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The Clinton New Era, 1891-02-27, Page 6ri t• u IF AN INDIAN STANDS tatty fatted—the DeminiOn Gorr* COLD. „ ' or nowt Ooreudefiiener boxing .., *POO thAt it caaald..Pot lit0nmio+' y -tute is In d u i, tan The Indian. .. uost inkt nCef Barry* � io f tl bird* There is 'this, remarkable trait, n ..his- cbaraoter, however, xltiycthe, ansagicity Star'. No, " 4iilttr. bots deep . late, physical vekt,let his btanketa ha ever se blizzards scant ,and thin and the b eifiee. so pirceing*, he stands it ';tlke•a stoic. A white .man under n inilar circumstances, swears and , oi>trees. sold assails his lack' and assures the world of hie resolve' 4 have .a vast and comforting .• ,.Inge. ,An Indian undergoes ' llit pinch without a mer our and ill rt'eeze even, with no more row about it than a river. They are prone to do the best they can under -the limitations of circum- - ataneas ani1 after they do they l .w motionless to fate. I romem- t tl winter in New Mexico, the oessfull * carried en in the Anm- .�'* WWe coakt and train for kiln%. but the eiftir wa 40040% Gee" preferring to operate se a publ'e trainer, the wig i s h. ......411 e h Aiei, months, egg t peti0. ,• Canadian eggs rnust'be sent to the Ppited States. A restricted trade (a continua-, tion of the N. I'.) and farmer' wives will taxed$820,009 a year on eggs and poultry alone in order to keep theTo>;y party in power- $4,2,5Q.r000 in the next Ave, yearat This market' can be thrown Tin by the adoption of unr estriot- ed r eCiprO y cit. The ?tmericaans have- promised to enter into negotiations for such trade relations es the .Reform party have proposed, and they have declined the 'restricted regi- procity which the Tory Govern- ment at Ottawa profess to be in t, guts thereof were cold enough favor of. yen for un iceman. The morn-) Vote for the Reform candidate ings of each day were by no I and a free market. •means sultry, and until 11 o'clock in the morning, the thermometer was generally content to put in the time in the vicinity of the 20 degree mark. One morning early, while the frosty air bit like. a bulldog, I saw an old Navajo with about enough on him, count blanket and all, to flag a hand -car, very busy in the collection of ---heap of - -splinters, .twigs. _.ori chipps. Where he 'had put in the night"conld not even be gamed at, but be was getting ready for a fire now. He continued his .efforts until he had amassed a collection about the size and con- tour of a bushel basket. Then some two feet away he started a little fire brat a pint of water would• have extinguished. This becoming a crackling success, he wrapped his threadbare blanket about the upper part of his body and over his head and lay down on his face with a leg on each side of the fire, said legs being disposed iota sort of parenthesis so as to bring them within reach of the genial iriflneue " TIie -sold book wor•'d snooze, laid up in this fashion for about twenty minutes, and then, the fire dying low, would raise himself enough to reach bis little store of combusti- bles with one hand and transfer .a arnall•supply to 'the blaze. Then his- slumbrous head would drop, the Pre would recover and affairs ge smoothly for another twenty minutes, when the play would be repeated.. He got in some six hours in this way very success- fully arising at 12 m. and begging me for his dinner. CORN SOWING Is a process conducted by the agency of tight boots all the year round. Corn reaping is best con- ducted through the agency of Patnams Painless Corn Extractor the only safe and sure -pop corn cure. Putnam's Extractor is now widely imitated. Beware of all poisonous and sore producing sub- stitutes ; they are dangerous to use and are sold simply because they afford the dealer larger profit. • EGGS AND POULTRY. AN .. UNDENIABLE FACT. Little troubles are proverbially the ones that cause the most worry, annoyance and vexation.. But what are sometimes considered little troubles if left to themselves, soon magnify into grave evils,produoingdisastrous results. This is especially true of cold in the