The Clinton New Era, 1897-06-11, Page 3i
c ,
WE WILL SEND THE NEW 'ERA TO NEW $UBSCB IBE S FOR BALANCE OF 1897, FOR 54 CENTS„ CAS
tomsse • IN Mei MAiL 8OX6'J.
Live Cats, 'empty Flasks and Other
Things besides Malt Matter.
Tha big mail boxes placed in various
parte of the city for the reception of mail
matter other than letters are familiar.
They are about three feet in height, and
they are raised on short legs, so that they
Wlli clear the sidewalk. The top of the
x is rounded. The opening through
hick mail matter may bo dropped, and
blob le about big enough to admit a dio-
tlonary., !o just under the top in front. It
is closed by a vertical cover which turns
down on pivots at the lower corners, and
which is so weighted that it•roturns to place
When released. At the bottom of the box
and extending across is in front is a door
which le secured by a padlook. This door
Or. 0 ward, and when open it forms
Al ,front, continuous with the Boor
o the bek.. These big hoses are painted
red, and on the front of each one is sten-
oiled thin announcement: "Por newspa-
pers and packages, but not for letters. U.
8.g all."
Many thinge besides mail packages have
been found in these big boxes. Sometimes
when the collector unlocks the door a cat
jumpe out and rune away. There are men
who appear to think it le fun to catch a
live oat in the street and thrust it into
one of these big letter boxes. It is not un-
usual to find in the bones loose newspapers,
put into them under the impreeeion that
these are boxes intended for the reception
of reading matter for the sink in hospitals.
Sometimes empty flasks are found. Hav-
ing taken the last drink, the drinker, in-
stead of throwing the Hoek into the street
to be. broken, considerately drops it into
the mail box. Sometimes there are found
in the boxes old shoes, put in by people
Naito think that is a funny thing to do.
There aro found occasionally sandwiches,
or parts of sandwiches, dropped in by per-
sons who have eaten all they want or have
time for of n quick lunch, or by beggars who
did not want the sandwioh that bad been
given to them, and had therefore gently,
but firmly, dropped it into the nearest
package mail box.
Still, these things aro, after all, but in-
cidental. The matter found in the boxes
is chiefly mail matter, and it includes a
great variety of things, packages and boxes
of all sorts and sizes that can be got
through the opening and some that can't
be. Sometimes boxes too big to go through
the opening are jammed in as far as they
will go and left thorn, holding the cover
open. Sometimes rolled up maps are put
in the boxes, or one end of them is thrust
down through the opening as far as possi-
ble, the other end sticking out at an angle,
something like a fishing rod. As the peo-
ple have become more and more accus-
tomed to using them, the bulk of the mat-
ter deposited in the boxes has increased.
The mail from the big boxes is oollected
with wagons.—New York Sun.
KIDNEY GRIND.
South America Kidney Cure the Only Spec-
ific for Kidney Disease— A Liquid and
Solvent— Never Fails.
•
Medical Science has proved beyond a
doubt that the ordinary particles which
pass through the kidneys in the ordinary
process of circulation—and which in time
so grind and wear the organs ihet they be-
come diseased and will not perform the
duties for which they were created--- require
a solvent to dissolve and eradicate from the
system these foreign substances, and the
South American Kidney Cure has proven to
be the best and most scientific specific rem-
edy for su':h and the testimony of thousands
who have been cured by it when pill doses
have failed is the demonstration of the fact
that a solvent must be administered. If
in despair use the remedy. Sold by Watts
et Co.
F. Richrnond, the tramp rent down
to Goderich for stealing a pair of boots
from Messrs Homuth R Bowles,
of
Wingharn, came before the County
., udge and wascommitted to the coun-
ty jail for one month.
The managers of the Brantford cotton
mills are rejoicing in the fact that theY
manufactured more cotton during the last
month than in any simiiar period. Anoth-
er body of capitali'ts— the Montmorency
Cotton Company— is making arrangements
to erect an immense, new cotton mill at
Drummondville, utilizing the rapids on the
Diver St, Francis. It will employ about
1,500 hands. It will be interesting to learn
that the management have turned to for-
eign countries for custdlners. It is the in.
tention to manufacture on an elaborate
scale for the markets of China and Japan.
