The Clinton New Era, 1890-09-05, Page 7lelelneelmerellalseue, r"
THE CLINTON NEW ERA, admitted to be one of the best locals
papers in Ontario, will be sent to new subscribers, for the balance
of the ,year, for 35 .cents cash.
A Fact
WORTH knowing is that blood die.
WORTH
which all other remedies fail
to cure, yield to Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
Fresh confirma-
tion of this state-
ment comes to
hand daily. Even
n,k such deep-seated
and stubborn com-
e '`-z•- ' plaints as ltheu-
;; r•,\` matistn, Rheuma-
tic Geist, and the
like, are thorough-
ly eradicated by
the use of this won-
derful alterative.
Mrs. R. Irving
Dodge, 110 West
weer -'gif "s 125th street, New
York, certifies :-
" About two years ago, after suffering
for nearly two years from rheumatic
gout, being able to walk only with great
discomfort, and having tried various
remedies, including mineral waters,
without relief, I saw by an advertise -
went in a Chicago paper that a man had
been relieved of this distressing com-
plaint, after long suffering, by taking
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I then decided to
make a trial of this medicine, and took
it regularly for eight months. I am
pleased to say that it effected a com-
plete cure, and that I have since had uo
return of the disease."
Mrs. L. A. Stark, Nashua, N. H.,
writes: "One year ago I was taken ill
with rheumatism, being confined to my
house six mouths. I
came
out of the
sickness very much debilitated, with no
appetite, and my system disordered in
every way. I commenced to use Ayer's
Sarsaparilland began to improve at
once,s aint g in strength and soon re-
covering my usual health. I cannot say
too much in praise of this well-known
medicine."
"I
a great
deal of medi-
cine,
have taken
cine, but nothiug has done me so
much good as Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I
felt its beneficial effects before I had
quite finished one bottle, and I can
freely testify that it is the best blood -
medicine I know of." -L. W. Ward, Sr.,
'Woodland, Texas.
•
•
•I
7t
Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
PREPARED BY
-Dr.-J.-C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Price $1; six bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottls.
QUIET WAYS ARE BEST.
What's the use of worrying.
Of hurrying
Of scurrying,
Everybody flurrying.
And breaking up their rest ?
When every one is teaching us.
Preaching and beseeching us,
'To settle down and end the fuss,
For quiet ways are best,
'The rain that tickles down in showers,
A. blessing brings to thirsty flowers ;
Sweet fragrance from each brimming
Cup
The gentle zephyrs gather up.
There's ruin in the tempests path
There's ruin in a voice of wrath ;
And they alone are blessed
Who early learn to dominate
'Themselves, their violence abate,
And prove by their serene estate,
That quiet ways are best.
Nothing's gained by worrying,.
liy hurrying
1 id scurrying.
With fretting and with flurrying
The temper's often lost;
And in pursuit of some small prize
We rush ahead and are not wise,
And find the terwontonexercise
A fearful price has cost.
'Tis better far to join the throng,
That do their duty right along;
Reluctant they to raise a foss,
Or make themse!ves ridiculous.
.Calm and serene in heart and nerve,
Their strength is always in reserve
And nobly stands each test ;
And every day and all about,
By scenes within and scenes without
IVe can discern, with ne,er a doubt,
That quiet ways aro best.
WHAT DOES IT 11IATTEH.
SONG OF THE SECONDS.
Sing a song of Seconds,
Tireless little elves,
Who, because they're busy,
Don't have time themselves !
They must work forever -
Then They're never done
Work is rain and sorrow -
Work in joy and sun -
Talking to the minutes --
This their work by day -
Grains of Good or evil
Folks lose by the way.
Minutes build foundations,
Feebly built or atrong,
As the Seconds fetch thein
Deeds of right or wrong,
Ilours set the rafters
Which, as years pass by,
Make for us our lovely
Homes beyond the sky.
