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The Clinton New Era, 1901-06-21, Page 9THE CLINTON NEW ERA. June 21st, 1901 J So many persons have hair that is stubborn and .du 11. It won't g row. What's the reason? Hair -needs help just as anything_else does at times. he roots re- quire feeding. When hair stops growing it loses its lus- ter. It looks dead. el" H3J.t acts almost instantly on such • hair. It awakens new life in the hair bulbs. The effect is astonishing. Your hair grows, be- comes thicker, and all dandruff is removed. And the original color of early life is restored to faded or gray hair. This is always the case. $1.00 a bottle. All druggists. "I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor, and am really astonished at the food it bas done in keeptog my hair from coming out. It is the best tonic I •have tried, and I, shall continue to recommend it to my friends." M.TTIE HOLT, Sept. 24,1898. Burlington, N. 0. If you do not obtain an the benefits you expected from the use of the Hair Vigor, write the Doctor about it, Da. J. O. AVER, Lowell, Masa. I THE SWANETAN3. A Carious People Living In the Iierset of the Caueauus. In the heart of Caucasia Ilea Swaneta, a long but narrow valley at the foot of , the 1✓Iburz mountain, through whichithe Ssi trong Points 7 HE " UDDEN" A'.'ERICAN. What London King Met at a Hotel in The most sudden thing I ever struck was an American. I met him at a hotel in Marengo, in Italy. IIe Bat next to me at the table. He 1 k d t th rd in m wineglass— of course it was the wrong one. -and,.. began, , -breathlessly. '-Mr. IIoosie? Put it there. I knew Floosies in Ne- braska once. Mr. Hoosie, you .are young enough to have enthusiasms„.' and you will forgive an old man for saying that the cathedral here lays over any other cathedral I. have ever. seen. How doyou do? That your mommer or what? I drop ,these cap- sules into my wine for reasons con- nected with the liver. I am in iron and it's wearing. I am trying to in- vent a way of eating in my sleep to save time. Paris is all. fudge and, fake, don't you think? The lovely creature who happens to be my wife is smiling on me like the fair dawn of freedom. She's a judge, so you're passed right away as an aristocrat. Is it meat soup?" Really, he was nearly as bad as that, though of course I cannot re- call his exact words. I said- my name was not Hoosie. Did I look like a Hoosie? And then I glanced up and he was reading his guide book between the spoonfuls. I prefer the English style. They look' through you as if you were a kind of hole walking about, and it is so much more restful. You `haven't to keep on saying how beautiful the scenery is. Even when they do seem to begin to realize that there is a filmy something rubbing elbows with them at table every day they just let the salt melt the ice.—London King. '.1•he body of A, Ferdein, a pa ,adian soldier who had sebved in the Ui,ited Stiles army in the Pnilippines, was 'sent from Manilla to L xiduu, 0 it., by the U,iited States Q Ternment. Russia has raised the duty on United S' at es hies cies at d resins 30 and 20.per cent., respectively. A Repast a school is to be built at -Woodstock. Marengo, Italy. river Ingoora winds, For most of the year Swaneta Is isolated entirely from the. world, and even in the summer season the mountain passes leading to the locality are made extremely dangerous by water currents, avalanches and falling roeks,' There is a strange semisavage people in the valley numbering about 9,000 tam - Hies. They subsist on ,their chase for Wild animals, of which there is an Olin - dance in the mountains, and in the mild season of the year plant just asmuch o hi immediate grain us is required for their necessity. Every now and then a Swa+ netan will wander away from his secluded home into a more civilized neighborhood to sell a few hides and to get In exchange a few things that he misses in his native valley, such as cloth, cotton fabrics and some articles of apparel. But this he does very seldom and with great unwillingness, for his needs are few and his native valley has made him love isolation. They speaka dialect the prim cipal element -of which in corrupt Geer- Sian, with Persian and Firgilese terms of speech strongly intermixed. They are of a pacific nature and extremely shy ,of strangers. - The dress and manner of living of the Swanetaris present a striking contrast to the dwellings they occupy. They cover their bodies with hides in the winter and go about half naked in the warm season and comfort of the