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The Clinton New Era, 1891-06-05, Page 3.W, tar „sew--,$A.'Y - e. • .lw lee— .n: -,alar q . thebest news every 'week, Subscilbe for die CLINTON NIW ERA. d TALE OF TWO CH 9,TRS. Elijah on his Lizzie calls Whenehores are done and evening falls Elijah's bashful, Lizzie's shy. But then her parents sit near by. "Good night, Elijah—Liz, good night," paw and maw, by candle light, Go of to bed and leave to bliss Their daughter and her beau, with chairs arranged like this: Elijah 'lows "This weather' 1 do Fur hayin',' Mize thinks so too. "Went coonin"'long with John last night. "Get any coons?" "No moon wa'nt bright." And so they court; naught goes amiss, And Lige and Liz have aimed respective chairs like this: With spartan will to do or die Elijah seems to grow less shy, And chairs become bewitched, I wis They hitch and hitch and hitch until they stand like this: "D'you like me, Liz ?" Oh, Lige," they kiss. Then round gets in round, and chairs resembleehis: THE LAND OF LONG AGO. It was home; that land where our mother's hand Her little one's curls carressed; There we smiled and wept, and as sweetly slept As baby birds in their nest; Now a sigh ascends for the dear old friends; We can never hope to know Any hearts so kind as those left behind In the Land of Long ago ! Then what a bright romance was that first glad chance Into Love's enchanting book; And what thrilling bliss when the first fond kiss From our darling's lips we took; We may woo and wed; bat till life hath fled We shall yearn and sigh also, For the Angel,fair whom we worshipped there, In the Land of Long Ago. Though our dreams are gone, yet we still plod on Aweary with pilgrimage; Let ne do the right, and with evil fight, Till we reach life's resting stage. Then shall friends weep o'er our dream- less sleep In the churchyard layns low; When the Night is o'er we may ake once -more re the Land of Long Ago. DUNNO AND I RNOWIT. I Dnnno atarted out on a memorable trip. With a valiant companion, I Knowit; "Let ns feel our way slowly, says slow I Dunne. I Rnowit says, "Let ns just go it ?" And one would go fast and one would ' go slow In this trip of I Knowit and slow II Dunne. I Dnnno picked his way, felt about with his cane And carefully tested the bridges, I Rnowit rushed on, like a late express train, Over monntains and rivers and ridges ; Ile looked back and Dried, "Get a move on, old slow!" "Oh, I'll go my own jog," said old slow I Dnnno. I Knowit got tangled and lost in the swamp ,,i�nd well nigh submerged in the mire - ,L'Dnnno, he found out, in his leisurely romp, That the ground was too soft, and went higher —I'11 poke withmy oane wherever 1 go, And stub along easy," said slow I Dnnno. I Knowit crawled out all covered with mud,• And banged and battered with bruises; Sails he, "A fellow with fire in his blood Can duff in wherever he cheeses." 'e 'Tis better to go kinder mod'rate and slow, And not get banged and battered," said slow I Dnnno. I Dunne travelled slow, but be got far ahpaa 01 the rapid onrnsher, I Knowit. I Dnnno still said, "Let ne carefully tread." I Ilnowit still said, "Let ne go it 1" I Rnowit brought up in the swamp of Dontoare I Dnnno reached the beautiful land of / Qetthore, THE STOB' OF grE. Only the same oId story told in a,dif. tenant strain; Sometimes smile of gladness and then 4 stab of pain; Sometimes a dash of sunlight, again the drifting rain. Sometimes it seems to borrow from the crimson rose its hue; Sometimes blank with thunder, then ' change to a brilliant blue; Sometimes as false as Satan,sometimes as Heaven true. Only the same old story ! But oh ! how the changes ring ! Prophet and priest and peasant, soldier and scholar and king; Sometimes the warmest band clasp leaves in the palm a sting. Sometimes in the rush of even, some- times in midday strife. Sometimes with dovelike calmness, sometimes with passions rife. We dream it,. write it, live it—this wierd, wild story of life. 