The Clinton New Era, 1891-05-22, Page 7ir
itipitpri In tha neat Hollis �ba a feted by
univerebi suffrage at thereto panni
se., a .vete- '• The beadisnd of ,,Sµniuw
would bete natural advantages fel;
calmp.groundarid eceleaiaetioal; uwim-
miee sehopi, and in keeping with the
spirit of the age brawn sed muscle.
would be dexeigped by a well-Peedeeted
gyntnaeium with spelling and eros»-
tion dies attaphment.
He sours have paid 3Q per cent, of
the cost of a new (Angell at Crete out
o£ these drawing neogeeities. $e could
naive Demm
as Doe down and run a sub-
soription, or Apolloe come over from
Aahaieeand gives few leoturee on mar-
riage, or'"Fools,» or ""Fox ,Hunting,"
or on "Snail," or on ""Hard Rows and
How to Hoe. Them," or on "Noses," or
`•'Heads and Fame," or "Phrenology
and Physiology," or the "Ten Lost
Tribes," or some kindred theme, this
would pay another 20 per sent. The
remainder could rest on mortgage at
lowest rates of interest till exourelon
time. No wonder he was an unpopular
miserable old fogy. Why, he preached
the Gospel to them at Mars' Hill and
then started off to do the same thing
at Corinth! One dollar contributed to
the treasury of the Lord's House by the
heart of love and the hand of faith will
travel farther over the areas of heathen-
dom and outlive more succeeding sal .
enders than one thousand wrung freest
the penury of some worldly grad/rind,
squeezed from the check • nook of
some religious sponge by"" ,,+he delicate
financiers of some new -dangled alter- •
ation.g
1 uugQn63t d-drei3s•
•
1ti oonueottion wide We closing ex.
cissa of V ietgria 'ljii{jyeadltity, lied
Maxwell, of. �'droantox gave an addxeae
entitled, "iThe pulpit ivaattad V. t
pulpi t needed."The brilliant el?igrai?]msa
4f .phe reveiO4d *leoturerty�ere free
gtle>ttlY Anatuated With rood Appian
tYe
the
daY
an
the
anal
s-
ed
0,t
he
o -
ay
s-
er
se
io
or
a
The following' brief synopsis. wipl g
0,91040 pee, of the breezy etyle of
ederesa,- -T,ae congregations of to-
P� g, MAT 1$91. a>•e clamoring for a 'pulpit that a
draw," said the lecturer. The "ma
The Yolulptee?r Serviehe• netic pulpit'" advooatea aaswnetleat
generation of novelty -loving Atheni
are pot all interred in Mare Hill Cean
tory. Hence a combination is form
with the evening newspaper. Contra
the physicians' cards or those of t
legal profession with the "pulpits t
mot row"-lolumn and who would not a
that the former accord to their prole
Bion the greater dignity. The lett
seem rather to make an effort to eolip
the "Sports and Pastimes" or "Mus
and Drama" or "Wit and Humor"
"Odds and Ends" columns. Claptra
titles to sermons, claptrap illustration
and claptrap methods of delivery,epioe
with a Gospel solo, often only
jingle of claptrap words, with
request that the congregation unit
in the still more claptrap chore
Such is the programme of the magneti
pulpit.
ToIeep up the magnetic influence o
this popular pulpit, theologians hay
been known to take lessons from thos
who "tread the boards." Reverend
gentlemen figuratively strutting befor
the f otiighta, and the pulpit elbowing
ay ,into the regions' of the melo
1c¢rivietions In parliament without r ma. When the Greeks of eighteen
bila'motiou being distorted, and oheruNas announcing g
the meanest kind of insinuations mono they asked the significant ques-
tion, "What will this babbler say,?"
The inference is easily drawn, .' itn
tinted walls, frescoed ceilings, m,iiiorial
windows, lily -crowned pillar4, opera
chairs, Brussels carpets, •magnificent
organ, concert music, varied with a
snatch from waltz, marohy oratorio and
chant, with floral displays around the
altar and aisles adore 0,d with ushers to
match, wonder,' ,t that a hightoned
pulpit :is des _ended. In this artistic
realm pies Loping must be reduced to an
art ac„ religion degraded to a science.