So when Seconds watch us
All the livelong day -
Taking every action,
Every word away -
Let our deeds be noble,
Let our thoughts be just ;
Let the fact of living
Fill with simple trust
Hearts that are now troubled,
Saddened and oppressed ;
Know whatever happens
' Always must be beat
When we're rid of sorrow,
When we welcome mirth,
When we make our moments
Blessed upon earth,
Then the flying Seconds
In their hands wilt hold
What will make our mansions
Baro and bright as gold.
"IS LIFE WORTH LIVING ?"
Is life worth the living ? 1 sadly mused
While the waters whispered, as they
were used
To whisper to me in childhood's fait
day,
When the light of my life before me lay.
Is life worth the living ? I asked the air,
But not a response could i catch from
there !
Then I threw the question from earth to
sky.
What good to be born ! to endure ! to
die l
Wealth and glory, place and power,
What are they worth to you and me?
For the lease of life runs out in an hour,
And death stands' ready to claim his
due ;
Sounding honors or heaps of gold,
What are they all when all is told :'
A pain or a pleasure, a smile or a tear -
What does it matter what we claim ?
Fur we sten front the cradle into the
bier,
And a careless world ants on the
same.
Hours of gladness or Lours of sorrow,
What does it matter to us to -morrow
Truth of love or vow of friend -
Tender caresses or cruel sneers. --
What do they matter to ns in the end ?
ie and the lone
For the brief day dies „
night nears.
Passionate kisses or tears of gall
The grave will open and cover them all.
Homeless vagrant or honored guest,
Veer and humble, or rich and great -
All are racked with the worlds unrest,
All must meet with the common fate.
Life from childhood till we are old,
What is it all when all is told ?
There is more fun ina sheet of sticky
fly paper than in the average negro
minstrel. Watch the kitten playing
with it on the new carpet; the latter is
ruined for ever; the kitten goes into a
fit and the women and children rush
out of the house in terror. If you want
to rid your house of flies, buy Wilson's
Fly Poison Pads, and use as directed
Nothing elsewill clear them out thor-
oughly. Sold at 10 c. by all druggists.
The Kincardine school estim—
ates this season amounted to $5,-
902.
Twenty-one years ago, at the
birth of his son Andrew, Thomas
Reid, of Walkerville, placed in a
savings bank a sum of money to
leave it there until his on camp
of age. The sum had more than
doubled itsell.
PISO'S CURE FOR r,!
THE BEST COUGH MEDICINE.
BOLD BY DIIII0G1lITS EVESYWflZ2 I.
CONSUMPTION !n'
The wandering west wind carried the
sound,
But never an answer could be found
Till I heard a wee child o'er the way
Say softly, as only a child can say,
"I love you, mother," and then my
heart knew
God had given this woman the answer
true.
Minard's Lininientlumberman's friend
NEWS NOTES.
Tho Sarnia papers announce
that Mr Charles Mackenzie, M. P.
P.,has been offered the Provincial
Treasurership.
In Arkansas the Democrats are
running fbr Governor a Baptist
preacher, and the Republicans
and Labor Unions a Methodist
preacher, and they do say the
campaign is unusua:ly bitter and
noisy.
Mrs Mary Wilson with her babe
in her arms was in the cemetery
at CarbDrado, Wash., on Sunday
sitting on the grave of' her child—
ren, when a tree fell and killed the
woman and child.
The Monetean De Rome referr-
ing to the many converts gained
to the Roman Catholic Church in
England d(c'ares that it the work
of conversion continues at the rate
maintained for the last century
Catholicism will be dominant in
England a century hence.
English Spayin Liniment removes
all hard, soft or calloused Lr nps and
Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavin,
Curbs, Ring Bone, Swc 'ney, Stifles,
Sprains, Sore and Swollen Throat,
Coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one
bottle. Warranted the most wonderful
Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by
J. II. Combe, Druggist. June 27, 1 yr
Canada's imports from the mo—
ther country continue to decline.