Acareful personal inspection of these mark-
ete by the agents of the Montmorency Com -
w pony has convicted them— and they, in
turn, have convinced the management--
that
anagement—
that an immense field for trade lies unde-
veloped in these countries.
C
St.tii' tin'le, a
burnla: or.! I
seer'-', in (lin;f;in!g
the lock or n , de
so that the combi-
nation won't work,
Next morning the
bank officers can't get at
their own money. There
may be millions in the safe,
but if their credit depended
on getting at it in a hurry
they would be bankrupt,
imply because the combinatiou won 't work.
, A. sick man is in very much the same fix
about getting at the nourishment he needs
to keep him alive. There is plenty of good
food at band, but his digestive organism is
out of order; the nutritive "combination"
of his system won't work. He can't possi-
bly get at the nourishment contained in the
food. He takes it into his stomach, but it
does him no good. It isn't made into good
blood. He is just as badly off as if the
food was locked up where be couldn't touch
lt. He_gnets„o_strength or health out of it.
Al'real-nutritive conditions have a
pend, 1 cientific remedy in Dr. Pierce's
Goldch Me . cal Discovery. It puts the nu-
tritive "combination" of the system into
perfect working order. It gives the diges-
tive and blood - making organs power to
snake pure, red, healthy blood, and pour it
into the circulation abundantly and rapidly,
Aiidrives out ail bilious poisons and acrof•
s germs, cures indigestion, liver cons-
t, nervousness and neuralgia, and
ds up solid flesh, active power and
nerve force.
Mrs. Rebecca P. Gardner, of Grafton, York Co„
Va. writes: "I was so sick with dyspepsia that I
could not eat anything for over four mqnths. I
had to starve myself, as nothing would stdy on my
stomach. I Was so badiy oft' I could not eat even a
cracker. I thought./ was going to die. I weighed
only Ro pounds, I tried almost everything,
and nothing did ale any good, until f took two
bottles of the 'Golden Medical Discovery.' Ism
flow as well as I ever Was, and weigh les pounds."
A Hunter's Story
EXPOSURE BROUGHT ON AN AT-
TACK OF RHEUMATISM
Nervousness and Stomaoh Troubles Fol.
locked—Sleep at times was impossible—
Health again restored.
From the Amherst, N.S., Sentinel.
The little village of Petitcodiac ie situa-
ted in the south-easterly part of New
Brunswick, on the line of the Intercolonial
Railway. Mr Herbert YeoFnane, who re-
sides there, follows the occupation of a
hunter and traper. His occupation re-
quires him to endure a great deal of ex-
posure and hardship, more especially when
the snow lies thick and deep on the ground
in our oold winters. A few years ago Mr
Yeomans tells our correspondent that he
was seized with a severe bilious attack and
a complication of diseases, eueh as sour
etomaoh, sick headaohe and rheumatism.
r�
1i
Mr Yeomans' version of the facts are:—"I
became very ill and suffered the most ex-
cruciating pains in my arms, legs and
shoulders, so much so that I could not
rest in any position. I frequently could
not sleep nights, and when 1 did I awoke
with a tired feeling and very much depress-
ed. My appetite was very poor, and if I
ate anything at all, no matter how light
the food was, it gave me a dull, heavy feel-
ing in my stomach, which would be follow-
ed by vomiting. I sufferen so intensely
with pains in my arms and shoulders that
could scarcely raise my hands to my head.
I tried different remedies, but all to no pur-
pose. A neighbor came in one evening
and asked "have you tried Dr, Williams'
Pink Pills?', I had not but then deter-
mined to try thein, and procured a box,
and before the pills were all gone, I began
to improve. This encouraged me to pur
chs more and in a few weeks the pains in
my sroulders and arms wet e all gone and I
was able to get a good night's rest. My
appetite came back and the dull, listless
feeling left me. I could eat a hearty meal
and have no bad after effeo•ts and I felt
strong and well enough as though 1 had
taken a new lease of life. My old occupa-
tion became a pleasure to mo and:1 think
nothing of tramping eighteen or twenty
miles a day. I know from experience and
I fully appreciate the wonde-fu'. results of
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills as a safe and sure
cure and I would urge all those afflicted
with rheumatism or any other ailment, to
try Pink Pills as they create new vigor,
build up the shattered nervous system and
make a new being of yon. The go-ui,le
Pink Pills are sold only in boxes bearing
the full trade mark, "Dr Williams' Pink
Pills for Pale People " Protect yourself
from imposition by refusing any pill that
does not bear the registered trade mark
around the box.