year; of'cleanliness r t they know nothing, and. there are no lux uries among teem.. But they' live in an- cient castles of magnificent construction, though more than half ruined: There is quite a number of such castles in the mountains that encircle the. Swanetan valley. The Swanetans • have a sort of writing, and their folklore is rich in curi- ous traditions andquaint legends, point- ing to a time when their intercourse with the world was more frequent .than at present, and when they ranked among the strongand civilized peoples o1 the region. But all this is dying out with thein. They worship four divinities and sacrifice animals unto them. Their conceptions of those deities arestrikingly suggestive of corrupted notions of the Trinity and the Virgin and indicate that they were once Christians, but lapsed into heathenism be- fore Christianity took deep root among them. They are strangers to all that we accept as social mortality. There is a. ter- rible percentage amongthem of lunatics, idiots, cretins, epileptics and those strick- en with cognate, physical and nervous diseases. The physical deformities of the Swane- • tans are commensurate with their moral deterioration and show that they must. have lived as they live now for many gen- erations. " Their heads are flattened at the back and abnormally elongated in the - temples; they are marked with strong prognatism and with diasthem of both the upper lower teeth. As a consequence 0 of cretinism Bich Is prevalent among ,wg em $5,000 Reward l IF NOT TRUE. An advertisement may in- duce a person to try an article a FIRST time. But an advertisemaent won't 1. induce a person to use that article a SECOND time unless it gives satis- faction. Sunlight Soap has a sale larger than the combined• sales of any other three soaps. An advertisement may UN• 'r ducerpeople tit% t y S LIG soils, once.. But it to quality and qual- Ity alone, that makes peopleuse SUNLIGHT SOAP continuously and always. LSV R 6R011inRa LIM1180, Soap Mssufaetur ire, TORONTO. nearly S etans have very The Man Who 1s a Family Nuisance. It is not an uncommon thing for the world to make mistakes and ascribe. to -some men better tempers, to others worse ones, than they actually possess. A man may not only be thoroughly selfish and exacting, but ready to fly into a passion at a small provocation and yet pass for being good tempered simply because those around him are afraidto crosshim and give him no opportunity for. breaking out. His likes and dislikes are always taken into account and considered beforehand. This is known to him, and the sacrifice is . pleasing. ..... • The members of his family—for temper is chiefly a feature of family life -think that peace le cheaply bought at the price of their own inclinations and congratu- late themselves on the fact that papa or Uncle Richard is in such a good temper. The fact is that he is in an abominably bad one. He is probably quite uncon- scious of the fact and unconscious, too, that in theirhearts the other members of the family think him a nuisance and breathe more freelywhen he is out of the house, more freely still when he is a hun- dred miles away. ABOUT a. B. Bs 1. Its Furityr . 2. Its Thousands of Curds: 3. Its Economy. 1c. a dose. NI. Mt. IS. Regulates the Stomach, Liver and Bowels, unlocks the Secretions, Purifies the BIood and removes all the impurities from a common Pimple to the worst Scrofulous Sore, and pialgt1]13 DYSPEPSIA, ' BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, HEADACHE, SALT RHEUM, SCROFULA, HEARTBURN, SOUR STOMACH, DIZZINESS, DROPSY, RHEUMATISM, SKIN DISEASES. GEN. SMITH-DORRIEN. Thur commander of Canadians in South Africa Has Been Appointed Ad- ,jutant-General in India. The long -vacant and important post of adjutant -general in India is at last to be filled by the appoint- ment of. Major-General H. L. Smith Dorrien, D.S.O. - General. Smith-Dorrien is well known as the late commander of the I. . Hollowed Directions. I The servant girl who follows directions explicitly bas always been eonsidered a jewel, but there are some flaws even in the most valuable gens, as this story shows. The -jewel in question was a Scandina- vian willing and vigorous, but net over- gifted,witb intelligence. When she first arrived on the scene, she had never seena refi•igerater before. After initiating her I into its mysteries, the new mistress in- structed her never to leave in, the icebox anything old or left over, but to keep it perfectly clean and fresh by throwing away the old things every morning. On the day 'following this the mistress happened to look out of the window and noticed something peculiar in the. yard:. Summoning the maid she asked: "Sophia, what is that, and boat did it get there?" . The Scandinavian beamed with joy at her own cleverness and in' expectation of cordial approval. ,. from as- h sold ice ma'am,left r "That 1 yes- terday. 