It could not well he otherwise
when the average rate of customs
duty upon British 14( ods bronght
into the Dominion is twenty-two
per cent compared with an
average of thirteen per per cent
upon imports from the United
States. The British trade rc -
turns for the seven months end-
ing ivith July show that the value
of thn goods imported into Canada
from Greta[ Britain during that
pork 1 was .£2,734,040 compared
with D8,672,920, in the same
of the preceding year, show-
ing a decline of 048,580, or over
.;1,500,000. This is how Cana-
dian loyality is exemplified in
trade matters.
Whether it is a growing feeling
against capital punishment or,not
English juries are returning an
extraordinary number of verdicts
of acquittal on the ground of 'in-
sanity. . The latest to go free of
the gallows in this way are the
unhappy druggist, Oakes, and his
wifo,who poisoned themselves and
their son, Arthur, the son alone
dying from the strychnine ad-
ministered. Oakes was driven to
desperation by want of employ-
ment. A woman at Liverpool,
who killed several of her children,
has also been pronounced insane,
and in the case of a collier who
compelled bis wife to shoot and
murder the proprietor of a colliery
whose domestic she had formerly
been and who is alleged to have
taken advantage of her, the jury
acquitted the husband on the
ground of insanity, and the wife
as acting under the husband's
compulsion. As a rule English
law is administered with cor-
tainty,ifnot always with severity,
but at the present the pnnish—
ment of crime seems 1n he un-
certain.
News was received at the De-
partment of Justice of the death
on Aug. 20 of Lieut.•Uul. Sproat,
registrar at Prince Albert, N.W
T., which position he had occupied
sinew December, 1580. He had
been in For health lately and
was or leave of absence at the
time of his death. The late Lieut. -
Col. Sproat represent'd the eon-
stituettey of South Bruce in Par-
liament for some year sprevious
to his appointment.'
Minard'sLiniment cures garget in cows.
The unsettled portions of Africa
are now being -divided up among
the nation, of Europe pretty much
as the North American continent
was two hundred years ago, and
in a few years the parties to the
division will be encroachiug upon
each other's domains and terri-
tory which now seems of very
little value. Theg reat
timber
forests discovered by Stanley re-
main to be apportioned. Great
Britain acquires more territory
than any other power, by the
recent apportionment of Africa,
but Franco and Germany each
secure important possessions,
while Spain,the former great col-
onizingamong fewer
theail❑ V
gets nothing. in the Niger coun-
try, bordering on the west coast,
as well as on the Zanzibar shore,
England is given valuable terri-
tory. Prance gets the Sahara
desert, with the right of carrying
out Do Lesseps' scheme of flood-
ing it by means of a canal from
the Mediterranean. The Soudan
states are partly French and
partlyEnglish. French practically
gets Madagascar and the Senegal
country. This division of terri-
tory- has taken place without the
inhabitants of the district being
either consulted or considered,but
any native who objects to the ar-
rangement will be dubbed 'a
rebel.'
Following Directions.
"Hold nu to Inc ti 411C lt+ sal 1 "while I
get my hat."
C. C. Ricner,us .4• Co.
Gents. -I have used your MIN-
ARD'S LINIMENT is my family for
some years and believe it the best medi-
cine in the market as it does all it is
recommended to do.
Canaan For,11s, N. I3, DANIEL KrERRICrr,
John Mader, Mahone Bay, informs
us that he was cured of a very severe
attack of rheumatism by using MIN-
ARD'S LINIMENT.
Following the decision of the Hali-
fax Cotton Manufacturing company to
wind up business, comes the announce-
ment that MessrsWilliam Parks & Son,
of St John, N. 13., the largest manufac-
turers of cotton yarns in the Dominion,
have suspended. The policy of trade
restriction is evidently " getting its
work in." For twenty years before
the high taxation policy was introduced
Messrs Larks roc Son did a prosperous
business. Their yarns'acquired a high
reputation, and were in groat demand.
But the Tory trade policy, which bur-
dens every industry and reduces the
purchasing ability of every consumer,
has c.i.used the firm to suspend business.
