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The Clinton New Era, 1890-10-31, Page 4sr Sew trtI 8Xtflto , savaratlttt,s- Waltot MRrrisutt I�----00QpO Bros, pe� (ltagpex 0 O. Ruwball 7Ri wll ►,.liebertoom Olt$ tp teat --4 il1I'iitersall. inanr n -E Oorbett 1111derwear-- 4915sori Bros A big change—Harland Wes mall paper--Coeper & Co. 4liiinton 'BIDAY., OCTOBER 31, 1890. The New Era Has It. 'rhe;-.(.aderioh Signal disputes our statement that the NEw Eaa is the largest paper in the County, offt ing to back up its opinion by money. It is not necessary to go to that trouble. Unless the Sig - mal pgssesses. the faculty of mak- ing a foot rule tell a different tale to what it usually dons, it cannot possibly demonstrate that the Signal is the largest. The NEw +.RA is the largess paper in Huron, and any one arta, wishes to prove it for themselves can have:a copy QM application. Further,awe will send a copy to any resident of the county who would like to make a comparison of the two papers. The Weight of Eggs. The following item appears in a murnber of papers: - "The Government has received advices from an English authority on the egg question, stating that there will not be the slightest dif- ficulty in obtaining the highest price for Cana-ian oggs, providing they weigh over two pounds and a laiif to the score." In order to find out how near eggs would come to this require- ment, five different stores were visited, and twenty eggs, taken - promiscuously from a lot,weighed. This was the result in the five places: - 1 -two pounds eight ounces 2 -two pounds six ounces 3 -two pounds eight ounces 4 -two pounds eight ounces 5 -two pounds five ounces In no instance did t'Iey.r•eally ex. ceed 2A. pounds, and the business men in some of the places remark- ed "they won't average, generally mora than 2 lb. 7 oz." We are not prepared to say that this is correct, nor do we know how near to the required standard a consign- ment would go. If English pur- chasers are unwilling to accept them, except at their standard, it means that eggs must be culled for that market. • But why should not eggs be sold by weight here? • If of Benefit once, why not Again? Speaking at Hamilton in 1860, Sir John said: - "One great cause of the pros- erity'of the farmers in Upper nCada is the Reciprocity Treaty, athe consequent interchange of agricultural commodities • and raw materials. He has found a market where there was none at all before." ;. If this statement were true, then. the reverse holds good,, and the paragraph, adapted •to suit the present condition cf affairs, would read :- "One great cause of the poverty ,of the farmers of Upper Canada is the lack of a Reciprocity Treaty ,and their inability to interchange agricultural commodities and raw materials. He has lost a market where there was a good one be - fere " A. Give Away. Burrows, our enterprising seed - man and grain dealer, has filled the order for Michigan parties Inentioned in these columns two weeks ago, shipping amongst other things 7000 bushels of oats and 75 tons of hay this week on the schooner Jane McLeod. He has another order from the same parties for 7,000 bushels of oats and 100 tons hay. The articles are designed for the lumber woods on the north shore, and the sea- son's trade of these parties, which is likely to be shipped from this port hereafter, foots up from $7,000 to $8,000. This is worth looking after, but it takes a man who can "hump" himself to get it." --Goderioh Star. Tho Star surely has made a mis- take. It has for weeks been toll- ing its readers, that no American trade was worth speeches, and we didn't want it anyhow, but here it goo and gives the whole thing away by intimating that a little deal of seven or eight thousand dollars is worth looking after. How about the millions that wo 'lave done annually, and which might be trillions more, if looked after. rsllfaolrinleyed” le the Jatest, phr4en that here been coined to feet. the elnergencies of exl,rass- ton.. The Globo certainly voices pub- lic sentiment in this section when it says, concerning Iiircball, that "the law must take its course." Major McKinley, of tariff bill fame, is seeking re-election to Congress. at Canton, Ohio, and an American paper asserts that a Se- cret Service agent of the Domin- ion Goverument arrived there a few days ago with $20,000 of Ca- nadian funds, with which to se- oer•e his defeat, if possible, it being assumed that bis defeat would be a blow at the bill beat ing his i greatly Tuistaken, W$» copliod tiara tau I gotterelpres8 report of tie/Assizes, *sit appeared at the ktu We do not sup - Rae for a rnonaot't that the public ever thought of blamtpg the efileiale, and Mr Picks= may ret easy on this score. 