Tire ambassador of the cross has sub-
stituted for a pithy, pungent, practioal
presentation of truth a twehty-minute
essay written on perfumed note paper,
a Sunday evening concert or rosewater
oration. Brevity is in such demand
that in one ohurch the minister adver-
tises that his sermons will tak only
twenty minutes in delivery. would
be interesting to known how long they
took in composition. Auother minister
announces that the service in his church
would not last more than one hour. It
would be interesting to know how long
the worship of God lasted. The all -day
service of Ezra has been abridged to the
half-day service of the Covenanter,then
the quarterly service of the Puritan,
then the two hours of our fathers. rhe
treatise has given place to the sermon,
The shrmon to the sernonetto and
one alternative only remains, either
the sermonium or obliteration.
Whish the "pulpit needed" demands
the highest order of manhood.
Dimes, decorations and degrees, dipped
in a solution of systematic theology will
not make a minister. Tho divinity
selected heralds of the now c)venant
when filled andlfortified by the Godhead
of truth furnish excellent samples of
the men referred to. They were neither
invalids nor exquisites, nor drones, nor
tailors' blocks, they were neither
essayists nor reciters. They were no
ascetics, bleached and skeletonised by
indoor life and midnight meditations
through whom sunbeams might shine
and wind blasts blow, The "pulpit
needed" demands rich -hearted clear-
Daring' a discussion in the
Odus'e' a few days since Mr Chart -
ton, mentioned as one instance
where •,o»'rent expenditure
conld be curtailed, the amount
annually spent on volunteer scr-
viiee.. ^F.or •this remark he has
beer" .assailed ie the most virulent
winner by the Empire, which al-
leges that "the remark is an evi-
, donee of Mr Char tort's t"aitorous
leas ings," It is tirne.the Empire
• c«aecd giving utterance to such
itleane, got. No one believes it,
and it,. is only degrading itself. It
rias corns to a pretty pass if a
Qmbei' cannot express his honest
made 'against him. Mr Charlton
is not.alone in his opinion that
it1;0'inoney spent in this way does
:not r,roduce the best results. The
Kingston News, one of the most
uneh supporters of Sir John 14
;airs- he same opinion, and does not
}"hesitate to say so. If Mr Charlton
h traitor, the Kingston News
mAet be also, for it says :—
about time the country
exiously reflected on The large
amount spent ever; year for mi-
iitia purposes. We spend about
"e a million and a quarter dollars
annts7iy' on this trench of the
,ppllic service, and the result is
not, we confess, eminently satis-
factory. Ifthe object of the ex–
lrend�lture is to foster the military
spiirii and to develop soldierly
'babits among the volunteers it
cannot be said to have succeeded
n its object."
That the volunteers have rend-
ered good service wherever it has
been necessary to call for them, is
admitted; by all, but that it is
gler Wise or prudent to keep
Buell a large force is a point upon
'which there is considerable room
•
for Bout t.
A HANDSOME GIRL.
;is " thing of beauty and a joy for ever;"
but where the charms of youthful
`'health, the rosy lips, and pearly teeth headed, martyr -spirited, ,yell -balanced
sere accompanied by the breath ofca- men. There is no room in the pulpit
tarrh 1 Why it is time that the maiden for shadows cf men whose brainlessness
bought Clark's Catarrh's Cure, price and heartlessness are hid by the
50 cents. This would cure the catarrh
at once, and'save her chances if not her
life. No other remedy so easy and
;• pleasant to take, and nothing else so
awe. There is no excuse for an offen-
sive breath when it can be avoided and
prevelete'd. ,e easily and pleasantly,
Bashful ladie may send the price di-
root to C1ar Chemical Co, Toronto
New York. i
PECULIAR SORT OF
INDIANS.