In its anxiety to shield the high tariff
policy from blame for the deplorable
condition of the cotton trade the Mon-
treal Journal of Commerce asserts that
the same industry is depressed in
the United States and in England, and
adds that " no matter what the admin-
istrative policy may be, we find in every
case cotton mills running upon thecom-
monerstaple lines more or less de-
pressed, and in many instances running
at a loss, and this evidently not on
account of the particular tariff com-
plexion of their surroundings." This
amounts practically to a confession
that the Canadian tariff is of no bene-
fit whatever to our cotton mills. It
does not keep teem in motion or pro-
vide dividends for their owners. And
the plea of " general depression " as an
excuse for idle cotton mills is of no
avail. The Tories promised to protect
our industries against depression, and
considering the enormous sums that
have been borrowed abroad and spent
in the Dominion in railway building,
etc., during the past few years, business
ought to be booming now. But instead
of a boom we have stagnation, because
nnr producers are without a market. -
Ottawa Free Press.
THE POLITICAL SITUATION
HIas not materially changed within
the last year, but Wilson's Wild Cherry
is beconerg better known every
week as a cure for Coughs, Colds
Whooping (Cough, Croup, Loss of Voice
.nd ether affections of the throat, chef t
and lungs. For twenty years this re-
iable medicine has been used in scon e
ef families with the greatest success.
Sold by all druggists. Get the genuine
in white wrappers only.
They held on tight.
He Leat a Sale.
An icebox on which a sign "For Sail"
stood in front of a Brooklyn store
the other day, and when a w'vutan stopped
to examine it, a ntau, with Ids hands and
overalls showing gi me 'i came out and said;
"Madam, dot vhas der beegest
bargain in
dis whole county. I paid $1.5 for dot icebox,
and now I sells him for-for-vhell, I make
der price so sheep dot it pays you to shplit
him oop for firewood."
"Been in use a long time," she observed as
she looked inside.
"Madame, Igif you fife tousand dollar if I
down' buy him only last year."
"What's the principle on which it works!"
"Der best principle in all dis worldt, mad-
ame. It vhas by der oopright, horizontal,
rotary principle, and nobody can beat it.
My son he runs dis grocery for me while I
runs my boiler and engine shop. Dot makes
me know all about ice boxes."
"A boiler isn't an ice box," she remarked,
as she looked into it again.
"Shust so, madam, but der priuciples vhas
der same. Dis vas a ten -flue ice box, mit a
return draught. She vhas sees -inch stroke,
patent cut-off, tested oop to 180 pounds, and
vhas feexed oop mit a low-water indicator
and all der latest inventions. If dat ice box
explodes on you I gif you one million dollar,
and any shild can run him."
"Explode! Merey on me, but I don't want
anything around to blow me up: It must be
some new fangled arrangement."
"Madame, I gif you my word he vhas as
safe ash a trunk oop in der garret. He con-
sumes his own smoke, vhas provided mit a
check -draught of der latest style, and—"
"I don't want it!" she said with a decided
fnap in her voice, and hurried away as if she
feared an explosion.
At that moment a young pian came out
and asked:
"Fadder, dean' you make a s
"No."
"Vas you tell her i"
"I say to her dot it vhas by her oopright,
horizontal, rotary principle, mit return flues,
seer-inc'h stroke, patent—"
"Fadder, you go avhay and leaf me to sell
him. You vhas too scientific. Su mooch
talk makes people afraid. I shust tell 'em
dot it vhas for sale by a family who vhas
going to Europe for der summer, or to wind
oop an estate, and before to -morrow he vhas
sold. You vhas all right on engines and
boilers, but you vhas way off on ice boxes.
All der principle about him vhas to ,sell him
for $10 cash."
On Saturday afternoon a young man
named Stanley Hughes, while working
a threshing machine on the farm of Mr
Stephen Haight,two miles from Picton,
had his leg badly mangled up to the
thigh in the cylinder of the machine.
He died in two hours.
Meagre Fulford & Co., Brockville, the
well known proprietors of Nasal Balm,
have purchased the business formerly
carried on by the The Dr. Williams
Medicine Co. of that place, whose Pink
Pills for Pale People have already
achieved great popularity where known.