11"--- WHY DON'T YOU LAUGH
Why don't you laugh, young man, *then
troubles come,
Inateafl of sitting round eo sour and
Slum?
You cannot have an play
And sunshine every day.
When troubles come, I say, why don't
you laugh?
Why don't you laugh? 'Twill ever help
to soothe
The aches and pains. No road in life lie
smooth.
There's many an unseen bump
And many a hidden stump
O'er which you'll have to Jump, Why
don't you laugh?
Why don't you laugh? Don't let your
spirits wilt.
Don't sit and cry because the milk you've
spilt.
If you would mend it, now
Pray let me tell you how:
Just milk another cow! Why don't you
laugh?
Why don't you laugh and make us all
laugh, too,
And keep us mortals all from getting
blue?
A laugh will always win.
If you ca'tCome on! t'sn allaJoin us! Whust y don't
you laugh?
—laifies C. Cifalllss in Independent.
STERILIZED MILK.
Reeent Investigation Have Strengthened
the Arguments In Its Favor.
Although milk has so frequently been
held responsible for the dissemination
of diphtheria, yet curiously but few ex-
act investigations have been made on
the behavior of diphtheria bacilli in
milk. Hesse found that cholera bacilli
underwent deterioration in raw milk;
that, in fact, when kept in these sur-
roundings at a temperature of 87 de-
grees C. (98 F.), they were entirely de-
stroyed within 22 hours. Caro of Na -
pies, on the other hand, working with
anthrax bacilli in raw milk, etates•that
these microbes flourish abundantty to
milk and abate no jot of their virulence
under these conditions. Professor Sebot-
tellus has repeated these experiments
and has 'entirely confirmed them. Re
has, however, extended his investiga-
tions to the behavtor of diphtheria ba-
cilli In milk.
In a recent number of The Central-
blatt fur Baktertologte, Part I," a sum-
marized account is given of these re-
searches, and it appears that in fresh
milk diphtheria bacilli find an excep-
tionailysatlsfactory material'for growth
and multiplication. In sterilized milk,
however, their growth was not so abun-
dant and was leas strongly marked than
in the ordinary broth used for cultiva-
tion purposes. As the milk was only
sterilized for half ell Belo' by means of
the ordinary Soxhlet apparatus, this
difference to the vitality of the diphtbo-
r1a bacilli in the raw and heated n;t1k,
respectively, could not have been due
to the milk having become acid through
heating. Hesse has Shown that when
milk is subjected to prolonged sterilisa-
tion at a high temperature it exhibits
an acid reaction.. Professor Schottelius
concludes his paper with a warning,
now so often repeated, of the danger at-
tending the coneumptfon of milk in ire
raw, unsterilized condition.—Nature.
Tho tate
emilo
signature
of
.t2i.*3atrC.
444
xii
is on
story
wrapper.
On a Modern Cattle 6hlp,
The staterooms urs these big boats are
'anitdship and have ample accommoda-
tions fur 60 passengers. -Prom the com-
mencement the experience was delight-
ful. It was almost impossible to be-
lieve, as far as the motion of the vessel
was concerned, that we were on the
ocean. For Instance, the rims on the
tables to catch overflowing coffee or to
stop the antics of fruits and foods were
missing. There was no need for them.
The explanation of the remarkable
steadiness was In the fact that the ship
had bilge keels—two extra keels, like
fins, running along the sides and pre-
venting that rolling which is the de.
epair of weak stomachs. This Improve-
ment represents the latest development
in steady transportation for animals,
and If the 800 quadrupeds we had on
board appreciated It as much as the 60
bipeds who gloried in the smoothness
and the comfort of it all they lived 11
of tfptest days of their lives.
Other Woe, still larger than this, are
now buildifig.