In Manitoba and the western
lout of British America, where I
spent some time, I came in con–
tact with a very peculiar race of
Indians. They belong to no parti-
cular tribe, and in fact, to no
pparticular race, having Indian,
scotch and French blood in their
veins. They are the descendants
of the old Scotch agents, of the
Hudson Bay company and their
Indian wives, with a dash of
French blood from the Canadian
woodsmen. Their hair is fre
quently of a light brown and
wavy. They speak bad French
and all have tho broad Scotch
burr. They hold themselves aloof
from the full blooded Indians and
the French half bloods, and are
_he best carriers to be found, for
no other Indians can compare
with them as runners. Sixty
Telles a day is no uncommon
. journey for them. By constant
J intermarriage tboy have preser-
ved and strengthened their
peculiarities, and consider them-
selves a separate tribe. They
number about 5,000.—Interview
St. Louis Globe -Democrat.
GALLANT RUFUS CHOATE.
iOn a pretty girl saying to
Rufns'Ohoate, 'I am ve^y very
sad -yon -see,' he replied, '0, no ;
yb>ti belong to the old Jewish sect;
you are very fair -I -see ?'
14othing adds so much to the
beauty of a fair girl, as a clear,
bright, healthy complexion, and,
to secure this pure blood is indis-
pensable. So many of the so -cal-
led blood -purifiers sold to itnprove
a rough, pimply,muddy skin,only
drive the scrofulous humors from
the surface to some internal vital
1rgan, and disease and death is
the inevitable result. ,,On the
t;ontrary, Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery strikes direct-
,ly at the root of the evil, by driv-
• -mg the impurities entii ely o trbf
jhe system, and with a 'esb
retain ¢f pure blood so, ; ing
'thg v'etti8,nothi b ho
d, ialrrsst e ' 1 i its
nothingness of an empty ambition to
make "a mark." The "pulpit needed"
requires not less divinity, but more
humanity; not less Godwardness, but
greater manwardness ; not less interest
in the "other worldliness," but 31oser
contact with "this worldliness"; not
less a3quaintance with modern lan-
guages, but greater intimacy with that
wonderfully complex humanity that
makes these languages the vehicles for
converse and commerce ; not less re-
sponsive to the will divine, but less in-
different to the treacherous eddies that
endanger unwary mariners in the on-
rushing current of human affairs. The
days of danger are not all past, while
Satan synagogues are being freely pat-
ronised by professors of religion and in.
fluence and money that should give
wings to the gospel are poured into the
coffers of theatrical dramatic terpsi-
chorean, and Bacchanalian enterprises,
while t3 the chief rulers in many of
these synagogues is accorded a welcome
to swell the praises of the sanctuary at
leo-called sacred concert and even on
the Lord's Day.
This is no time to lower the danger
signals or lay aside the trumpet. This
is certainly not an hour when the her-
alds of the Cross can afford to play the
roll of aproned cooks] serving out del-
icate dishes to poisoned constitutions,
or gliding slowly and softly through
the halls of society like turbaned nurses
with a smooth word of prophecy in the
mouth, and bowl of thin gospel gruel
,1;or chronic invalids, and in the other a
roll of soft elastic doctrinal bandages
for chronic soreheads. Oh for watch-
men faithful to their commission
though it provoke opposition and cause
the babelmonthed multitude
"away with him his usefulness is ended
on this circuit." Why? Because he
denounced Herod our riohest man, or
Tertullins our cleverest 'adherent, or
Druscilla our society belle, or Simon
Magus our most generous contributor,
or Felix our chief magistrate, or Shuisai
oar scribe, or Judas our treasurer, or
some of their families or fancies or
follies or fashions have suffered by his
message. What antiquated notion ob-
tained with Paul and what a slow -coach
he was in running church! IIe went
down to Phillippi and aoted as though
preaching Jesus and the resurrection,
coupled with the aele.tion of a personal
experience, was alone necessary to sus-
tain a prosperous church. He even
allowed himself to be betrayed into the
chimerical idea that the treasury of
the Lord could be abundantly supplied
by each member laying up in store and
contributing on the first day of the
week as the Lord had prospered him.