'I threw it away lak you tole me." —New York Mail and Exprese. GEN. SMI•rH-D MIEN. Nineteenth Brigade of the. South Af- rican Field Fre, in, which were the e Canadians. As a reward for his ser- vices int thls capacr*ty' and as G. O. C., lines of communication --Pretoria to •Kroonstad-he 'was promoted in the recent Honors Gazette to his present rank from brevet:colonel. 1 Atthe age of 42 the gallant all- r' • has seen 25 years' service in the ▪ f ntrY(mainly ' with the Derby - shires). He has .held staff appoints dente, and has - also seen war :ser- vices in Zululand, Egypt (four cam- paigns), and on the northwest -iron- ies'? W India.' • THE HORSE SHOW. A special 'wagon is being built for Ana Gonda, 2:021,!+. Another trotter has been named Car rle Nation, and this one hails froth Buffalo, The will of a Kansas City roan set. aside $1,000 for the support and care of a favorite horse. Alt Belle, 2:3414, owned by Homer Bros., Greenville, Pa., Is very fast and will surely enter the 2:20 list of 1001. J. W. Miller, Lancaster, Ky.., reports that the fast mare Nora L, 2:1014, has a handsome colt by Ashland Wilkes, 2:17%. The green gelding Prank Powell, noW In the stable of D, M, Lake, Columbus, O„ is said to have shown a mile in 2:0914. Simmons, 2:28, will pass the century - mark in standard performers in 1001, as he pow has 97 to his credit; of which 19 are pacers. Georgena, 2:07%,the winner of the $10,000 Charter Oak last year, has again gonelame, and no _further at- tempt will be made to train her. A good green'one, who will be In Lon McDonald's stable, is Hamward, a 5 -year-old stallion by Hambrino. Last year he showed a mile In 2:15 in a race. The bay pacing mare Lillian B, 2:281/e, has been purchased- by W. S,- Smather, Northville, Pa., from R. A. Stiver, Bradford. She is in good condition and is expected to enter the 2:15 list -in 1001. Sable Guy, 2i27%, lathe nlost.intense- ly inbred of the new sires of 1900. He is by Sable Wilkes (a ,son of Guy - Wilkes out of a mare by The Moor), dam Linda Wilkes (a daughter. of Guy Wilkes out of a dam by. The Moor). BILL OF.THE P.LAY.. Miss Gertrude Coghlan bas been com- . pelled by 111 health to terminate her tour in "Vanity Fair." "Quo Vadis" was . recently - produced In Paris and met with strong approval from a large audience. • Helen Bertram is reported engaged to a --pollee. commissioner of--Detroit..-Ile will be her" third husband. Giving Her ta• Chance: A Cheap Jack Leeds butcher brought. his cart to a standstill in. Lady lane. An old woman looked with longing eyes at the pile of bones and gristle which the butcher loftily referred to as "joints'! and "steaks," but was evidently very' poor Indeed, for she hesitated to pay threepence for a scaleful of "selected bits." "'Ere, 'ave 'em at tuppence," growled the butcher. "It's too much," said the woman. "'Ave 'em at a penny." Still the wotnan.hesitated. There was a look 'of pity mixed with disgust on his face as he murmured pathetically: "Still too much? 'Ere, 'ung it, I'll turn my back while you sneak 'emi"-- London Answers. Chinese Wit. A doctor 'who had mismanaged a case was seized by the family and tied up. In the night he managed to tree himself and escaped by swimming across• a river. When he got home, he 'found his eon, wlrn ,hard Post began to study medidne, and said to him. "Don't be in a hurry with your books. The first andmost im- portant thing is to learn to swim."— Gars' "Ilistory of Chinese Literature." • Sarah Bernhardt went duck shooting while at New Orleans recently and is said to have proved herself a crack shot. Minnie Madders, Flake's tour of the west, the northwest and the north has been one uninterrupted triumph,' ac- cording to all reports. Mme. Seinbrich may never sing in public again. Her physicians have ad- vised the famous .operatic soprano to cancel all her engagements and retire O � 3n Dresden for a rest. t her horne, The fourth nation to bear •"San Toy". Is Germany, when It -was produced in Berlin a short time ago after having been used in England, America and Austria. It met with great success. In' a recent German adaptation of "The Merry Wives of Windsor", Par- son Evans Is made a stutterer instead of a Welshman