With the push and energy for which
Messrs Fulford & Co. are noted it is safe
to assert that Pink Pills will soon be-
come a household word thoughont the
Dominion. Their announcement ap-
peJtrs elsewhere in this issue.
BIG MONEY
FOR AGENTS
NO RiSK. NO CAPI'T'AL
REQUIRED
An honorable anri praiseworthy huainess
without any posalble chane,' of Inas; steady
employment and control of territrey Have
I done business In Canada 30 yews. Liberal
pay to right man to aoll ouv unexcelled
I Nursery Stock. Send for terms.
CHASE BROTHERS COMPANY.
Neraersmen , Colborne, Ont,
A Promoter of Temperance.
Magistrate -Did you ever see a man intoxi-
cated by beer?
Saloon -Keeper -Oh, yes; lots of time,.
Magistrate -In your saloon!
Saloon -Keeper -No, sir; hien never get in-
toxicated by beer in my place.
Magistrate -How do you manage it'
Saloon -Keeper --I draw my beer into the
Coney Island beer glass, -Racket
No Hope.
Caller (to nick ratan) -How are you feeling
to-day;1"
Sick Man -Oh, a little better, but there's
no hope -I'll never get strong ennngh to gat
away from the doctors. -('hatter.
•
On the Street -Car.
Innocent Countryman (te1a,lv,just enter-
ing) -Have a seat?
Lady -No, thanks.
I. C. -Bless you, Ididn't exp 'et auy.-Har-
per's Bazar.
How Uncle Jerry %Vent Brack 00 the Crowd.
Every boy of us in in the villegr knew
Uncle Jerry Crawford. He was a dried-up
old man, and never seemed to get any older,
although always complaining. The form of
salutation was invariably this:
"Hello! Uncle ,Jerry!"
"Yass, yass."
"How you feeling'"
"Wretched, wretched, thank ye,"
I've heard that at least one thousand times,
and never knew a deviation hut once. A
drummer w ho used upoccasionally
i ise, 1 Gi come
from St. Louis got on to it, and one day
when a dozen of us sat on the steps of the
drug store Uncle Jerry was seen coating up
the street.
"Isn't that old Crawford," asked the drinn-
mer as he shaded his eyes with his hand.
"Yes. '
"He's the num who al ways replies that he's
pretty well, praise God?'
"Oh, no. He's the man who always re-
plies that he's wretched, thank ye."
"I may be mistaken, but I don't think so."
"Of Bourse you are."
"Well, I hate to give in.
:firm be comes up and you
&ll reply as I said."
(i'1lwe was seven of us there, and all we
OMNI• else was 815. We banded that out
WI enough, however, and it had been cov-
ered when Uncle Jerry came along. We
wore on the grin as the drummer caile,t out:
"Hello! Uncle Jerry!"
"Pass, yass!"
"How you feeling!"
"Pretty well, praise
Jen -y, as he passed on.
It was about two minutes before we could
get breath, and thsn the drnmmer had gone
with tlra stalio+ An hour later 1 asked
truck/ .terry what he meant by sure r induct,
and he replied
"Took 111e all (lay t , Darn it, and the feller
gin me tyre big rlollars.-
The Absolute 1.Im11.
Itno; I'n' lr.a,,r -How many of your books
s;.r111 u • prod, Mr. Mc.\Illsten•!
11 1,J+ r -h'•mr hundred. Fuck
I'll bet $20 that
ask him how he
(iod"" replied U1101e
.1. 10 tieing mark to Africa.
. o hy -Henry, will you go back to Al-
ri, a after we are married?
!ienr v- I1m-I-well, I really cannot say.
Yea or nol-Puek.
a
Bringing Thnags to a Foeas-
Theophllus James Hunker bad been the
"steady company" of Miss Ethalinda De
Wiggs tor a long time.
Tuesday night had found him at the De
Wiggs domicile as regularly as Tuesday night
arrived, and everyone knows that Tuesday
night comes on strict schedule tili4s.
He arrived at 8 and lett at 10:30, and he
had been doing this for year* without once
asking the fair Ethalinda if she would be his,
or if be could be hers.