3]n. Nrw Fan�,7 ANOWIER VERSION. To as Editor of 14 Clinton .New Era, DEita 6m, -In your issue of last week I see a letter written under the heading, "Varna Sensation," and signed, "One Wlio lPowP," which, to do justice to your paper and the parties mentioned, requires some explanation, that I know you will grant me the apace to give. In the first place, he speaks of some mis- leading comments whioh appeared in the Clinton News -Record, I would say in reply that they could not be one-half so misleading and degrading as the vile insinuations that he penned for your paper. And in the s000nd place he speaks of the trial, Mre Wiggins ve Beatty, and of the indecent exposure. Now, let me say, there is not one word of truth in his statements, and also, I will say, that there was nothing brought out at the trial to prove anything of the kind. The facie of the case are these, an -Mr name. It would not be unlike an Beatty was in hie implement wareroom, action of thegovernment,if the working at a seed drill, when Mrs Wig. gins, without any provocation, Dame election was in this$eountiy, bat across the street and pelted him with the statement otherwise has a push, and she tell over a piece of board which was in the way. Mr Beatty has witnesses to prove that he did not abuse her, and only pushed her out of his way. In the third place he speaks of a fine. Now, Mr Editor, that money which was taken from Mr Beatty was handed back to him, the J. P. knowing that he had done wrong in fining him for an offence he was innocent of. He also speaks of the vile language used; let me ask this man who knows so much, where this vile and disgraceful language came from. It came from the parties he is trying to uphold in their dirt. I will speak of just what I have seen myself, and will say that it is almost impossible for a decent re- speotable person to pass along the street without being insulted, and I would say that the' sooner the respectable community about Varna rise and stamp down such doings, the better it will be for the place; it is high time that jus- tice should step in and do its part, when the homes of decent people have to be kept closed, in order that they may escape the vile insinuations that OUR LETTER BOX are thrown at them when they make [We wish itdistinctly understood that their appearance. I am surprised at we are not, directly or indirectly, re- sponsible, for any opinions expressed under this head.] d in justice to all I give them : stones. In self defence, he gave her a doubtful look about it, and is evi- dently on a par with the absurd stories attrrted,.by the Empire so often about Yankee gold being sent here to hell, the Liberals at election iline. The Canadian Man ufactur•er•s'As- sociation is said to have sent out a circular asking for funds to help defend the policy of protection at the polls. If the funds at•e forth- coming, the consumers are the ones who will have to "whack up" though the manufacturers may act as middlemen in the process. CORRECTION. Tu the Editor of the Clinton New Era DEAR Slit, —My attention has been drawn to the enclosed article, which I out out of the NEw ERA of the 17th inst., and as it is calculated to convey the impression that the jail officials are exceedingly lax in the discharge of their ordinary duties, I venture to make a correction, and place the true facts be- fore you :— "The prisoners Nesbitt and McDou. gall,who were sentenced by Judge Toms to five years in Kingston, took the dose quite to heart, for on Sunday they made an attempt to break jail, having pried off the door of their cell, and had actu- ally reached the jail yard, and were pil- ing chairs and boxes on each other,with a view to scaling the wall, when they were discovered. So well had they cal- culated everything that a few more minutes would have seen them over the wall." - You saythe prisoners were piling chairs and boxes on each other, with a view to scaling the wall—that is more than the truth. Permit me to give you a true account of what really occurred. It was on the morning of the 5th inst., Sabbath. Our work was all done, that is, the prisoners were all locked in their wards, and the turnkey had gone home to his breakfast, not to return till after dinner, such being the usual custom with jail officials, and having been the rule here during the twenty- six years I have been in the jail—the turnkey going to church in the morn- ing, the jailer in the evening. After the turnkey had left I went to my office, as usual, to write up the re- cord of the previous day. On going down to breakfast, I looked into the ward in which McDougall and Nesbitt were confined, and saw nothing wrong. Motioning to the servant to keep watch while we breakfasted, I passed on to the dining room. The meal was almost finished when the girl came and told me she thought there was something wrong in the ward. I rose at once, got the keys,which are kept under lock and key when not in