on the ground that the German has no equivalent 'for Evans' dialect. .. Y, By permission of, the president:Sec- retary Long has issued a leave of ab- sence for the United States Marine band of Washington to visit a number of the leading cities to give .exhibition' • IF THQSE WE LOVE BE, TRUE. what matter i1 the days seem long Because your tie'. ishard to do? Within your heart will burst a song 11 those you love ho true. b What matter it the day bleak, l a iC , No sunbeams pierce the blacltclouds throught Joy to your inn oat soul will speak e 11 those ,o,. Looe be true. 1, What If the world says things unkind And what it knows is false of you? Much happiness you still eau find If those you love be true. What if Dame rortpne, with a frown, Seems e'er your footsteps to pursue? Success your toil at last will crown If those you love be true. What matter, then, what orrice or goes, If life be long or days be few? Life's pleasures far outrun life's woes If those we love be true. LIVE ON A PUNGENT DIET. xt+en Who Devour Tabasco Sauce and Pepper With Great Gusto. The storm doors of a quick lunch cafe on Eightlestreet„below Chestnut, parted suddenly and a man was thrown into the street. When the man thus served arose from the small swamp into which hehad beeu cast, several hundred personsgath- ered around. ' I ,"What's the matter, old mak?" asked a dry goods clerk, "What happened? If I were you, I'd sue for damages,” The man who had been ejected kept very quiet. He was not intoxicated.. He was well dressed and .appeared 'to be a gentleman. He offered no explanation for his abruptexit from the lunch cake. .He bt'irshed :the mud from his clothes and walked away. The purple . faced waiter who bad thrown the man out was simply boiling over. "'.Chat man and a whole lot like him," he said, "have what is known as the condiment habit. It is their practice to -come in and order a cup of coffee, and after they have drunk it they gather •all Mire sauces, the`gait"and pepper and every other condiment, and no one else around the table can get a chance at them. With' the material before them they have a real good time. First they take a dash 'of catchup. Into that go vinegar, the pepper, salt, celery Salt, worcestershire sauce, Molasses. and anything else that. may be handy. This they drink. "We have any number of such persona come in here. • I first noticed it about six months ago. A lawyer. who was in the other night told me that the people that carry on this way are called the condi- ment cult. He said that the desire to . drink the fierce mixture they compound is almost as bad as that which the morphine fiend experiences. • • "As a rule, the men who have tried the trick here are genteel in appearance. When you go to them, at first they make a brave stand for their -rights, but when you throw them out they simply go away without causing any trouble, just as that. fellow did." rIn other restaurants around town the waiters declared that they bad met the condiment cult.' In, one hotel cafe on Broad street the head waiter sald that he had several regular patrons who insisted. on mixing the condiments on the table and drinking the. mixture. "When they are regular patrons," he said, "we simply humor ,them and put the price on their bills, but when outsiders come in we dis- . courage them, -and 'we "icannet.say that they have ever tried to get us arrested." "I know one woman who had the condi- ment habit," said the proprietor of -a Chestnut street cafe. "We let her. satis- fy her peculiar tastes about three times here. Thenit got too much' for us, and we had to give hera talking to. She never came back, and we heard later that she had, been: arredted..fordisturbing.. the_ peace in another restaurant. ` "Once the condiment habit getshold of these men' and .women it seems to cling to thorn. And I have noticed that the. members of the cult decline rapidly in health as the result. An investigator declares that "in (great o Britain the form 'grey' is the 'more fre- qu ity. of Johnson and later English lexicog- raphers, who have all given the prefer- ence to "gray." In answer to questions as to the?r practice the printers of The Times stated that they always used the ' form 'gray;' Messrs. Spottiswoode and Messrs. Clowes,always used 'grey;' other, eminent printing Arms had no fixed rule., THE ROYAL BOX. ent In use, notwithstanding the author= In the house of Gotnrnotls Mr Bil- four Bald there was no foundation for the rumors of peace negotiatiole with the Boers, The Boer force now in the field is