sue cessful SALESMAN of any one who will work and follow my in- structions. Will furhasil handsome outfit free, and pay ,your salary or commission every week. Write for terms at once. E O. GRAHAM. Nurseryman, Toronto, Ont. Coughs ? Coughs ? C~ASITS Syrup Tamarac Gum Cures all affections of the Throat Lungs and Chest—such as Bronchitis Whooping Cough Croup, Hoarseness, Influenza, Spitting Blood, Pain in the Chest, Coughs, Colds etc. This valuable preparation excites ex- pectoration allays and heals all irrita- tion of the throat and lungs, 'giving in- stant relief to any rpain, and imparts strength to the affected parts Cures every time. !REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES. PR"EP'AItED ONLY BY H. SPENCER CASE. Chemist and Druggist, 50 King St. West, Hamilton, Ont. Sold by J. H. COMBE, (4) ARS YO CT ONE OF THEM! In 1890 takes 160 free acres The Home -Seeker II, the famous Mill, River Valley of Montana, reached by the MANITOBA RAILWAY The Health -Seeker takes the MANITOBA to the lakes and woods of theNorth- west, Helena Hot Sptbngs and Broad- water tSanitarium TheFortune-Seeker talcesthe MANITOBA to the glorious op- portunities of the four new States The Manufacturer take` the MANITOBA to tho Groat Falls of the Missouri The Tourist TheiTraveler The Teacher Anyone takes the MANITOBA through the grand- est, scenery of America Iates the MANI- TOBA Palace, Din- ing and Sleeping Car line to Min- nesota, North Da- kott, South Da- kota, Montana phi the Pacific Coast taken the MANITOBA cheap excursions from St. Paul to Lake Minnetonl-a, the Park Region, tho Great Lakes, the Rockies, the National Park, the Pacific Ocoah, Cali- fornia and Alaska will receive maps, hook pad guider of 1:.o regions reached by The St. Paul, Minneapolis Cr Manitoba Rail- w3v, by nt-ting t F. I. Whitcev, G. P.1t TA., St 'Paul, Minn. S. WILSON, GENERAL DEALER IN TINWARE. HURON STREET, CLINTON. Repairng of all kinds 'promptly attended to reasonable rates. A trial solicited,