The trip to London takes 11 days, and
on the fifth day out I accepted the cap-
tain's Invitation to accompany Win WI
his morning inspection, "although, for
that matter," he added, "you may visit
any part of the ship at any time you
choose." Directly after breakfast we
began the journey. There were nearly
600 cattle and 200 horses distributed on
the three decks, and up and down the
aisles between their protruding heads
we walked. It was a bit doubtful at
first, but the captain seemed to be on
friendly terms with his cargo, and there
was not the slightest danger. "How are
you, old boy?" was his greeting as he
felt the ears of the animals to see if any
of them had fever. When the captain
was asked why he used the masculine
exclusively, he explained that the cattle
taken to England's markets are bul-
locks, and it became clear why the offi-
cers at the table had smiled when the
ladle gravely discussed the advantage
of going over on a cattle ship because
there was always a certainty of fresh
milk.—Harper's Weekly.
MANY WOMEN DECEIVED
At the present time many manufactur-
ers of crude and adulterated package dyes
are making lively efforts to induce the
wholesale and retail druggists and grocers
to buy their dyes.
These common dyes are quoted at euch
low prices that some profit -loving dealers
are tempted to buy them. The profit -lov-
ing dealers then take care to sell these
adulterated dyes to the inexperienced and
careless at the same price the popular and
reliable Diamond Dyes are sold for.
This iniquitous and deceptive work he s
caused a vast amount of loss and trouble to
many in Canada, and will continue as long
as women are foolish enough to take any -
thin that is offered them.
If hone dyeing is to be a successful and
money -saving work, every women should
see that she gets the Diamond Dyes as
they are the only guaranteed package dyes
in the world.
J. A. Gregory who has taught the
Winchelsea school quite successfully'
for a numder of years, has resigned
and will pursue his studies flitting
himself for higher spheres. His re-
signation takes effect at midsummer.
It is sad to think, sagely remarks Life'
how much we have to read about the war
between Greece and Turkey, and how little
satisfaction we have got out of it. It has
not been pleasant reading, because the
Greeks have been thrashed. It has not been
profitable, because, however much inform-
ation
we may have got,
we can make no
o
practical use of it. Then, too, we have read
a good deal of news that was not true, which
was a waste of time, and we have read much
which has mace us think rather better of
the Turks and worse of the Greeks, and
that was contrary to our wishes.
WITHOUT A PEER — WORKS MIR-
ACLES.
Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart is with-
out a peer. This great remedy relieves in-
stantly the most aggravating and distressing
forms of heart disease. It is the surest and
quickest acting formula for heart trouble
known to medical science, and thousands of
times has the hand of the grim destroyer
been delayed by ite use. If there is palpit-
ation, shortness of breath, pain in the left
side, smothering sensations—don't delay or
you will be counted in the long list of those
who have gone over to the great majority,
because the best remedy to -day was not
promptly used. Sold by Watts & Co.
The 9,1(13 postoflices in the Dominion in
1899 were used for the postage of 116,028,000
letters, 24,794,800 postcards, 3,505,500 reg-
istered letters, 4,808,800 free letters, 24,024,-
000 newspapers, periodicals and circulars,
2,352,000 packages of printers' copy, deeds,
policies, &c , 1,320,700 packages of mer-
chandise, 331,700 parcels post packages, 22 -
630closed parcels for the United Kingdom.
The mails are carried over 14,699 miles of
railway, an increase of 206 miles over I895.
1here has been a very great increase in the
amount of correspondence between Canada
andjChina and Japan. Some 229,738 tetters
went to these countries, an increase of 49,745
as compared with 1895.
Belleville.
True to the Last.
One of the best and most popular shoe-
makers in Belleville gives evidence to an
important matter.
Mr Wm. Kemp, the well-known shoe-
maker, says; "My wife has been a great
Anfferer of nervbee find heart troubles for
the last 20 years. She was in a very bad
state, bad pains in the region of the heart
extending up over her shoulders, and she
was so nervous that she could not sleep at
night. Her appetite was almost gone, and
although she had taken many kinds of med-
icine both from doctors and proprietcry art-
icles, she reoieved no relief froni them. Sat-
ing an advertisement of Milburn's Heart
and Nerve Pills, I got a box with the faint
hope that they would help her, She has
taken two boxes and the results are some-
thing wonderful. Her pains have all but
left her. Her appetite is good. She sleeps
well, which is one of the greatest blessings
she has experienced, and she has improved
in every way.