estimated at 17,000 men. uhlidren Cry for CASTORIA Many correspondent's said that they had, used the two forms with a difference of meaning or application, the distinction most generally recognized being that 'grey' denotes a more delicate or a light- er tint than 'gray.' Others considered the difference to be that 'gray' is a 'warmer' color or that It has a:mixture of red and brown. There seems to be nearly abso- lute unanimity as `to the spelling of 'the Scots Greys; 'a. pair of greys.' " A Little Too Fast. "Look here, sir," said the irate custom- er to the dry goods clerk, "you sold me this piece of goods warranted a fast color. It vas green when'I, bought it. and,• now It has turned to a sickly blue In less than two weeks." "Weil, rovIam;" expostulated the clerk, I • Claret cup as prepared In England 10' the Emperor. William'sfavorite bever- age. - ging Ed,ward Inherits that Hoe trait' of bis mother'which was .marked. by her faithful care and affection for those. who had spent their lives In her service. The jewels which 'the Duchess of Cornwalltakes with her to Australia have been Insured against all risks for £75,000. The 'duke has insured his jewels for £2,000. An amicable arrangement is reported in Holland by which Wilhelmina is queen and Duke Henry an obedient subject two hours every, day. The rest of the time the queen is a loyal and obedient wife. The children of the Duke and Duch- ess.of Cornwall and York have been brought from York House to: Marlbor- ough House. They will stay with :the king and queen till the duke and duch- ess return from their colonial tour. "you could hardly expect a color togo faster than that."—Lealle's Weekly. POLICE EXPENSES. Better. • "Well, madam," said the doctor, bus- tling urtling in, "how is our patient thief morn- ing?" "His mind seems to be perfectly clear this morning, doctor," replied the tired watcher. "He refuses to teach any of the medicines." ntrlkthgiy Affected. First Scientist—I hear that your dog went orad and bit Professor Snagroots. Any serious results? Second Scientist—Yes. the poor beast is barking In Latin and Qreekl—Chicago News. THE ORIOIINATOlt OR DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS, The original kidney specific for the cure of Backache, Diabetes, Bright's Disease and ail Urinary Troubles. - Don't accept something just as good. See you get the genuine DOAN'S1 In 1899 the expenali of the New York police departmen were $11,182,500. This year they are $11,182,000. The London pollee department costa $8,100,000, the Paris department $E1,,- Berlin police depart- ment and the 000 000 P $1,500,000. Berlin policemen are retired Prussian soldiers. The annual cost of the Chicago pollee department Is $3,300,000, Philadelphia $2,050,000, Boston $1,500,000 and St. Louts $1,400,000. _. The expense of the pollee departnient In all four of these Amerlcan cities, having a total population of 4,100,000, is $8,000,000 a year. • ' . • New York, 'with a total population of 8,500,000, expends in• police salaries alone more than 810,000,000 annually. i. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Never fold up dresses When turned inside Ont. If . [olded on the outside, they will not crease, Kerosene may be safely used with boiling water to whiten yellow clothes. The quantity, required Is it tablespoon- ful to each gallon of suds. Delicate lace -may be cleaned by spreading it, oat on fine white paper and covering it with calcined magnesia. Place another paper' over it and lay It away under a heavy weight for two or three days, A gentle shake will re. inOTO the powder, which will have itis. sorbed the soil from the lac& I b CC1t2 A COLI) IN ONE DAY, make Laxative tiroato Qaintne Tablets. All dr.rggi,te refund the tnoneri it tails ta' mire, *Sets, R. W Gtrovc's sianatars is on each box The Raard of Control will not per- mit the removal of the Macdonald nlonumentin the Queen ie Milt tornake way for one of 4iteen Victoria until after learning the views of the donors of the Macdonald monument. One Other. During Mr. Lincoln's canvass of Illi- nois for the senatorship in 1858 he made a speech in Rushville, a small town in the, interior of the state, which was. listened to with great interest by a young, wo- man who sometimes wrote for the local paper, The Schuyler Citizen. The next number of that paper con- tained an article' from her pen, in which she said:. "So many people had told me that Mr. Lincoln was a miracle of homeliness that I expected to see the -ugliest -man in ilii vols. Instead of that I saw a "man whose face lit up in the most extraor- dinary way when he talked, and I don't care what anybody else's opinion is—I want to say that I consider Mr. Lincoln one of the handsomest men r ever saw."' A copy of that paper was sent to Mr. Lincoln, with the article marked. 