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 reeom-, mended to do. Cannaan Forks, N. B., D. KIERBTEAD. John Mader, Mahone Bay, informs us that he was cured of a very severe attack of rheumatism by ueeing MIN• ARD'S LINIMENT. NEWS NOTES. Two variety performers named Leon- ard and Gilmore went into a room at Seattle the other night to settle a dispute over a woman. They fought with knives, and Leonard was killed. A young American clergyman has been so persecuted in Berlin by a Ger- man girl, who threatened to commit suicide before his eyes if he did not listen to her advances, that she has been confined in a lunatic asylum. Hood's Sarsaparilla is on the flood tide of popularity, which position it bas reached by its own intrinsic, undoubted merit. An old apple woman known as "Kitty" has just died in London at the age of 104. She kept a little stand near St.James Hall, where she often gold candy to Lord Nelson and apples to Pitt and Fox. William Welch has atarted on a tramp from Chicago to New York to de3ide a wager of $500. He is to walk the 994 miles in nineteen days, and will follow the Lake Shore traoks. Two years ago Welch claims that he walked the dis- tance west in 21 days. The latest movement against the Jews in Itiissia is an order forbidding them to observe the Jewish Sabbath and com- pelling the closing of their business places on Sundays and other days ob- served by the Greek Church. Judge Patterson, of the Supreme court of the United States, has just handed down an important decision, in which he holds an illegitimate child can inherit its mother's property regard.. less of a willexecuted before its birth and admitted to probate. Nature provides a remedy for all ills, and Dr Williams' Pink Pills is nature's remedy for the ills peculiar to the female'system. Suppressions, weakness, nervous- ness and all diseases resulting from impoverished blood, speedily yield to their treatment. Sold by dealers, or sent on receipt of price —50c cents per box, or 5 boxes for $2—addressing Dr Williams' Med. Co., Brockville, Ont. A Watertown, N. Y., despatch says: Mrs S. I. Cummings has secured a warrant for the arrest of her husband on the charge of bigamy, but he seems to have escaped out of the immediate reach of law. Cummings is a Cana- dian. He came to Watertown with a wife and a baby in 1890. His wife and child afterwards returned to Canada. Then Cummings changed his boarding place and fell in love with Emma Olive the 16 -year-old daughter of his land- lady. The girl learned that he was married, and his lovemaking was in- terrupted for a time. He went to Can- ada and returned, reporting that his wife web dead. He was then married to Emma ho is now the mother of a child twoeeks old. The first wife has discovered the situation and is there to prosecute. Mr Foster did not give much encouragement to the deputation that waited upon him last week asking for the passage of a pro- hibitory law. He said it was a question for the people, not the Government, to decide, that as soon as the people said they want- ed prohibition they could have it, that it would be wrong to pass such a law unless it could be en. forced, that the Government would lose $7,500,000 annual revenue by its adoption, and that he did not know how such a sum could be raised by any other means. Such objections were trivial to Mr Fos - tor when he was manufacturing temperance lectures at $10 a night. flVERYBODY IMO WS That at this season the blood is filled with impurities, the accum- ulation of months of close confine- ment in poorly ventilated stores, workshops and tenements. All these i m jatti 1ti'OnIiiil'"'6very trace of scrofula, salt rbourii, or other diseases may be expelled by telt- ng Hood's Sarsaparilla, the best blood purifier ever. -produced. It is the only medicine of which 1100 doses one dollar" is true. A. Bit of Dveryday Inaoindateney, (Down-Town)—"Hold on a minute, I want to tell you fellows the latest story—best thing you ever heard!" (At Home)—"O, I'm too busy to tell you a story—run away, and don't bother mol" as, COURTING ONE'S WIFE. How a Married Rbinoceroua of Eleven Years Standing Succeeded at the Job. Polhemus Dietz set his lips firmly together, buttoned his coat about him and started for home. "It was as mach my fault as here," he mut- tered, "that when I went home the other day with the idea of courting my wife I didn't seem to succeed. I ought to have known better than to bother her when she was --irking the pin -feathers off an old hen and iridget was taking an afternoon off. I won't nake a blunder like that again." About half an hour afterward Mr. Dietz entered the family mansion. Ile found Mrs. Diltz in the sitting -room. Merely remark- ing that it was a chilly day he threw a pack- age carelessly into the fire that burned brightly in the grate. "What is that, Polhemus?" inquired Mrs. Diltz, somewhat sharply. "Nothing but my pipe and cigar -case," ho replied, with a yawn. "I've sworn off froin smoking." Mrs. Diltz