"I will recommend them very highly and
feel that no other remedy could have achiev-
ed a result in so short a time. (Signed),
Wm, Kemp, Belleville, Ont." + aTreka,...:,,,•,
atop
Laxa Liver Pills mires constipation, bil-
iouenees, and sick headache; 25o.
a..
TAKE NO IfISIs.
Do Not Fool,shly Experiment
With Medicines That have
No Standing. -or Rep-
utation.
Paine's Celery Compound The
Only Medicine that Cures
and Blesses the Sick
In matters of health and life no man or
woman eon afford to take risks yr experi•
ment foolishly. A wrong move, or follow-
ing the advice of toe careless or ignorant,
may result 10 serious oumplteutloua. 'Pits
is especially true uf Luetlwtues ebtu people
are in a low condition of health.
When the physical powers are impaired,
when you are weak, nervous, irritable, de-
spondent, sleepless or weighed down with
that dull and tirtd feeling that usually
con:mor.c.:sal ibis Eine of ti,a year, it is
wine and pruueut to use the medieiue that
has given h a;th, vim au,t activity to thou-
sinds of weak peop.e 11. the past.
This safe, oertain and health -g; vin„ rem
edy is Paine's Ce.ery Compound which is
now so extensively prescribed by the ablest
doctors in Caned . The indorsetsof Paiue'a
Celery Compound, besides those in the or-
dinary walks of fife, are clergymen, law-
yers, judges, members uf pa lraureut and
bankers, hundreds of whore 11 has restated
from sufferlug and death.
Avoid the numberless liquid medicines
that are worthless from a medical staud-
poiut, and /het have never gained the sha-
dow of a reputation. Put your faith in
Paine's Uclery Compound, and when you
put chase be site you are Supp ted wltu the
right article. See that the buttie load box
bear the came -.Paiue's Uslery Uumpouud"
wall ttie stalkrof celery : that Is the Only
;,euuine make—the kind that malas prop:
weal.
Whaling at Amagansett.
Away out on the eastern end of Long Is-
land, almost as much at sea as though it
were an island by itself, is the little fish-
ing village of Amagansett. It lies directly
on the ocean, and has neither harbor nor
wharfs nor ships, yet it is known far up
and down the coast as a whaling town, for
it is at this point, strange to say, that the
whales come nearest to the land. They are
sighted first within a few miles of Ama-
gansott.
The weather seasoned surfmen, who fish
through the breakers for food fish, will
give you a dozen reasons why this is so
and why their little navy is unique among
the fishing fleets of the north Atlantio
coast. But they are mostly guesses, and
we only know that the whales have fav-
ored Amagansott thus for many years.
During all the summer and fall the hardy
fishermen who live in the gray cottages
among the dunes set their nets for blue'
and weak fish, but from the end of winter
to early summer they become fishermen of
more heroic cast, and chase and take and,
land the biggest "fish" that swims—the
whale Nearly every season whales are
sighted by the life savers who patrol the
beach, or by the lookout at the life saving
station, and when one or more of them are
taken, the oocasion is one to be marked
with a white stone in the history of the
sleepy little village.—Harper's Weekly.
Smoothing Irons.
Irons may be made to last for years, and
they may be treated in such fashion as to
wear out In a few mouths. The first great
secret in their preservation is to keep them
from rusting. To this end, when not in
use, they should bestowed away in a clean,
dry place. If, in spite of this cure, or,
more likely, because of some neglect, they
should still become rusty, rub them thor-
oughly with lard and l':;eswax and then
with sandpaper.
A Strict Regime.
Briggs—I'rn thinking of moving over
to your boarding house.
Griggs—What for?
Briggs—My doctor told me not to eat
anything with my meals.—Detroit Free
Press.
There's nothing makes a man madder
than to know he has made a fool of him-
self after having his own way about it.—
Adams Freeman.
There is no better ballast for keeping
the mind steady on its keel and saving it
fromp11 risk of crankiness than business.
-, ...est e,:..
THOSE WORRYING PILES
One application of Dr. Agnew's Ointment
will give ou comfort. .Ar'pIiel every night
for three to six nights and a core is affected
in the most stubborn ca.cs of blind, itch-
ing or bleeding piles. Dr Agnew's Oint-
ment cures eczema and all itching or burn-
ing diseases. It acts like magic. 35 cents
Sold by Watts & Co.
They Got the nen.