head. The sufferer looks neon it as a trifling annoyance that needs no treat went.. and . will speedily pass away. This is a grave mistake. There is nota case of catarrh in existence •that did not have its origin in, neglected cold in the lead, and the longer the trouble runs the more serious the results. Cold in the head, developing into catarrh, renders the breath foul, causes a loss of the senses of taste and smell, rartial deafness, distressing headaches, oonatant hawking and spitting, and in many, many oases end in consumption coed death. No case may have all the symptoms indicated, but the more the saferer has the greater the danger. It is obvious, therefore, that no case of cold in the head should be neglected for an instant, and that to do so is courting further disease -perhaps death. Nasal Balm, in the most aggravated ease of cold in the head, will give instant relief, and speedily effects a cure, thus r•reventi ng the developing into catarrh. •110 other remedy has ever met with the su-ecesii thatNasal Balm has, and this is simply because it does all its manu- facturers claim for it. As a precau- ionary remedy a bottle of Nasal Balm should be kept in every house. Sold by all dealers. Ir, no agricultural or dairy products are the farmers and their wives more directly interest- ed than in the prices that can be secured for eggs and poultry. For many years these two com- modities have been admitted free to the United States. The result has been the establishment of a trade—one of the most profitable in the country. Under the operatiou of the Mc- Kinley bill, by which a duty of 5 cents per pound on dressed poul- try and 5 cents per doz on eggs is levied, the trade in eggs and poultry has received a crushing blow. Nothing can secure the free market again except the adoption of the policy of unrestricted reci- procity by the people of Canada. A duty of 5 cents per pound on dressed fowls, turkeys, geese, ducks and chickens, means that the wives of Canadian farmers -will receive $75,000 less for The poultry exported to the United States than they would if . there was •a free market. The Christmas markets just passed showed a decline in the prices in Canada compared with other years. The high prices in New York, Boston, Buffalo and Albany indicated that the Can- adian farmers were receiving 5 cents per pound less than' they would have had the American markets been free. The duty -of 5' cents per dozen on 1 egg will paralyze a ,trade -which has grown under a free trade market from 17,000 dozens in 1870 to 15,000,000 in 1390. The duty of 5 cents per dozen on eggs means the loss of $750, - TOO,' to the wives of Canadian farmers in one year. Success at the election of Sir John's government means a tax of $3,250,000 during the next five years on the ,farmers' wives on4the one article—eggs. By the Liberal policy of unre- stricted reciprocity being a,dopted on the 5th of- March this- $8,250, 000 will be in the pockets of the .Canadian farmers. Ni3 other market in the world is Open to Canadian eggs. The effort to slltatlish an egg trade with Great `Britain has sig - HOW RICH MINES '• iiE FOUND. Few people in this part of tie country have any idea of the difficulty of finding a mine. A man who follows it for a living fink 'pills arenot a patent 'o medicine,.laut a remedy Carefully 'INQZTLD 1Fif' QA . Mr Frankland be well.knowu;l caul° exporter of Toronto. writer' OlOv9 aQap concerning the bs defl Of free trade fa --4 re ared„a , aQ, a erienoed 1?>#yal� ' Why cannot our farmers con elanp , . he curepof female eolpl,- cattle ? Is it. fol, $ o to rwtt western ce t 2 .t l► lafnta and nervous d garde;e. new - an absurdit : to May why?. LrY them,, ell,. I would wager all, I .ami or lora. 