looked pleased, but said no- thing. It will save meat least $100 a year, Mary Jane," observed Polhemus, with another yawn, as he walked aimlessly about the room with his hands in his pockets, "and the habit's a nuisance anyhow." "It certainly is," assented Mrs. Diltz. "I'm glad you've quit—if you'll only stay quit." ldr. Diltz continued his aimless walk about theaveom. Presently he brought up in front of a small closet that he had been in the habit of hanging his smoking cap and smoking jacket in. He opened it, took those garments out, and inspected them. While I am about it," he said, "I'll make a clean job of it. I'll hang these things in the woodshed, and the next tramp that comes along can have them. You can use this closet for anything you like. Seems to me," continued Mr. Diltz, resuming his nonchal- ant walk about the room, and extending his stroll into the room adjoining, "we don't have more than about half enough closets in this house. If I were building a house for human beings to live in I'd put in fifty of 'em. Now, here's a place under this stair- way where I could have a good largecloset made. I suppose you'd object to it though." "No, I wouldn't," responded Mrs. Diltz, warmly. "It would just suit me, Polhemus." "Well, I'll have it done." And Polhemus kept on yawning and strolling leisurely through the rooms. "There are half a dozen other places," ventured his wife, somewhat timidly, "where I should like to have closets built or shelves put up, while you're about it." "All right. You can have all you want." Mrs. Diltz went behind a door and bugged herself, Mr. Diltz continued to walk about unconcernedly. "What—what will you like for dinner this evening, Polhemus?" "Anything, Mary Jane—anything. I don't know but I'd like some hot biscuits, only "Only what?" "Bridget doesn't know how to make good biscuits." - "Why, Polhemusl Ido you like tiny, bis- cuits better than Bridget's?" "I never eat anybody's biscuits but yours if I can help it," "0, Polhemus 1" Mrs. Diltz came nearer to her husband. For the first time in eleven years she threw her arms about his neck and—but nobody has any business to be intr uding here. Please retire. * * M* "It isn't such a thundering bard job, even for a married rhinoceros of eleven years' standing, to court his wife if he only knows how to go at it right," said Mr. Dietz to him- self as he went about the house the same evening at a late hour locking up things for the night. Wifely Counsel. Old Tippletou—liemi I a'pose a man ought to dress in Sober colors daring this Lenten season? Mrs, Tippleton (with deep feeling)—Yes, indeed; and he /should be particularly care- ful about his nose!—Texas Siftings. A Case of Real ]Distress. Tommy—Ma, you must get me a new pair of shoes. ren got a bole in one of my shoes. Mother—Is it a big hole? Tommy -4 -Well, 1 lost my stocking through ft this morning going to school-••-Tetas Sittings. .'±aw�rcrxe Oxer your =Wig 'ewe r : Oe, where..1 .ono t city $tyle t lowest pais . )., , , „i �V1• ; ail Q> QnalPrallPJNLtygill leS wb4mirr,•eeBoc,Nkso 4P$1iBr1t44 121 gP9114."bit lllrftg �t !` Of, xnrasesesen. Totsonteaont.lTh4s Coame ie THE ACTION OF FROST, nOCODt daisy bas been nearly as A potato, no matter bow hard it may be frozen, if left alone and the temperature is equalized, no damage is done to the tissues and the plant is all right. Apples al- so may 6e frozen with arctic radi- ationi and if kept in the dark, and not disturbed, no harp will be done, and the fruit at the end of' a year will be as good as ever. So fine is this point of radiation of heat on animal and vegetable structures, that wood ants may be frozen stiff, yet by gradually equalizing the temperature they thaw out and revive. The de- duction from this is that it is nec- essary to shelter plants at this season from exposure to the uncoluded sky. The timber ques- tion is thus one of the most im- portant that we have to deal with in respect of climate, crops and the effects of sudden and relative radiation. Potato plants were blighted on ]Saturday, but even tender vegetation often escapes frost when the thermometer re- gisters below the freezing point. Even when frost is deposited on a plant the leaf itself is often not frozen, and will not be unless the frost is thawed out too suddenly. If there is much wind and the temperature only just down to the freezing point as it has been this spring, buds, blossoms and leaves may be injured on windward side of the true, while on the