The trustees of a church near Detroit
found it necessary to establish a fund to
purchase a bell. The membership was
small, and composed principatl•y of per-
sons who were unable to do more In a
financial way than they had already
done toward building the church edifice.
Grocer Smith, one of the trustees, be-
lieved it would be a good plan to solicit
contributions to the $200 required among
the few well to do members of the con-
gregation.
"If Deacon Brterly took a notion,"
said the grocer to another trustee, "he
Is able to buy the bell. He won't,
though, because he's the closest man in
the village. I'm going to him just the
same and do my best to make him see
his way clear to give us $100."
The first man the grocer solicited the
next day wan Deacon Brierly. The
deacon was unusually grumpy that
morning and was nearly unnerved when
the grocer explained his mission.
"I know I'm a member of the church,
hut things are so close that I can't do
much Just how."
"How much will you give toward buy-
ing the bell?" asked the grocer.
"Well, I reckon I'll give as much as
anybody," declared the deacon,
"You were always good at your word,
deacon, so you and I will buy the bell."
The grocer held the deacon to his
promise. The grocer was not a wealthy
man, and it came a trifle hard for him
to spare $100 from his capital, but it did
him a world of good to 'near the bell
tolling a few months later. — Detroit
Free Press.
Tho fah
almi to
denature
K
C7.E7ilH1'Z' C 1:>Ei-TA.
,r.•----+ a as
��� very
�x^
wrapper.
HIS FIRST- POEM.
. Longfellow's Computation o1. the Irate of
Mr. Fiuney's Turuip.
When our great poet Longfellow Was 0
years old, hie mestur wanted hire to write
a composition. Little Henry, like all chil-
dren, shrank from the undertaking. His
master cold:
"Yt�1 can write words, can you note"
"Ydll;" was the reply.
"Then you can pub words together?"
"Yes, sir."
"Then," said the master, "you may take
your elate and go out behind the school-
house and there you 000 find something to
write about, and then you can tell what 1t
is, what it is Per, and what is to be done
with it, and that will be a ootnpouition."
Henry took his slate and went out. He
Went behind Mr. Finney's barn, whiult
chanced to be nearby, and, seeing a fine
turnip growing up, he thought he know
what that was, what 1t was for and what
Would be done with it.
A half hour bud been allotted to Henry
for his first undertaking in writing coo•
positions. In a half hour he carried in his
work all accomplished, 'and the plaster is
said to haps been affected almost to tears
when he stivq la"* little Henry had done
in that short ti 5.
Mit. FINNEY'S TURNIP.
Mr. Finney had a turnip,
And it grew, and it grew,
And it grow behind the barn,
And tho turnip did no harm.
And it grow, and 1t grew Mfr
Till it could grow no taller.
Then Mr. Firinoy took it up .
And put 11 is the cellar.
There it lay, there it lay
Till it began to rpt.,
When his daughter basso washed h,
And she put it in the put.
Then she boiled it and boiled it
As long a.4 oily was able.
Then his c:tu;;:t:or i.t.:zie lock it.
And she put it un the table.
Mr. Pinney and Lia vviie
Botli eat dawn to sup,
And they tit:', :.r,.' t!.: me
Till they ate ti-., to. _i:;. up.
ow cork Tribune.
THL YtT. r
Che Las Ever Known. s of Praise
from a New York 1 • for
l t/E PILLS
" I would like to t:dt', in;• tr.rt9.tncny to
that of '1b,•ry who •,a . •1'1; ;errs
and 1,' say thrt 1 luta, t�..l -n them
tor many years, azel alwi,.y.t Jeri \ ret the
best rami Is fro10 i.19ir use. 1'Ur stom-
ach and liver tr.,nllle,, mit' for ;lir' cure
:rar!acl;a cans,•1; :, : brae derange-
tueat.,, Fl;; cr'a iris c;;ul:i.,; bn equaled.
When my
frirnl5::1.-
a rnr whet is the
best remedy for di.Aor,l: r, of the stom-
ach, liver, or lint eh,, Iry !nt•ariablo
answer is, Ayr's l'iRs. Tr,krlt in sea-
son, tht•:• will 'inial; lip n cold; prl'vent
la grippe, sheik fl cl r. incl rc.;trh:te, the
digestive organ,. files; are easy to
take, and are, indeed. t;,l' le•• l oil -round
family medicine r have ever known."—
Mrs. Mar Jut:ssoa, I.idur Avenue,
New York City.