actual use, and'entered the ward. Just as I went in, McDou- gall came in from the yard, shouting, "We're here, all right." I then called Nesbitt in from the yard—he obeyed in a sullen, reluctant manner, and I then locked him up in his cell—then called McDougall and locked him in his cell. Having thus disposed of the prisoners, I proceeded to examine the ward and yard. I found that the strong inch iron bolt of the door leading into the yard had been broken, the doors lifted off their hinges and deposited in the yard, the ward table had been placed against the wall, and the prisoners' two stools put,side by side on the top of the table. I then returned to the ward to hunt for possible tools. The marks on the broom handle at once proclaimed it to have been the weapon used in the breaking of the bolt, and a small pine shelf, with which each ward is provided, had been need to pry the door off its hinges, which are the same as those of an Ordinary barn door. I then sent for the turnkey, and on his arrival we searched the prisoners, but found nothing that could help them in what they had done—no weapon or tool in fact of any kind whatever.— They used nothing in their attempted escape, but the necessary ward furni- ture, such as is in every ward now, and has been since my official connection with the jail. The door, at the time they were dis- oovered, was sixty or seventy feet from the table and stools. Had they succeed- ed in getting the door on top of the stools, about ten feo1 of the wall would have been scaled, but there would still remain nearly fourteen feet to be scaled, and there was not another item, boxes or anything else, in the ward or yard, wherewith to do it; their bedding was all looked up, and they had not at- tempted to tamper with the looks, probably fir the very excellent reason that they had nothing wherewith to do so. There was indeed"one other thing they might have used, as I told the Grand Jury, but the prisoners had evi- dently not thought of it, and as it also is a necessity, and cannot possibly be removed at present, you will, I trust, Mr Editor, pardon my not stating what it is, for the very ostensible reason that the information might he used against the officials in the future. You will not, I trust, for a moment, think that this has been written in anger, as my intention was simply to correct an error, whioh might convey a wrong impression of the management of the prison. W. DICKSON, Gaoler. Goderich, Oct. 27, 1890. [The item in question, if we are not men of the place, taking the part that that they do in this case, instead of working for their own interests and the welfare of the place. It is an easy mat- ter for a man with no reputation to lose to try and blackmail another, and draw them down. It should not be necessary to refer to this matter again, as justice will settle with this would-be "man who knows." Thanking you for your space, and hoping that Varna and its citizens will soon be restored to their usual peace and quietness, I re- main, yours, A Lovers oi' PEACE AND QUIETNESS. A continuation of the tobacco ques- tion, in type, is carried over uutill next week. NEWS S. A bis I in Now Mexico was frozen to death last week. Murders by Indians are getting alariningiy 1i ognent i n the western States. Mrs Martha Jones died in Ot- tawa on Tuesday, aged 100 years an. 3 months. • Tho Canadian Pacific railway is making arrangements to cross the river at Niagara Falls town. W. S. Whdrtcn,a Chicago money lender has absconded after incurr- ing debts to the extent of $50,000. At a meeting of Montreal Pres- bytery, E riday.Rov A Crochet was dismissed from Christian ministry on account of immorality. Two sections of a train convey- ing Barnum's circus collided near Macon, Ga., yesterday. Two men and eight horses were killed. Every steam fiting establish - flout in Chicago is idle, all of the union mon and 95 per cent of the non-union men being on strike. The Mexican goverment has placed an import duty of $500 a car on cattle from the United States in retaliation for the Mckinley bill. Miss Davis, Miss Mary Garret and others have raised £100,000 to enable John Hopkins Univer- sity to found a medical college for women. Kicking Horse, the Sioux pro- phet, claims to have visited heaven and returned to earth to tell the Indians what good things are in store for them. Stephen Boyrey brakesman,had his log broken at Campellford last night. He was on a gangway loading cattle when it gave way and onopar•t fell on him. Hog cholera in its worst form has appeared in the neighborhood of Brownsville, Pa. Four hundred animals being fattened at Ham - burgher's distillery have died. Canadian cheese stood in the front rank and received the high- est awards at the annual show of the .British Dairy Farmers' Association in London recently. A young man named