lee side the fruit will escape. The pheno- mena will,.,probably be witnessed on many trees this year, and it may induce the habit which some trees have now of bearing on each side in alternate years. Where snowlies ee 0 n fruit blossoms it may protect them. The chief danger in such case would be, not while the snow remained with the germ of fruit hidden beneath it, but when it thawed. Showering trues with cold water as the tempera— lure began to warm would let the snow thaw off with least pos- sible injury to the fruit., Of course if fruit buds or blossoms have been killed the Loss cannot be re- paired the same season, but when frost destroys or injures farm crops, such as corn, potatoes, &c., the evil done may be remedied. The thing for farmers to do when they sufferdestruction of their first planting by frost is to give no time to useless- regrets, but go to work at once to remedy what- ever damage has been done. The first planting, when entirely des— troyed is not an entire loss, The land before planting must be thoroughly cultivated and worlied again. This will mix the fertiliz- ing elements in the soil, and enor- mously increase their activity. Gardeners often say their replan- ted crop, after the first failed, came forward so rapidly that it easily passed in earliness what bad escaped destruction by the first planting, and often was not much behind, even in time. With regard to corn, there is plenty of time yet, and the best plan is to cultivate the whole frosted growth under, and plant anew, even if it is two weeks after this. What was frosted will always bo somewhat stunted by its early check, and the fresh planted corn will always give the larger yield, though usually a little later than that planted first. There is always a way out of most difficulties in which farmers find themselves, and they can find this way by keeping cool headed, never giving up when everything is lost, but pushing f rd to make the best of new s' nations as they arise. WHAT A THISTLE DID A Scotchman living in Austral- ia and visiting his native land, carried back a thistle, the emblem of Scotland, as the reader is doubt- less aware. Agland banquet was held in Melbourne by two hund— red Scotchnien, and the thistle, in a huge vase? Occupied the place of honor in the centre of the table. It was toasted and cheered, and the next day it was planted in the public garden with a great deal of rejoicing. The thistle grew and thrived, and in due time its down was scattered by the winds ; and other thistles •sprang from the seed, and their down was scatter- ed by the winds; other thistles sprang from the seed, and their down was scattered, and in a few years the thistle had made itself thoroughly at home in all parts of II.Australia. It bas rooted out the native grasses on thousands, I could almost say millions, of acres of pasture land destroyed sheep runs by the hundred, and caused general execration on the Scotch - man who took so much pains to import the original. .in similar manner the watercress, the Eng- lish sparrow, the common sweet- brier, and other exotics have proved very troublesome and caused immense losses. The wat- ercress has choked rivers, caused great floods, and impeded naviga- tion; the sweetbrier has become a I strong and tenacious bush which spreads with great rapidity, de- stroying the grasses; and the in - injurious as the thistle, Fift English sparrows were taken toe Australia in 1860, and now there are countless millions of them in all the colonies; they refuse to eat insects like their ancestors, but devote tbems'elves to fruit, grain, peas, and other vegetable things, to the ruin of hundreds of farmers and gardeners. Moral—beware of exotics in a new country.—Mil- waukee Sentinel, BEFORE STARTING. On a journey, place a bottle of Clark's Lightning Liniment in your satchel. A few drops in water will prevent siok nese or pain from change of water. It is better than spirits or bitters as a stimulant, Miners and lumbermen should always be provided with it. All druggists sell it; price fifty cents. If the druggist has not got it for you. It will pay you to wait. Clark Chemical Co., Toronto, New York. COUNTY OF HURON TEACHERS' EX AMINATIONS, 1891. The Primary (III. class) and Junior Leav- Ing and Pass Matriculation (II. clams) Exam- inations at the Collegiate Institutes and High Sebools will be held at Goderioh, Clin- ton and Seafortb,beginning Tuesday, 7th of July,.at 8.40 A. M. Senior Leaving and Honor Matricujation (I. C.) will be held at Clinton, beginning Tuesday,14th July, at 1.30 5. re. Candidates who wisto write at Dither Sea• forth or Clinton moat notify David Robb, Esthan 22 d P. May �staati g at which latero1ie schools they intend to write ; and those who desire to write at Goderioh must notify Jno E. Tom, Esq„ I. P. Schools, Goderioh P. 0., by the same date. No came willlbetorward- ed to the Department unless the fee of $5.00 accompanies the application. Headmasters of High Schools ane Collegiate Institutes will please send the applications and fees of their candidates to the P. S. Inspector with- in whose jurisdiction their school Is situated Forma of application ,nay be obtained from the Inspector or the undersl ned. Goderioh. April. 1891. PETE C DAMSONy Clerk Rochosto tarNanarias Canadian Office —PETERBORO, ONT WANT° few good pushing men to well alae nasus Nurse stock in the Counties of Perth, Huron and Bruce. Our facilites for growing the FINEST and aennnsr trees are now unsurpassed SALESMEN and CUBTOMEns are sure to be de- lighted with our square dealing and fine goods Write for terms AT Owen, and secure your choice of territory Sales for fall 1891 and spring 1892, begin May 1st. Address THOMAS W. BOWMAN, Peterboro, Ont. (Over30 years in the businose) Sanitary Plumbing AND HEATING -0- ALECK SAUi. DERS GODERIOH --0 LATEST METHODS. PARTIC- ULAR ATTENTION PAID TO SANITATION AND VENTILATION PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS CAREFULLY PREPARED Repairing ProneptiyAttended to Three trains daily. Telephone Nol2e. Correspondence solicited "The Doming School of Medi- cine"—The Histogenetic System. Chicago, Jan. 1, 1888. This is to certify that I have made a thor- ough investigation of the Histogenetic Medi- cines, prepared by Dr J. Eugene Jordan,and of hie unique methods of research, and am therefore competent to form a correct judg- ment. 1 pronounce them marvelous pro- ducts of the highest skill, showing an ac- quaintance with the natural science far in advance of any savant with whose works the world is acgiiainted. The amount of time and painstaking which the doctor has expen- ded upon the single branch of spectroscopy is enormous, and bis discoveries startling. Also having used these medicines in my own practice, I can gay that their actual sneoess .n curing disease is as great Ile is their dis- bovery. The revolution of the Medical 3oience of to -day is no dream—it is at hand. J. B, S. Knao, M. D,, P. D. Prof. Chem. and Toxicology, Hahnemann Medical College of Chicago. The histogenetic theory of reaching disease is: Rebuilding the diseased cells and tissues of the body, with the same proximate principals and ferments, organic bodies, and so on, which are normally prepared in the body by the glands, Tho medicines are prepared by chemical pro- cesses. in a perfectly pure condition, and are quite tasteless. Diseasee heretofore considered incurable aro cured by these medicines, -In acute diseases such as La Grippe, Pneumonia, Typhoid, Diphtheria, etc., the patient improves 4t once. TESTIMONIALS. Airs McOulleogh, 601 Adelaide street east, To- ronto—gory rapid cure of congestion of liver and inflammation of kidneys. J� C. Sinclair, 83 Victoria street, Toronto— Bronchial trouble, effects of la grippe, meed in one week. 0.11. Wood, 122 Jarvis street, Toronto—Kid- ney troubl. , gravel and constipation. , Henry Hoperoft, 744 Markham street, To- ronto—Consumption cured in a few weeks. Mrs J Fawcett, 102 John street, Toronto— Female troubles ; had been in Toronto General nospital; also treated by several physicians,; af- ter using Histogenetic medicines for two weeks was a now woman. Joseph Perkins, 125 Tecuinseb St. Toronto— Remarkable cure of paralysis. John Bulangett, Mattawa, Ont,—Nervous de- bility, etc. 30 years • two weeks medicine did more for him than MI the other remedies he bad taken in the 30 years. Thomas Williams, I00 Robert street, Toronto —Codsumption cured in a few weeks, T Iii Hammond, Springfield on the Credit, Ont.