Who ever heard of snob a fiscal policy?
cIf he has any knowledge of human
needs, not to say natural niggardlinesse
he could have so arranged aisle extract
from the unwashed crowd a few sheokels
to replenish the funds of the ohurch
and relieve the deacons. ' A sham glad-
itorial contest could not fail of sucoese
in Macedonia, and, if conscious squirm-
ed, he Could ofts'et its objections by de-
voting the proceeds towards belpirg
"thepoor saints which were at Jerusa-
lem. " What a golden opportunity he
lost at Athens. In that esthetio center
an art exhibition in the line of Madame
Jarley's waxworks would have been an
immense snooese. The beautiful prom-
ontory at Salamis would have been a
grand place for a picnic and the bine
waters of the y would invite the
oarsmen to a tryst h, Witkrantitigan ana
trance fob, t+►iiile i t Meat popular poi.
pi;QYl l<i! SIS p' xT , 1S
I M..a au i1ustiat of it of theft ioapoi
upon the Tapanese character, take
the ease of a young man who was
very rich and Qwned a oreweiy
in the neighborhood of Tokio, the
capital of Japan, fie bought a
Bible from a colporteur one day,
read portions of it, oamo to the
missionary, and after a season
professed conversion. Then the
question of the brewery carne
up for decision, Under the
teaching of the missionary he was
led to see he could no longer as a
Christian be a brewer. He re-
fused to se)1 the buildingt lest it
might continue to do ii,'ury to his
countrymen. oHe had a large
stook of sake , twhich is as strong
as our whieacy'), but instead of sel-
ling it i�?� n de all the barrels be
empt' „dont; the building he got
fit,tl�up for a church, and the
,Aiospel of Jesus Christ is being
preached in it at the present time
to hundreds. A smaller building
he gave over for a high class girls'
school, and under a Christian tea-
cher adult girls are receiving a
literary and Scriptural education
in it. This made his faith mani-
fest by his works. Surely we
cannot fail to keep Japan before
our oyes and bear her upon our
hearts, that the day of her com-
plete subjection to Christ may
speedily arrive.
AT:tirOST LIKE MAGICb
r
Is t, effect of Clark's Lightning Lini-
t when applied to a burn. It stops
e pain instantly, and even in the
worst cases the healing is rapid and
thorough. There is no other prepara-
tion equal to it, and in the States jte
use has become general in the hospitals.
Clark's Lightning Liniment stands
alone as a Pain Alleviator. Sold by all
flret-olass druggists; price fifty cents.
Clark Chemical Co., Toronto, New
York.
NEWS NOTES.
Mrs McLaren, a resident of London,
Ont., celebrated hor 101st birthday
anniversary on Tuesday. The old
lady is in good health.
Rev H. O. Hoffman, of Bloomington,
I11., says there is no hell. It is just as
well, however, to take no chances on
the matter and -stink to the straight
and narrow path.
"Lightning, " reports the Boston
Herald, "played a queer freak in a New
Hampshire town this week. It took
off the tail feathers of each of twenty
hens sitting on a roost and affected a
rooster so that he has not been able to
crow since.
There are only fourteen members in
this seventh Parliament of Canada who
were elected to the first after Confeder-
ation, and there are 26 who were
returned in 1872. The names of the
fourteen are:—Bourassa, Bowell, Bow-
man, Cameron (Huron), Cartwright,
Costigan, Daoust, Edgar, Geoffrion,
Langevin Macdonald (Sir John), Mac-
kenzie, McGreevy, Mills (Bothwell).
General ° Booth, of the Salvation
Army, has no reason to complain of
the manner in which the British pub.
he is supporting„ his philanthropic
schemes for the reclamation of the
lapsed masses. Mrs Orr Bell, of Glas-
gow, who died recently,lhas bequeathed
the residue of her estate, which, it is
believed, will eiceed the value of $300,
000, after payment of certain legacies,
to the General for the purpose of the
Salvation Army.
Winnifred Gavin, or Old Winnie, has
been charitably cared for by neighbors
at S,t. Cbatharines, Ont., having re-
presented that she bad not a shilling.