These dilatory tactics were regarded with
disfavor by Ethalinda, while the girl's parents
hoped that each succeeding Tuesday night
would report something decisive. But it
didn't.
No succeeding Tin's lay night ec,•r seemed
to succeed.
"It isn't right," said Ml's. De Wiggs to her
daughter. "The constant ".ttentions of Mr.
Hunker discourage other young then, who no
doubt think you are engaged. I really think
you ougbt to bring him to the point."
"So do I, " aa.ented Ethalinda, "but how
shall I do it!"
" 1 ou must hint to Lim in some way that
unless he really means to marry 'you he had
better cease eu: atg on you."
Ethalinda res.,,v,..t that she would,and
she was full of that resolve last night when
Mr. Hunker called. She had determined to
seize the first opportunity the conversation
offered for the planting of an effective hint,
and if no opportunity offered she had resolv-
ed to manufacture one to order.
Fortune favored her, however, and it was
unnecessary for her to go into the opportun-
ity -making industry.
Mr. Hunker had been much interested in
'ecourt, and on
the operations of the license c u
Pe
previous Tuesday evenings he had dropped
opinions which would have been invaluable
to the judges could they have had the bene-
fit of them.
Last night, after discussing the weather
and the base -ball outlook, Mr. Hunker re-
marked:
` Wcourt is over at
ell Lind the Llt:ense
"Well,.Lindy,
last."
"Yes, Theophilus James," the girl replied,
and a close observer could have detected,
without the aid of a chemical analysis, that
her tone would assay 2000 pounds of deter-
mination to the ton. "Yes, the license
court is over, but the marriage license court
is still wide opeu."
There was no mistaking her meaning, and
Mr. Hunker did not pretend to.
He looked at her for a moment or two in a
surprisedsort of way, and then, recovering
his self-possession, he remarked, as he clasped
Ethalinda to his bosom, and imprinted a
a three-ply kiss on her lips:
"I'ut glad you mentioned it, my love. I'll
get one to -morrow."
"Oh, you needn't be in such a hurry, after
waiting so long," replied Ethalinda, "I shall
need a little time to prepare. We'll have- it
the first Thursday of July."
And they will, unless Mr. Hunker dies or
absconds. -Pittsburg Chronicle.
'Twas Ever Tress.
Minimus (the new boy, of an inquiring
turn of Hind, to employers) -Why, Mr. Max -
mus, did that young man who just went out
stammer so while looking over that tray of
rings?
Maximus -What did he buy!
Minn is -An engagement ring.
Maximus -That's why he blushed and
stammered so. -Jewelers' Weekly.
Poetry Versus Reality.
(happie-You know we invited Col. Plun-
kett, who used to be a blacksmith, to hear
our class give the "Anvil Chorus" the other
night. The fellows were got up in red shirts
and the stage was turned into a real forge.
His Friend -You don't say! Moved the old
Colonel to tears, I suppose?"
Chappie-Not exactly. He simply said
"rats." -American Grocer.
An Aristocratic Locality,
Mr. Ch. Icago-Say, Bub, can you tell me
where Washington Square lsl
Broadway Bootblack -Oh. dat's where de
dagos shires per up for two cents! -Puck.
More Important.
Waller -What's the news, Riser?
lti-er-Great news. Won a dollar on a
ball-ganne bet (rout Fuller to -day.
Waller -That's good. How is that stock
sett bought last week. Still going up?
Riser -Oh, I forgot about that. I sols it
(o -day and made $5,000 on it. -Jester.
A Trunk Road.
Little Roy -Pa, what is a trunk railroad?
[yell m • son I expect S 1pec t the railroad
that goes to Saratoga is a trunk line. --Texas
Siftings.
A little Learning.
Mrs. Brown- -V/al don't seem to Irave a very
high opinion of your husband's ability.
Mrs. Malaprop- No, he's a very ignorant
man. Last night he spoke of persons acting
in eoncert, when he should have known they
only sang at such entertainments. -Epoch.
Our Thermometer.