—Hemorrhages from the lungs and bad cough two years; consumption eared In a few weeks. Coll or send for free book explaining the Histogenetic system. One of our stall' will Visit Clinton every two weeks at "Rattenbury" Rouse, dates for June are Tuesday 2nd Tuesday 16th Tuesday 30th CONSULTATION P1tE.r liistogcllctic Mcticioc Assec'n Rooms 2 and 3, Albion B;Oet, Richmond Street, London, Hoed Office for western Ontario. Neste 091ee for Canada, 19 tongo Street tear• yIce:, Termite, I COPPS WALL PAPER and Paint Shop Is stocked with a Select Assortment of American and Canadian Wall Papers WITH BORDERS TO MATCH, from live cent rolls to the finest gilt. Having bought my Papers and Paints for Spot Cash, and my practical experience justify me in saying that all wanting to decorate their houses inside or paint them outside will find it to their ad- vantage to give me a call, eA d•Shop, south of Oliver Johnston's black- smith shop, and directly opposite Mr. J. Chidley's residence. JOSEPH COPP Practical Paper 'f v , • •- , , 1 , If you want to know the news take the Clinton NEW ERA. Itch, Mange and Scratches of every kind, on human or animals, cured in 3 minutes by Woolford'e Sanitary Lotion This never fails. Sold by J. H. Combe Druggist. June27-3133, The underslgoedhavo bought out the TA ery bueiuess lately owned b R. Beattie,stn desire ou the cam the Mille that they; o in t:he o1d premitiee, Next VODTMEROTAL IfoteL, deveral new and gooddrivipghorses andtl4 he business, and will be hired a n added p prices. Satisfaction guaranteed, i¢lsaraatead; R. REYNOLDS de s.,0; 1 BIBLES & TESTAMENTS ATCOSI ' ocieghefor Sale at DRBrW0R Bible TOki DE ;: STORE, Albert Streot„atine essortmonto' Bibles andTestamente. r TESTAMENTS no( 8019, ITriyARD - EMBLEM PROM Mite Urwl,xua conk ANDBEE. DR WORT$lrye, c IC I W re wig Woo C2int W tri 2C CO 4 q'o ,.n+wtl.►Y1 liavoyousccollayward'sNowimproyod RoadCar-, If not come and see it beforeon purchase. It nci clumsy bars to climb over 'when gettingein or out. The Boot lor Body is l. There mde, tight, so that no mud can splash through. It has a long spring in front, under- the cross -bar, which takes s off the horse's motion and the jar when the wheel,. strikes an obstruction. Also long spring back of axle, whiohoomes right beneath;;:' the seat and makes it ride very easy. It is so constructed as to be perfectly.,,,, balanced with either one or two persons. Having had several years experience,. in the mannfactnre of Carts, I have no hesitation in saying that I now have; •, the strongest, lightest, in fact the neatest and handsomest cart in the country,`,, We also manufacture a PH.STON BODY ROAD CART, which is ver-- t' neat and stylish, suitable for pnysicians, ladies, or general use. All our 0tr; are free from horse motion, built on mechanical principles, the material ,li9 `p being of the choicest quality, and we guarantee them to be satisfactory int( respects. Persons wishing to try them and see how easy they ride are at liberh.', to call at my shop and do so. We also manufacture fine Buggies, Track Carts, Phaetons. Boggy Tob ' {` always on hand. Our Buggies are not made on the old-fashioned scale, .bo*seattit ;; st all the new improvements, making them neat and light. As this is the time of year you want your buggy repaired and painted; W itN are prepared to do the same in good style and at modest prices. E. E.HAYWARD, opposite Fair's Mill . TO THE EDITOR: rq: CURtti T1® • Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above lzalnl drama. By its timely use thousands ofhopelees cases have been permanently eared. I t11a�I be glad to send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any of your readers 2vhQ have coal ' sumpption if they will send me their Express and Post Office Address, Respee T. A. SLOCUM, M.C„ 188 West Adelaide 8*.. TORONTO. OMTARIIO, The LATEST STYLE IN FINE - GOODS To please everybody, Call and see all the latest shapes. We are constantly offering bargains. We are showing a stook that is wonderful in quantity, quality and style. We also keep on hand a magnificent assortment of 4 —noBATSin•s Our stock is complete and well assorted. We invite your inspection. REMEMBER THE STAND—ONE DOOR NORTH OF THE DRY GOODS PALACE 01-33i0. O -L ASGQW �.�•-'fir-. The Peoples GROCERX We have just added a very select stock of Cottons,Cottonades, Shirtinti Towellin�s, Shirts,Drawers,'. Prints, Flannels. Ladies Woollen and Cashmere Hose, Etc. To our stock of CHOICV FRESH GROCERIES, all of which for ,tile, next 80 days we will offer at the very lowest cash prices. Palrana examine our stock. We are confident you will buy when you lee ot'ir Goode and Prices. G•393O ST W.A.RT Lai c c/*/ IR) : Titra, 'Value Will be given' mill. tt; Lines; for the month of ivirtly. 1L� o liC� CiA.S.i71, And all 1890, or previous accounts, not otherwise ag t; upon, tTiat are not settled during May, will be. pulsed : other hands for collection. , GEO. Nt~WTON y w LoNiozett ll'o,