4 He showed it to his wife, a queer smile wrinkling bis rugged features the while. "Mary," he said, "I have always thought until now that you were the on- ly woman on earth who considered me a handsome man, and I have not been ab- solutely certain about that, but it seeing there is one other."—Youth's Companion. A Test of Sanity. A gentleman was once being taken over en Idiot asylum. He asked an attendant how they knew when an idiot wad con- sidered to he ,sufficiently restored to san- ity to be discharged. Oh." said the attendant, "It is easily managed. We take them'into a yard -- • •e- . _ are l- troughs. -....Wo- e e severe nbuie fh r g turn on the taps and then give the Idiots bu`kets to bail out the water and empty the troughs. Many of them keep bailing f away while the taps keep running, but them that isn't idiots stop the tap."— London Tit -Bits. 11 Appetite of a Spider. The stupendous naturerof the teak that a man who essays to provide food for some thaueands of these voracious little creatures sets himself may be Imagined when It is stated that a confined spider has been proved by actual experiment to eat 26 times its own weight in the course of a day. At this rate a man of ordinary size would require three • or lour bullocks and from 15 to 20 sheep to satisfy hie appetite dally. ,9,ouDr oss nLo�PrI ".7 n0001111I6u,,,, P,IIIII➢Mll „IIIIBf i1..'1,,e, Ante tablePreparationforAs- similating t-heFoocl andRegula- liing the :.Ituinachs iiitiBowels of INF : ':: i;w'.••iILoREN Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither Opiuni,Morphine nor Mineral. NOT NARCOTIC, .71apeafOldZY S'i1MUFLP/TCBER .rtinvkin Seed- AlsSenna Raai.rl.Salts - feiree" Seed mint Kw* .Seed - Mirir,wFa to Aperfect Remedy for Constipa- tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms ,Convulsions,Feverish- gess and Loss OF SLEEP. 'Fac Simile Signature of NEW YORK.-. tr►arstlt.s old 35 D.osEs'—JJCrNTS' EXACT COPY Cy WRAPPER. SEfl3 THAT THE FAC—SIMILE. S[[:N:ATURE OF - IS ON TFIE WiAPPER OF EVERY BOTTTLT OF CASTORIA Oaatoria is put up in one -side bottles only. It is not sold in bulk. Don't allow anyone to sell you anything else on the plea or promise that it is "just as, good" and "will answer every pun pose;' See that you get 0 -A -8 -T -0 -E -I -A. Tire he - simile: slgnatute� of Loaarp w arappet: , ew :Tweeds erges . said uitings Our Tailoring Departmentartmont is now in charge of MY Robert Downs who needs no introduction. Charlotte Is a "cor'ruptton of the old . $Inglish word eharlyt, which means a dish I of custard, and charlotte rugae 'le a Hu- i elan charlotte. I There Is no didttnetion of parts of "�ypeseett lg the Chiaeee language and Se lt'Ieogaltloon Of the prt'ndpte ofindeetlon. County Councillor Thoe Shaw of gospeler was etuckhy a train whole prossing the G. T. R. track near Res- celer and instantly killed. Mie J. J`. Redpath and her son were i shot in Mrs Redpath'e bedroom at Mon. i t real, and both are dead. No one wit• n eased the affair, and it is a mystery, R a� �o ts' Minton Sasn Door, and 'Qlind Factor. Ll '+�� e J S. S. COOPER - PROPRIETOR, General Builder and, Contractor. This factory is the largest in the county, and has the very latest improved maa abinery, capable of doing work on the shortest notice.: We carry an extensi•fs and reliable stock and prepared plans, and give estimates for and build all class es of buildings on short notice and on the closest prices All wort is enpervis ed to a mechanical way and satisfaction guaranteed. We sell all kinde of in terior and exterior material. Lumber Lath, Shingles, Lime. Sash, -Doors, Blinds, I Agent for the Celebrated GRAYIIMLL SCHOOL DESK, mannfact at Waterloo, Call and get prides and estimates before planing vonr,prdere First class Buqqies and Wagons • We have a large assortment of firstelass Buggies to choose from and intending buyers will_tind our stock up-to- date. Prices are low for iigh-grade goods. Geo. Levis, General Implement Dealer. CIh$en. • First Class Buggies I am handling the celebrated McLaughlin make of buggies and other makes of Arst•olase Ontario Orme, Also of my own manufacture including top bug Nies,mikadoes, eto. of all the latest and modern styles. ]~repairing of all kinds promptly attended to. . JOHN` LES,IE, Huron Street. Minton