'on o f the theory worth tat Ontario with free corn` Inc.lr. t# Q than a fast horse needs bast mo413P yaw: have cattle all the year round ate work when being trained..AV, .ready for the.raarkets of the world a fast exhibition mile,an exchange not, as now, about three mouths,., cites the case of Edgeletkr, who for is it :net a- fact that we. are was given but threw miles in his shipping cattle out of the: country gbetter, ethe season only half= rown, I might gay only -ark. in2,30 or s ear•old mark of bone and s new, to be fed upon this he made his � � 2.16 same Coria while we might be im. When aborses'shoe iatobe taken proving our farm, our stock, our off it must not be violently wren -pocket and our country. aged at the risk of splitting, off a It is t idioulgus to say free trade large piece of hoof with it. Let is goingto impoverish the conn• the clinched end of each nail be try. o have never had. free first turned back. Then the shoe trade on the basis of the platform may bo carefully raised with the of the Liberal party which is pincers far enough to withdraw asked for now. I ask all liberal - the nails, so that their heads may minded men to look to England, be taken hold of by the pincers her policy is free trade, free as and each nail separately drawn the sun that shines over our out. The nails may also be drawn heads, that gives light for our out one at a time, so as not to o es to see, and t hope will open alter the position of the tip of the the eyes of Canada on the 5th shoe, and a fast nail made to ex- day of March, so that for once aetlyfit the countersink in the she will be able to lift up her shoand to pass through the head and to say 'free to the same hole in the hoof, may be v,orld.' If I know the sentiments driven in its place.—[Southern of the Government farmers andf Ontario the TP. ri b Cultivator. A gentleman from Canada says dead sure enough, but, as a last 'The 'trotting boom has evidently word, do not let sentiments of come lin Canada to stay. Go loyalty :your you away. Be where you will the talk is on this loyal to ,your country, to your - line, and even the farmers are on selves. to your families, sell in the the lookout for brood mares pos- dearest market and buy in the sensing a goodly share of trotting cheapest. God gave to the Israel - blood. Scatcely a town or village ities their freedom. He offers to that does not boast of something us ours. Now is your time or coming to the front. The one never. .Accept, all will be, well; great drawback seems to be the refuse. you have only yourselves want of good trainers. The to blame. If you falter or halt writer has no hesitation in saying you are lost. We have had fossil that half our back stock is ruined Government, trick and tricksters for speed on account of ignorance long enough. A good yarn is in handling and driving. Mean- very well in its place, but now let time we have a few that know us up and have something to how to handle the strings and benefit the masses. Men of On - from their hands_• we expect to tario, your votes are solicited for swell Li,e 2:30 list the coming cca- a pure Government. for the next son.'— [Kentneky Stock Farm. five years. If the owner took half as much 130W FARMS ARE VALUED. pains to fit the harness to his horse -- or mule as ho does to get a good The true value of the farm is �tting coat for himself, Bays an what it will sell for. The price exchange, there would be fewer on can get for your farm is gov- rice hair worn off., Harness hide; with erned by the amount of money it hair worn Harness iQ bought makes for the tiller of the soil. hap -hazard, when it can be bought Therefore when farm produce cheap at auction; or when there f an immediate use for it the pur- chase is made at a shop that does - not keep an assortment?, so it hap - W4 *NI) BROOK 0010, • $0 1,$* gnestiom that i_ reef time to Sm. is dI.ouaied iii ' aoisntth a � i, 'rheaons , the vast' I of Own,' liatle0 and prem atureely to414”-the.,.foupid iii every, commune y, meta, ?4, qi1T4Pat ler* to 'that fire rem le deteriorating, , The cameos lead. lag to .th a dephase an manhood are ifart4;ua, and among them may'beiinen- -iodc d Ryerworked, mental "etraln, loss or sleep ever indulgenco,of. appetitoii, i ea . Lind weans- R# variona lends, al 1 d vit 1. � a r er ea f a v lwi ty rte ed� n In -tQ. 1'a , tomes add promotive decay*,', a rd .often to, insanity To all lona au$e inlor: Wtlliamet Pink' Pills' come ea* boon. They, ;'build .lip "battered nervee, enrich t're blood, atimPlf!te the brain, and reinforce the •ezbaueted system. All wheat eufferin-gtrom,anvoftbe caueos Theoho has been removed t0 the aheve�promisee .'''where P - the should sure sad p ed and will find am:busilyengaged in re wring CARTS them s sure and speedy restorative,p p � OW axil WgIIrdis for the spring trade., roust thoroughly understand the pens that the animal, gig or little. district in which he is._ Diffe.ierlt loug_,or Short, is rut iuto a gear sorts of mines are found indiffel.