Sunday night she died and a few hours
before the end handed over securities
amounting to 52,000, of which sum
she ordered $500 to be expended for
a monument and the balace to be given
to the Roman Catholic Church.
A horribe affair occurred Saturday
night at Mansfield, a mining village
down the Ohio river. James E. Stewart,
a miner, on reaching his home remind-
ed his wife that they had been married
five years that day. Stewart had been
ill-humored all day, and began to up-
braid his wife for unfaithfulness. In a
moment of passion he hurled a lamp at
her bead. It struck the ceiling and
descended in a shower of flames over
the woman. She was burned almost
beyond recognition, and her husband,
Stewart, is in jail and almost insane.
The circumstances surrounding the
death of William Barbour, a Canadian,
at Portland, Oregon, ten days ago, and
whose body was three days later found
n the Columbia River, are most mys-
erious. Mr. Barbour had been engaged
n general merchandise business at Leh
-
non, Ore., for about a year and a half
nd had been very prosperous. Previ-
us to that time he worked a large farm
n the Canadian Northwest, which he
old before removing to Columbia Riv-
r district. Five months ago he came
b Ontario and married •Miss. Minnie.
eal of Whitby. relations of deceased
eside at St. Marys.
Mr Gladstone is the latest of the
rominent men of 'Great Britain to be
nnonnced as on the sick list. Mr Glad -
tone went tochurch as usual. Sunday
orning. and seemed to be enjoying
is usual health. In the afternoon,
owever, the veteran statesman was
eized with shivering fits. Mrs Glad -
tone, alarmed at the symptoms, sent
orMr Gladstone's family physician.
he latter, though not pronouncing Mr
ladstone's illness to be of a serious
atnre, declares that Ms Gladstone
net not leave his roe'r, for several
ays.
The Clevland papers see: a of a won-
erful revival of religioe is the Prot-
stant churches of tl, et city. The
evival has been going on for nearly a
onth, growing more powerful every
ay, and the revival meetings are
ttended by multitudes of repentant
inners, over 7,000 of whom have signed
onvereion cards. On Wedensday of
ass week many of the factories and
tores of the city were closed so as to
ive the employes an extra opportunity
f attending to their spiritual duties,
nd the scenes at some of the churches
n Wedensdy afternoon were very in-
eresting.
There are now nearly five thousand
stablishmen in the United States
ngaged in raising f.lants and flowers.
More than three hundred of these are
wned and conducted by women. About
orty million dollars capital are invested
n the industry and nearly twenty
honsand persons employed in it. The
rod
pts duringfin the census year were
slued at terenty-six million dollars—
welve millions for shrubs and plants
nd fourteen millions for out flowers.
Among the products were nearly 'fifty
million roses; Fonr.•fifths of brie busi
nese has been developed within the past
wehtyyears. ighteen hundred estab
labiate* have prang ftp since WO,
WHAT IT COSTS
Must be carefully considered by
the great majority of people, in
buying even necessities of life.
Hood's Sarsaparilla commends it-
self with special force to the great
middle classes, because it com-
bines positive economy with great
medicinal power. It is the only
medicine of which can truly be
said '100 Dases One Dollar,' and a
bottle taken according to direc-
tions Will average to last a month.
A GREAT EVIL.
The Bishop of Wakefield writes:
I do not think our young men
have realized the greatness of the
evil, summed up in the two words
'Betting and Gambling.' They
engage in these things from care-
less thoughtlessness and the plea-
sure of excitement, and seldom
feel until too late the danger they
incur. 1 am not one of those who
can teach that every little trivial
wager is a sin, any more than I
teach that it is a sin to drink a
glass of water or of beer. But
when I see the terrible fascination
which the practice of' gambling
gradually exoreisos,and know the
ruinous effects to the moral char-
acter ' +,f0, gambler, not to speak
of the 1„ •' y coistantly inflicted
on the t,.., .-eat by this passion. I
am bound to warn all whom I can
influence against the subtle
growth of a habit which always
begins with acts which seem harm-
less at the time. The parallel
with drinking is very close. In
each case habits are the product
of repeated acts, and in each case
the surest way to avid the for -
'nation of the habit is to avoid the
separate acts which tend to pro-
duceit. Little bets,and games play -
habits in which the excitement of
ed for very small stakes, grow into
winning or losing becomes a pas-
sion utterly destructive of high
moral character. This passion
grows into a .disease which en-
slaves and dominates the whole
man, and ends (if by God's grace
the end is not averted) in ruin of
body and soul.