Fox, only nineteen, recently employed on tho railway, was tried at the Criminal Court sitting at Rimou- ski for outraging an old woman of 82 years of ago at St. Flavier, last spring. His trial terminated on Saturday and he was sentenced to twelve years in the penitentary. The outrage was committed on the main road, Fox stopping out of a carriage and attacking his victim, whom he chanced to meet. His brutal action was witnessed by two of his companions in the carriage, who turned a deaf ear to tho poor old creature's cries for help, and merely langhed at her entreaties. Fox's companions wore severely rebuked by his Hon- or Judge Larne, who commented in ecathing torms on their most merciless, inhuman disregard for the poor old creature's entreaties for nelp. .JEWS. NOTAtif White Chat;,, Cummings,, of Orilli.a, wee .driving boldo from that town Q11 MoudI, r itis team took fright and gran away, Be was thrown out of the waggon and killed. Gen. Booth's "In, the Darkest England," Ras sold out three hours after it was issued. The General has received already sev- eral handsome promises of aid to- ward the realization of the great work proposed in the volume. Edward Houck, of Sullivan, Ind. went home drunk on Saturday, and began to abuse bis wife, who was ill in bed, threatening to kill her with a hatchet. While be was standing over the bed where she lay four masked men entered the room, took Houck out, and with the same hatchet smashed his head into a jelly. He died. Addressing a large gathering at Port Perry last night, Hon. John Dryden, Minister of Agri• culture, made some telling points on the subject of how trade reetrio- tion hurts the farmers. Speaking for that class, which embraces the large majority of the people of Canada, he said to the Govern- ment, "Give us a fair chance and we will hold our own against Eng- land, America and the world." The Minister of Agriculture rea- sons from unassailable premises when he says that damping grounds for Canadian farm pro- duce in far off markets should not be preferred to the natural and most profitable market over the border, which can be obtained if Canada and the United States agree to unrestricted reciprocity that will be mutually profitable to the two countries. When the civil case of Corbett vs. Mason was taken up at the Sandwich assizes; Mr Blackstock, for the defendent, cross-examined Corbett in a very abusive manner. B. B. Osler, was representing the plaintiff, remonstrated and de- manded the protection of the court towards the witness. Mr Blackstock still persevered in the same line of cross-examination and when he asked the witness if ho had been drinking, Judge MacMahon warned him that such language must cease. Dir Black- stock, with flushed face, remon- stratod against tho Judge's ruling and said that ho had a right to put any questions when they were proper, as the one ruled out had been. The Judge said such a question should never bo a:led. bI r Blackstock said that on ac- count of the Judge's conduct he would be obliged to withdraw BlrcbaWW Alf ire, Tpto,Thursday afternoon' the Weodstoell*VetitiQu$asking mexey for 040301, bad been si=gned by over 300, Among the communications received by Airs .Sirohait is one from ai fellow who declares bis willieguess to take Birchall's place at the hanging for the sum of $1,QQ0. The Bireball case is now engag- ing the attention of•the Minister of Justice. The belief prevails that the law will be allowed to take its Course. None of the petitions in his favor have yet reached the department. One is belug got up in the old country. Birohall's autobiography was pat up at auction at the jail in Woodstock, on Friday, Jailer Cameron acting as auctioneer. There were about fifty publish- ers in attendance, and the bidding was very spirited up to $1,500. After that it was slow until $1,- 700 was reached, when it was knocked down to C. W. Bunting, of the Toronto Mail, for himself and James Gordon Bennet, of the New YorkHerald. Half of the purchase money was paid down, and the other half will be paid immediately after the execution, to Mrs Birchall. The tombstone has received its finishing touch, and has been looked upon for the last time pro- bably by the dead man's brother. Charles Benwell visited the church yard on Saturday and stood gazing at the cold marble slab for some time. This was not his first visit to the grave by any means, but it was doubtless his last, for be left on Wednesday for England. What awful emotions muaLhave ovorcome him as he said farewell to 'Connie's' last resting place on earth ! Had he a feeling of re- venge or one of sympathy for Roginald Birchall ? As he wiped away the tears and turned to go his good bye to his dead brother's grave was sealed with a kiss upon the cold tombstone, and then turning to Captain Griggs, he thanked him kindly for his