- tbst plru:,es it, one place and ens ways, says awriter in the St. 'large loose at another, Very Louis Globe -Democrat. If you often the back pad, or part that are,inla placer district, of course, you have.,nothing to do except to walk along a stream, with a pan in your hand, and test the soil by washing till you come to pay dirt. But if you know nothing about it you will waste a great deal of time testing ait-t that an experien- ced prospoctor would know at a glance contained no gold. In a true fissure or contact dis- trict the experienced prospector will walk along fhe bottom of the gulches looking For 'floats,' al- though be expects to find the mine far up the mountain side. The .float is vein matter which breaks off with the settling of the mountain and rolls down its sides. The prospector who is acquainted with the district knows it at once and when he finds it climbs'the mountain till he ascertains where it came from. A tenderfoot would never know what it was. But sometimes a tenderfoot strikes it richer than anybody. The Silent Friend mine at Pitkin, Col., which showed a nine foot vein of solid galena at the grass, roots, ,awas found by two Swede railroad hands who •didn't know what the mineral was, and gave away threefourtbs of their inter- est before they discovered its value Experienced"prospectors had been over the ground thousands of times, but there were no external evidences of the lead. The Swedes found it • by rolling a bowlder down the mountain. The min- eral cropped out from the place where the bowlder had been. The great carbonate fields of Leadville were found by a man who was thought Insane fotysink- ing a shaft where there were no external evidences of mineral. 13.e found the carbonate in a 'blan- ket vein,' lying level as a sheet of water, a great distance below the. .ground. A regular prospector would never have sunk a shaft there. But where one tenderfoot strikes it that way a hundred thou- sand get broke and, go home dis- ousted'.• goes over the back, is so short that in plowing there is heavyFressure on the 1'ackbone, causing sores. The tortures of i11 -fitting harness are intensified by the suri,dew and rain,making it about as rough and hard as it would be if it was made of cast iron. Keep the harness out of the wet as much as possible keep it soft and pliable wi'h neatsfoot oil,especially the collars, which should be kept clean from dirt and hair. Remember, never fail to remember, that we are deep in debt to the working ani- mals for their services. We can't pay all, but let us pay what we can in k;ndness and care for their wants. CANADIAN METHODISM. [BY TEE HON O. MOWAT, PREIIIIER OF THE PROVINCE OF ONTARIO.] In consequence of my official and public engagement at the pre- sent tune, it is impossibleo for me to prepare anything for your 'Symposium' worthy of a place in it. ' Otherwise I should have been glad to vt Ate something by way of testifying my profound appre- ciation of the good done and doing in this Canada of ours by the various Methodist bodies now happily united I do not know that I could express to you that appreciation more strongly than saying I wish a union were practicable and at band between the, Methodists and Presbyterians (as has occasionally been sugg t- ed of late) by which these great branches of the Church of Christ should form one ecclesiastical body on the basis of mutual toleration and fortiear•ance in regard to the doctrinal matters now in differ- ence between them.