C. C. RICHARDS & Co.
GENTS—I have used your MINARD'S
LINIMENT in my family for some
years and believe it the best medicine
in the market as it does all it is recom-
mended to do.
Cannaan Forks, N. B., D. BIERSTEAD.
John Mader, Mahone Bay, informs
us that he was cared of a very severe
attack of rheumatism by nseing MIN-
ARD'S LINIMENT.
UNDER DRAINAGE.
The autumn is the •best season
for underdraining. The ground
is usually in a more favorable con-
dition for prosecuting the work at
that time, and there is generally
more or lees of this every season.
It is unfortunate that much of the
draining that hos been done -in this
copnlry has not been done to the
very best purpose, owing to the
imperfect way in which the work
bas been performed. We know of
no branch of workwhere the care-
fulexecution is of more importance
than in laying drains, because of
the difficulty of making repairs.
if a wagon wheel gives way
through defective workmanship
it can at once be removed and the
weak part repaired, but where a
drain is to be mended the chief
part of the work consists in get-
ting down to the defective part to
make the repair. Drains that last
only a few years aro very expen-
sive,and material that will not se-
cure effective work for a long term
of years should not be used at all
now that tiles are so abundantly
provided, .If an underdrain is
well laid with good tiles it should
continuo to do its work for gen-
erations, and , with increasing
l
lat.lel than decreasing off:' !etivo-
ness, owing to the more thorough•
filtration in the soil as the years
ro'1 on. The me core of the value
of a thein illi. that of its Weakest.
lank.—Prom The Canadian 1i'00
Stook Etna Jeornaafar May.
The undersigned is Agent for this well-known Waggon, of which a very large num-
ber have been sold during the past years. It recommends itself, for people no soon-
er see it than they are able at once to appreciate it. I sold 8 this season within 30days
Robt Beatty, of Orangeville, writineAto the Company says:—"In summing up my waggon sales for the last six years,
I find I have sold over 400 Chatham Waggons, and in all that number I have not heard of one break or one loose tire. I,
therefore, must congratulate you on building the best waggon in Canada." It is said by some waggon makers that they
have spent a long life in the business, and that, therefore theirs is the better waggon. If this be so, how is it that this
company, who only commenced making waggons seven years ago, are now making and selling more waggons than the
whole of them put together? Simply because the public appreciate the fact that undoubtedly they make the best waggon
in the Dominion to -day ; and hereby invite anylone or all those waggon makers who make this claim for their waggons to
a test of waggons for ease of running and parrying capacity against the Chatham Waggon for 5100.
I am also agent for the Oshawa Noiseless Gear
Buggy, an article that sells at sight.
Also the Daisy Hill Road Cart, claimed to be
the best cart in Canada, and also carts of other well-known
makers. ,
I am still handling the Champion Sylvester
Plow, and also keep in stook the Scotch Diamond
Harrow.
All the above are offered to the people at prices to suit
the times.
HORSE SHOEING.—Last summer I inventet
the Heart TrottingShoe for increasing speed in horses
and made sets for the following well-known horsemen: I
Bossenberry, Heneall ; Livingston, Blyth ; Roe, Wingham
Barnes, Brantford ; Fitzsimmons, St. Marys ; Beattie
Bros., Brussels, and others. These parties expressed them-
selves as delighted with the shoes, and we are still receiving
orders from different parts of Canada.
All kinds of Repairing, Ho: seshoeing, &c., done on
short notice.
Parties may rely upon finding me at the shop at any hour of the day, as I am determined to give close personal
attention to all work entrusted to me.
THOS TIPLING, ONTARIO ST., CLINTON.