atten- tion in the past and made arrange- ments to keep the plot in repair in future. '1 may never see you , again,' he said as he left, 'but I know you will always have an eye to this grave.' -Woodstock Standard. Birchall has not much faith in the petition now being circulated praying for a commutation of his sentence, although, since his wife made a personal appeal to the citizens for help, the list of signa-' tures has been increased to re- (-4 -) o ® er spectabie dimensions. Birchall • �t Windo* Shades- •. WOOLS &YARNS 'STATIONERY' Miscellaneous . Boole, TOYS - & -NOVELTIES FANCY CHINAWARE, SCHOOL BOOKS, ,w SCHOOL SUPPLIES, TISSUE PAPER. AMERICAN MONEY TAKEN AT PAR. from the ease, and walked out of ,bas not given up all hopes of a the room. It was several min- 'reprieve, but in case the petition utes before anyone spoke. Sol fails be is remembering a few White, who was engaged with Mr friends about town with presents. Backstock on the case, went out- side and had a conference, return- ing in a few minutes and stating that his colleague would not con- duct the case. Mr Osier, for the plaintiff,said that he did not want n) take any advantage of the de- fendant, and the Judge sent the case over to tho Spring Assizes. Mr Osler, when spoken to about the matter by a reporter, said he never in bis long years' experi- ence saw anything similar to it. He said that he once withdrew from a case; but it was because of finding out his client's dishonesty. The English railway companies have at last "made a break," from the old close compartment syste in their passenger carriages, and have adopted -at least in the case of one leading company, the Great Northern -the complete in- terior design of the "Holmes An- glo American railway coach," which was submitted to them six years ago by the inventor, Mr W. H. H„ lmes, then of Chicago, but a Canadian, and now a resident of this city. This modern carriage, which has been patented by Mr Holmes in Great Britain, Franco, United States and Canada, is an ingenious and happy combination of both the English and American systems, and while it affords the privacy and retirement of the for- mer, the interior communication and all the conveniences, viz., lad- ies' and gentlemen's lavatories, toilet rooms &c., drinking water, permanent heating apparatus, means of extinguishing fire, &c., of the latter are secured. The objection hitherto of the old coun- try companies to the now coach was the sacrifice of the space for the corridor, which runs along one side, and which necessarily, deprives the old pattern carriages of two seats at the end of each compartment, and without which there could, by no possibility, be intercommunication with all its attendant advantages: The ex- periment of the Great Northern has proved a success, and the de- mand on the part of the passen- gers for the new carriages has been great, particularly in Scot- land. There can be no doubt that Mr Holmes' design, which pos- sesses so many and important advantages over the regular Eng. lish railway carriage, will event- ually come into general use in Europe, while in the older and more thickly populated portions of this continent, thereis constant- ly increasing the necessity for the easy and rapid exchange of pass - engem at stops, especially in sub- urban traffic, the great advantage of tho side doors is abundantly manifest. -Toronto Empire -[Mr Holmes hare alluded to is a nep- hew of Mr E. Holmes, late of Clinton.] He had three beautiful rings made and presented them, one to his ox -guard, Entwhistle, another to S. G. McKay, his' lawyer, and the third one is for Mrs West-' Jones. They are suitably inscrib• ed. The same jeweller is making two gold lockets for Birchall He is to have one with a lock of his wife's hair, and should he be exe- cuted be will carry this to his grave on the 14th of November. His wife will wear the locket with her husband's photo. and a lock of his hair. Birchall is well pleased with his now guard. George Perry is a young man of pleasing address and his manner seems quite pleasing to the prisoner. The authorities continuo to re- ceive applications for the position of hangman, but the -executioner bas bean engaged, and he is one who, who it is claimed, will do the job with ioatness and dispatch. A Toronto man has been engaged who has already officiated at four- teen executions. Birchall has positively no fear of death, and blames the English farm pupil agency for tho whole matter. He says that he does not pretend to be a saint, but that if Old Testa- ment singers like, for instance, 'David, the:sweet singer of Israel,' realized an interest in heaven, why shouldn't an unfortunate devil like &himself be pardoned and admitted to a remote corner of that delightful desideratum. The Birchall trial cost the county $2,500. This was merely the