—[Methodist Magazine for Marcb. tJarrege c� T�ogo� r Albert S Op 1 Fairs Mill that break down one. enfeeh1e the sea. Dr W iillian:ye Pink Ville are sold by all dealers, or will be sent, post paid, on receipt of price -50 lents a box -by Co., Brockville, Out. 1 addressing The Dr Wi Hams Medicine 19I lip' FARMERS AND TfRESE a44S 0 Saw o O p - .•S$OULD USE E.n`IFoat1,„A. CYLINDER r-;d;NL-n-' te MCOOLL B1 ,OS. l'e;�go�.o3e�si $oo :t v°i4ND-- LARDINE OIL, i9sg'^z�stz'� WOOL OILS PURGER o ca s a. A•.Rx$BI� SEE THAT {fHE BARRELS ARE BRANDED Yr,Octri _e F -'i4 j °� ms4d y►°om9 "The Unkindest Cut of All." ENCORE' D Y E S - ONLY, 5 CENTS I ' A PACKAGE. The — Best Dyes in the World ii ViY tilwiti,ilY M i i/ii\Mr Equal to any Package Dye for brigbt and fast colors. Send for Sample Card to J. S. ROBERTSON & CO. Manu- facturers, Montreal. AGENTS, local and traveling at once, to sell rOrnamental Shrubs, Roses, Trees and Fruits. Experi.' Expenses encs unnecessary. Salary and Es p paid weekly. Permanent positions, No security required. Must furnish references tow ti.rms are cheap and cue- as togood o erecter, CHARLES H. CHASE, Rochester, Lumbar' are hard to get. Mention this Paper. But, oi, tee other hand, when farm produce is selling well, up goes the price of farms and buyers are easily obtained. The hi, a -American duty on farm pro..(01• is a large tax on every farms i i4 reduces the sell- ing value of 'arm land. A treaty of unrestricted Reci- procity would increase the selling value of farm lands from $10 to $80 per acre. The day after the election of a Liberal Government every 100 - acre farrfr of average quality would be worth $2,000 more than it is now. The Liberal policy of unrestrict- ed Reciprocity will give the farm- er the benefits of the best markets to sell in and a choice of markets to buy in Every fanner should vote far Liberal candidates. THE WORLD'S GREAT CAT- ARACT. The interior of Labrador un .I doubtedly is the largest unexplor. DCirculation over 100,400 copies AILY. ed area on this continent. Up the Grand River which empties The Press is the organ of no faction ; into the Atlan i at' Hamilton in- pulls no wires; has noanimosities to let, are the Grand Falls, which, if avenge. everything is true that is ieport- ed about them, are the most stn- pendous falls in the world. They are only 160 miles up the river, but only two white men have ever seen them. Mr R. F. Holme went three years ago from Eng- land to vieit Grand Falls. He organized t li,t.tle-party to accom- pany him inland, and arrived within 50 miles of the Falls, when STANDARD LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND. EsTABX.IsaED - - - 1825. HEAD OFFICE IN CANADA -MONTREAL Total Insurance over.... $102,('30,000 Total Invested Funds over... 535,730,000 Investments ib Canada over $5;000,000 Deposited with Government at Ottawa for Canada Policy Holders 52,000,000 Policies issued under all systems, including their new Reserve Bonus Plan, under which very large profits may be expected. Prospectuses and all information furnish- ed at Head Office or at any of the Com- pany's agencies. W. M. RAMSAY, Manager for Canada. C. HUNTER, Superintendent of Agencies. E. W. BURLEY, Inspector, Stratford District • CLINTON, ONT THE PRESS New York, for 1891. DAILY. SUNDAY. tr:EKLY. 6 pages, lc. 20 pages, 4c. 8 or 10, 30. THE AGGRESSIVE REPUBLICAN JOURNAL OF THE METROPOLIS. A NEWSPAPER FOR THE MASSES Founded December 1st, 1887. WHAT A LONDON PAPER Commenting on Sir John's Toronto speech,tbe London News says :— 'The,truth is, all Sir John Mac- donald s emphatic protests of de- votion to the Crown and zeal for the empire are neither more nor less than what he thinks good electioneering business. If be were really imbued with the spirit of affection for the mother coun- try which he so ardently professes he could easily show it by admit- ting British goods duty free at once. Sir Richard Cartwright might as reasonably call Sir John Macdonald a trailtor for not doing so as he can call Sir, Richard Cart wright a traitor for advocating reciprocity. Mr Laurier's able and temperate speech contrasts Most favorably with John Mac- donald's. Minard'sLiniment eurea garget in cows • TBIt' HORSEI1AN