When Baby was sink„ we gave her Caatorla,
When she was a Child, she oried for Caatoria,
When she became Miee, she clung to Caatoria,
When she had Children. she gave them Castor'
1liinard'sLinimentlumberrnan's friend
Cook v. Vance, a case which is ex-
pected to come off at Dufferin assizes, if
a settlement is not affected in the
meantime, is a most extraordinary case.
The plaintiff, Richard Cook, a laborer,
of the Township of Carrick, Bruce
County, sues Davie Vance, a wealthy
farmer of Waterloo Township, for
55,000 damages for the seduction of bis
daughter, Ellen Jane Cook, it appears
that in January, 1879, the plaintiff's
daughter went to keep house for the
defendant, a widower with a grown up
family. In April the following year
she became a mother, and when her
father charged Vance with being her
seducer, Vance declared that they
were married. The two lived as man
and wife until the 10th of April of this
year, five children being born during
their twelve years seeming married life.
In the beginning of the month ment-
ioned Vance, who is bordering on 70,
was taken seriously ill and is now said
to be on his death bed. He was not
satisfied with treatm ent he was receiv-
ing in his sickness from Miss Cook,
and a quarrel ensued Rhich ended in
Mist Cook leaving the house and taking
her five children with her. She im-
mediately disclosed the fact to her
father that she and ,Vance were not
married and then this action was com-
menced. It is alleged in the pleadings
that after the plaintiff's daughter be-
came pregnant the fourth tilde the de-
fendant induced hor to take drugs with
a view of procuring an abortion, and
damages are claimed for her suffering
in consequence. It is said that Vance
is willing to marry Miss Cook on his
deathbed, but is not prepared to make
what is considered a reasonable provi-
sion for her and her five children.
THE RIGHT
The new model of the Rockford Watch,when
placed in a screw bezel case, will fill a lon
felt want among farmers, es it is not due
proof only, but very strong. The plate
which the wheels work between, not being
separated by pillars as in the ordinary
WATCH
But by the bottom plate being turned out of
a solid piece of metal, with the edge left for
the top plate to rest on; it also being pend-
ant or lever set with sunk balance to prevent
breaking, making in all a good strong watch
For a Farmer
J.
BIDDLECJMBE
FO R
Insect Stings
Sore Eye_
Eruptions
Sore Feet
Soreness
Chafing
Cata .;
Brun'-
S
gel
Cuts
Piles
Female
Complaints
MV squ)to ,Bites
sunburn
In-f-lammation
REFUSE. SUBSTITUTES
BE SURE%HAT BOTTLE
WITH B U FFWRAPPER
LOOKS LIKE THIS,'"`
MANUFACu i8re MAY s .
POND'S EXTRACT COM15ANN
t .ybllftlAYNtYJYoliit..
CASI!-
HAVE
YOU
EVER
THOUGHT
WHAT •
THIS
PAEANS
TO OU?
GROCERIES
Glassware,
Crockery,
AT _
HARD TRIES PRICES,
FOR
GASH OR TRADE
J. W. IRWIN,
THE- NOTED GROCER.
Solo Agent for Ram Lal s Pure Indian Tea
THE B. LAURANCE SPECTACLE
pertteles a 1 Eye Glasses are the only genuine English Ar Herts in the Canadian market
re r: , a in n dad by and testimonials have been received from the Presidents of the Medical
Or' ,t ion o Canada, College of Physicians and Surgeons of Quebec, and scores of the best physici a rr
of nntario. The B Laurence patent test card used in an cases and guaranteed to fit a accurate/
a, machine We gun: tutee satisfaction For sale only at.
CI�IN''UN.
R:'ANS:
Guaranteed 7 year
Piano Cases.: Mouse •o'
�
Proof Peda
I have organs to •
rent by the year it/ti
or month. �►
coxae to theno I will
shopal/
p/18,47 for
al o sell my
particulars rr�� ORGANS
aid guaran-
4I tee against
failure tor
ett*o years
4 Organs sold o
rev Monthly Pay-
ments
•
plAtios.