witnesses' and constables' fees. The counsel pere paid by the Gov- ernment, making the total cost $8,000. It is said Birchall's mother has sailed for Canada to see her son before his death. Bir- chall writes in a localipaper•, pro- testing against the publication by a Toronto journal of articles pur- porting to have been written by him. He says they aro all pure fabrications. • An account of the work of the Ontario Agricultural College is given in the Fair number of The Woodstock Sentinel Review. The farm contains 580 acres,more than 400 of which are under cultivation of this 100 acres were devoted to experimental work last season, but the intention of the manager is to ase the whole acreage for an ex- perimental farm. The collection of cereals is the largest on the Amer- ican continent. The grain plots of the past harvest contained 328 varieties, of which x56 the foll wheat, 64 barleys, 85 spring wheats 95 oats and 28 peas. A majority of these are imported, and it has been demonstrated that many of them can be grown here with profit. Sixty varieties of corn and 91 varieties of field roots are being tested. A great number of ozper- & Co BOOKS, STATIONERY and FANCY GOODS, CLINTON. A BIG CHANGE:' Separation of Stocks HARDWARE in the South Building. STOVES and TINWARE in the North Building Goods all being remarked and away down below zero Look for particulars next week. HARLAN©. BROS., Iron and Hardware Merchants, Clinton iments are being made in the feed - of pigs, lambs and cattle, The work of the farm has elicited praise from opponents as well as friends of the Government, and the manager and his staff aided by the Department of Agriculture,are untiring in their efforts to make it more and more worthy ofpraise. T. Sherbano, of Purple Valley, Ont., while sitting in a chair at a political meeting, telling his friends how well he felt, gave a gasp and fell over dead. He was 45 years old and highly respected. BORN. ELLIOTT.—In Turnberry, en the 17th inst., the wife of Albert Elliott, of a daughter. SMITH.—In Wingham, ou the 22nd inst., the wife of John Smith, of a son. GANNETT.—In Wingham, on the 19th inst., the wife of Wm Gannett, of a son. MARRIED WINSLOW—BATER.—At Ware, Mass., on Oct. 15th, at the residence of Mrs Parker, grandmother, of the bride, by the Rev Mr Hall, Edgar D. Winslow, to Eliza M., eldest daughter of John F. Bates, of Goderich. PORTER—MCKAGUE. —At the reei- ddnee of the bride's mother, on the 16th inst., by the Rev H. MoQuarrie, John Porter to Mary MaKague, all of Turn - berry. SMITH—MCCAuLEY.—At the Metho- dist parsonage, Brussels, on Oct. 22nd, by the Rev S. Sellery, B. D., Mr Mor- timer Smith to Miss Martha McCauley, both of Wingham. PEEBLEf3—KEYS.—At the residence of the bride's father, by the Rev James Walker, on the 22nd inet„ Mr S. Pee- bles, of Minto, to Ellen H., only daugh • ter of Mr Wm, Keys, Stanley. BALL—DOnsON.—At the residence of the bride's father, 10th con., Tooker- mith, on the 23rd inst., by Rev Mr Tr- ine, Mr Wm Ball, of Hensall, to Mies lma, eldest daughter of Mr J. Dobson. ooa-Cor.osr ir.-At the residence of he groom's mother, on the 28th inst., by a Rev Mr Cook, Mr T. Cook, of Hen all, to Miss Coloskey, of Dash - w00 nMED t< WIooINTON.—In Goderich town ship, on the 28th inst., Sarah A. Wi gginton, aged 58 years. PATTON.—In Turnberry, on the 18th inst., William Patton, aged 75 years. STRACIAN.—In Goderich, on Oct. 21st, Mary Colvin, relict of the late W m Strachan, Culduthel, It*erness, Scot• land, and mother of D. C. Strachan, aged 84 years. , WHITE.—In Pompeii, Mich., on Sapt. 18th. Amelia, wife of Hiram White, formerly of Grey township, a.led 35 years and 8 months. Purif Tho importance of keeping the blood in a pure oondttlon is universally know,&, and yet there are very few people who have perfectly pure blood. The taint of scrofula, salt rheum, or bther foul humor is heredited and transmitted for generations, causing untold suffering, and we also accumulate poison and germs of dis. base from the air we breathe, the food we eat, or the water we drink. There is nothing more col. elusively pro von than the —our positive power of Hood's Sarsaparilla over all diseases of the blood. This medicine, when fairly tried, does expel every trace of scrofula os Balt rheum, removes the taint which causes, catarrh, neutralizes the acidity and cures rheumatism, drives out the germs of malaria, blood poi- soning, etc. It also vitalizes and en- riches the blood, thus o',ercoming that thea feeling, and building up the whole system Thousands testify to the superiority of Hood's Sarsaparilla as a blbod purifier. Full info. motion and statements of cures sent free. loo Hood's Sarsaparilla r Sold by an druggists. 51; six for 55. Prepared °nil by 0.1. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, llpNss 100 Doses One Dollar 5