.Tones -Poor Arthur's gone up.
Brown -Arthur who:
Jones --Arthur Moineter. 1Vashingtoi
Stat'.
Should 11 - Sat istird.
EVERY MAN
ARE NOT es Pru.
gative Medi.
cine. They are a
BLOOD BIIILDE1,
Team and BEooN.
eamooroa, as they
supply in a condensed
form the substances
actually needed to ea-
ch the Blood, curing
all diseases coming
from POOR and Wei
RY BLOOD, or from
VITIATED HUMMBO in
the BLOOD, and alae
nvigorate and BUILD
us. the BLOOD and
SYSTEM, when broken
down by overwork,
mental worry disease,
excesses and indiscre-
tions. They have a
SPECIFIC ACTION on
the SEXUAL SYSTEM of
both men and women,
restoring LOST noon
and correcting all
IRREGULARITIES and
SUPPRESSIONS.
Who finds his mental fac-
ulties dull or failing, or
his physical powers flagging, should take these
PILLS. They will restore his loot energies, both
physical and mental.
EVERY WOMAN
should take them.
They cure all supp--
preesiona and irregularities, which inevitably
entail sickness when neglected.
OUNG MEN
should take these PILLS.
They will cure the re -
en is of youthful bad habits, and strengthen the
system.
YOUNG WOMEN T'eesen'd take them.
ThYu.Ls will
make them regular.
For sale by all druggists, or will be sent upon
receipt of price (50c. per box), by addressing
THE DIi. WILLIA MS' MRD. CO.
Brockville, Ont.
Tuggs (jeweler) --Thr. ring i bought from
ynua week ago for 1s l:.fret, I have leen told
is one-third alloy.
Buggs (jeweler) -But, my dear friend, eon -
shier how much gold there is in it. -Jeweller's
Weekly.
"But There Aro Things."
"Never cry over spilled milk, dearest."
Penelope -But if the milk happens to be
condensed and you get a cold slab or two on
your new skirt? -American Grocer.
That Decision Again.
"I have had a delightful evening," he said.
as he took his hat and [rose to go. "May I
call again?"
"I shall be glad to seeyou," she replied with
a blush.
As he walked out Into the hall be saw in
the mirror of the hat -rack a reflection of the
roguish girl slyly throwing a kiss at him, and
he turned back.
"I must have that, in the original package,"
he whispered.
He was a Kansas young man, and he got it.
-Chicago Tribune.
He was Truthful.
1
In its First Stages. 1
t Palatable as Milk.
1
Be sure you get the genuine in Salmon
color wrapper; sold by all Druggists, at
Soc. and Peso.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville:
SCOTT'S
EMULSION;
DOES CURE
CONSUMPTION 1
VIwv1.1.4I-A•v41h. Iv.ii,
T
HE WONDER OF THE AGE !
�r=-_� �.'�'ta'i•`{v-��!ifflt,- am tr. �!/�':.:/ ///r'>//
A NEW IMPROVED DYE
FOR HOME DYEING.
Only Water required in trains.
10Cyour dealer does not keep them,
a package. For sale everywhere. If
send direct to the manufacturers,
COTTINGHAM, ROBERTSON & CO.
MONTREAL.
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LIVERY.
The undersigned have bought out the Liv-
ery business lately owned by R. Seattle and
desire to nform the public that they will
carry on the same in the old premises.
Next COMMERCIAL Hotel.
Several new and good driving horses, and the
most stylish carrages have been added to
the business, and will be hired at rem -nimble
prioes. Satisfaction guaranteed.
R. REYNOLDS & SiN
FALL GOODS
Just Arrived
She. '`John, You Iriveheen .11Ing''1eve',"
H,.. "N, 41 ,1.. 1 .
Bowen a .
w�rrCiALL1k,
C LOCKS,
& 11-v erwztre.
J. BIDD1.ECOMBE
S. WILSON,
GENERAL DEALER IN TINWARE.
HURON STREET, CLINTON.
Repairing of all kinds promptly attended 10
reasonable rates. A trialsnllelted.
d
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