AYE ti'S PILLS
Highest Honors O1: World's Fair.
Ayer's Sarsajarilla Cures E;rou disorders
TO
Cure
EUMAATISM
a'ggE
r i sto l's
SARSAPARILLA
IT IS
PROMPT
RELIABLE
AND NEVER FAILS.
WILL
MAKE
WELL
Ask our Druggist or Dealer for it
�� 5�� ,'S ISAPAlIILA.
5T
Makes the BEST BREAD.
''r,'-Yeetteeeetta r .*/ ai ; ,'j - ).,
11111 .11 111111 1111111.1
11.1Itm1
P,hLiliplllpu11 U tit qullu out It
P111.1.1111,111111,111 1161. I"py LlufI 11111 01114111111115
AVegetable Preparation for As-
simita ting the Food and Reg ula-
tigg Stomachs andBowels of
WESTEMMEMI
Tl
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful-
ness and Rest.Contains neither
O lum,Morphine nor lifuleral.
ISTOT NX RC OTIC.
I.YcyveofOldL'i•SAMTJ LPI7b@B
Pumpkin Sad -
Alx.Jrnna .
R.di.l4 Sdhr -
4ini11
Shie
(�"9cudda fr-
aJ
r
ivarFla;
mc
•T.
A perfect Remedy. for Constipa-
tion, Sour StomAch,Diarrhoea,
Worms ,Convulsions ,Feverish-'
'less and Loss OF SLEEP.,
Tac Simile ''Signature of
NEW YORK.
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
.
FAC -SIMILE M1'
SIGNATUR .�°'
IS ON THE
01' EVERY
BOTTLE OF
CA$TORIA
Castorla is put up in one -sine bottles only,
is not sold in bulk, Don't allow anyone to j1e11;
you anything else on tho plea or promise that'i.
is "just as good" and "will answer every puri,
pose." Jai' gee that you get 0 -A -8 -T -041, -I -A,,;
Tho fao-
dmile h ona"..;
oigsatsre-t%LLG�t(/�: suety.,,,•:.
qt vrappsfs
.:i4e.l,,ollaitahralele., .„1'•ci;,a ,..c't : ....,Fa:{rr•rY ''
siness
The partnership existing between J. McMurray and H. Wiltse has beers
dissolved, and the business will be carried on by the undersigned, who•
will be pleased to receive the support of all old customers,"and as many
new ones as may find it to their interest to give him a trial. All goods
to be found in a first rate Grocery, as good and cheap as any, will be
kept in stock.
Bargains for a few days in Dinner,
Tea and Toilet Sets. Cash for Eggs.
H , WI LTS E, CLINTON, Phone 4
zJ
Rady for Business SEIEI'PARI) Ss The Clinton Family Grocery,
Are now ready for business with a new and select stock of Family Groceries,
Floor, Feed. Provisions, &c. We guarantee our valves to be the very'beat in'>
the market. TEAS a specialty. Tei m a Cash or Produce.
t3 HEPPARD & BEACOM teCo o Bloc,
�1.r9 , Opposite Combe Blocn, Clinton
\Vhy Don'i You ISS A FOB
THE SAVE TIME AND .TEMPER
We Handle the Celebrated Lapham's Rival. It has the:,
Slotted G &pillory Feed Piece, therefore will not flood
or drop ink.
N
•
Do not allow Dealers to press upon you lines "just as good,:
•
but get the best.
LAPIIAM'S RIVAL
If your Stationer does not handle it write us and will sendyo1. .4
our reduced Price List.
The Copp, Clark Co., Ltd., Toronto
To rho Madden Yeast Co., London, Ont.
Gentleman,—We get qusult
icker and bettor res from
ming, Mrs, Mndden's Yeast then any Other we kava
hood, and hlRhly reeomntond (t DEAlf BB08., Ilnkore
THE MADDEN YEAST CO., London. >
a
MRS. JOHN
CASII. My husband has been
troubled with dyspepsia,
and finds IZipans Tabules
the only relief. He has
bccn troubled with indi—
gestion for the past fif-
teen years.
:.r
i