There are now 100 trotting tracks in France. O'Brien, who is the beat rider in Australia, is dying of consump- tion. The get of Hermit, the English stallion that died last year, have wen close to $2,000,000 in stakes and purses. The total value of the stakes run for in England during 1890 was close to $2,000,000; 2,102 horses competed for the money. Dr. Wise, of Oalifornia,wb i has gone into breeding trotters ex. tensrvely, recently offered 'Cd. Geers $6,000 a year to go to the The most remarkable Newspaper Suc- cess in New York. The Press is a National Newspaper. Cheap news, vulgar sensations and trash find no place in the columns of The Press. The Press has the brightest Editorial page in New York. It sparkles with points. The Press, Sunday Edition is a splendid twenty page paper, covering every cur- rent topic of interest. The Press Weekly Edition contains all the good things of the Daily and Sun lie was compelled to return on day editions. account of' the failure of his pro_ Those who cannot afford the Daily, or are prevented by distance from early visions. The Labiador Indians receiving it, The Weekly is a splendid say that the Falls aro haunted, substitute. and they carefully avoid them be- lieving they will die if they look i As An Advertising Medium. McCQLL BROS., LAR,.DINE, . - TORO )110Torc • AliSO LITEIYPURE tSMMURCTI RE lONTN,E CAROEMS NI INDIA. We are Solo Agents for Ram.Lal's Pure Indian Teas. We:beg to ask you to give them a trial, because they are absolutely pure; are grown and prepared on the estate by the most skilled labor and improve machinery that money can buy, whereas Chirur Teas are picked an carried by natives long distances before being made ready for ti market. Ram Lal's is a blend of Three Peas grown and prepare especially for ttiis'brand. ' Will always be the Name flavor, to -day.' ten years hence.. 'Tis ("leap; only Fifty Cents -'or a.pound;packag,„ which will go as far as two pounds of China or Japan Teas. J. W. IRWIN, The Times Tea Warehouse Cooper's Old 'Stand, Cor. Searle's Bleak, CLINTON ' - upon them. The two men who have seen them are Mr Maclean, when was'ascending the river in 1639, was stopped by the .Falls, and Mr Kennedy, who over 30 years ago had charge of the Hud- son Bay post in Labrador. Mr Holme says the height of tbeFalls ie not certainly known, but, in some respects, there is little doubt that they are the greatest in the world. Though inner Labrador ieso inadequately known we are aware that it is a vast tableland whose limits are quite clearly defined. In the southeast the descent from the tableland is quite sudden, and almost immedi- ately after leaving the plateau a level is reached that is very little above that of the sea. The Grand Falls are the place where the Grand River tumbles over the edge of this tableland, and almost the whole- of An -great drop is effected in this one descent. Pro- fessor Hind gives the height of this plateau as 2,240 feet. It has neon •.timated that the 'region at the foo- the falls is only 200 feet above sea level, and that, therefore, the waters of Grand River have a 'perpendicular de- scent of about 2,000 feet. 0 The Press has no baperior inNew York. RS flirt%Yih TO THE EDITOR: Please inform your readers that I have a positive • emedy for the above wines dr lase. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently,cured. 4 aha be glad to send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any cf'your readers who have Con- sumption if they will send me their Express and Post Office Address. Respectfully T. A. SLOCUM, M.C.. 186 West Adelaide St.. TORONTO. ONTARIO. THE PRESS. Within the reach of all. The best and cheapest Newspaper published in America. Daily and Sunday, one Year, t5 00 II II six months, 2 50 I I " one month, 45 Daily only, one Year, . . 3 00 " four months, . 1 00 Sunday, one year, 2 00 Weekly Press, one year, . . . 1 00 Send for tbo Press Circular. Sample free. Agents wanted everywhere. Lib oral commissions: Address, THE PRESS, Bnilding, 38 Park Row. NEW YORK. 4 .•.oma THE B. 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