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The Clinton New Era, 1879-07-17, Page 6• II • esaelj.e.meneumplry--- • TRE ciANToN NEW ERA, .0414040. 'JULY 1R79 Anterietille At Macon, Gi., on Friday, the the. moreeter registered 100 c' ia the shade." A lantlthy and well-informed won -Hite has lived at Laconia, N. IL, 42 yeers' withou‘gaing .mile friatie: and shellites not leeen on-gato etreet, in theateet4,14noliet4lian ',-aejtneatl:tIrnes .A. young women in France was re- cently eendernned to death for causing the death of her attpdatigh ter, a child of• 8 years, for compelling her to take 16 pins, ; needles.and pante, pieces of wood bbr amp. ' 66e diedin greaktorture. G. W. -Bryant, of New York, was ewatoned..hy ,-the tOtesi ,.pf a burglar who had" cieteeedh eefilence on Tues- day morning'. The burglar struck him in tixe•,faceewith aijireley,• when Mr. Bryant alifit t hitt, With a revolver. The burglar cried Mv Clod, I'm shot,' but rpn.awityriod epeaped,,, 7 „ Louis Soldagter, a buteliev , in the Chippewa -Market, avierop, camp; etalvii fit anothet, .7'Mi ", llet., • for throveing a pietO of Meat at Moe He threw a butcher knifeat Idleroitrtking, hint .in• the ;lege encl",41tering an artery,: wiliChOineed death in 'thirty Minutes. Schlagter surrendered himself tto the Trolice. . Wm. Watsone „once .4. noted and wealthy Brooklyn fobecconiiir Mid. in- ventor of the tinfoil wrapping for chew- ing jebaccer, diecrroj,t 5:1141.1„*ItY He vie Ott -Mkt; Wykiniefoettenee in liete years. He has buried nine ehildren. and leaves, a wife blind encl. penniless, • A friend Onc,e i smp1oypromise1 to, bury the body. • , • An absent-minded man in Aloproe, Conn., went. Id 4chnfe4the other morning with his oiereoat, as he pose, on on his arui; but the laughter �f • the peoPle in church direcreff1iiimiTES7-1. tion to the fact that he had taken his -ever*tley pantaloons, end that .tbe sue• -, pendersitttached to;thein were dangliug 4)60 his legs.,- • Avery Moore, anbx-Westside collect. tor,.who. tsvo years a,ger ran away to .Cda, a defaultete.ito extent.. of $8.,000.,- has returned, and through 'his ` daughter, who iset teacher inthe public schools, a 'compromise has beemeffected. A large itnaeunt . has already been paid • by the daughter, and she guaranteeethe The we (..t General Grant has sent an tetioe to the lerincies.Letriee to'visit her in W'aehington non 'whiter. Ten whites end fie° negroes died of suntitroltis in Charleston, S. O. on Se- rdiee,e A Texas minister who refured to mer- ry a eouple without his fee in advance, went on with the ceremony when a coven - shooter touched his chin. A reckless drunkard at Shakopee, Minn., crunched wine glass between hi 's teeth and swallowed it. Ile soon died in dreedfelsgeey. mitti.efer XM.Setteete Valle, i -N.1.1 is charged with hiring a livery horse Red svaggon, swapping. horsee istx times, in two days andelettrenfug•to the, stable, with the same horse as he took out, _having made $100 by thei,operatien. L. S I atb,,,.au aged"- man fot merly prosperous lawter at New York, and w ho chi bus to havtfAestiCthe' ties% tie raise tbb Atrenectenelitegin- CalIfornia, .was WORM last .Saturday; night to ''';`,,i-eiTe447,41gtettiiet A'S teflon letitteee •••Yor1e4.,4er:Vielg bbeit robliicrisf le4weitell and all his money. . • Mre. W. A. Mlithews, a woman said •. to be Worth $10,000;' was buried in Potter's Field, Now York,. On. Wednest ' " -dey. ,-Areangfinients for:Efereineeil • been made by the stater of the deteetee.d, ,who.emPloyerl an undertaker, • On Sa- turday, the 'thy ea for the feneyel, the undertaker denianded the, payment of bis bill, $125, Which she .was unable to • dcfarenee'" .He tlienre� dt1 bay frotna:' handsome roseweed coffin, and • tiettified the health •authoeitiKetho bent it to the Mormie. •• •'• • •• . • -A ample of runaway. rovershad a license, to tuarey in Olary et:may; Incl.', • hitt the train on which they 'wereing elop- ‘ only... totiqbeel Alse„ corner .of that - 1 county„. ind.-Withent .stoppingi, • cereinony w.ciuld be illegal if performed in . another connty, enlea a new license was • obtained; In this. dileninia they. • pealed to the contender, iceho stopped the eiain fOe 'a. "few Minutes /on 'Clark • COurity..soil; while a elergyinan hur- riedly tied the knot. Thn.paeeerigers were, permitted, •to' kiss •the bride', • as compensation for the delay,. , The Ogeten (Utah)'ifredateta says that, •- during Jay Gould' s. recent trip in the West,a bend,o desperate train robbers . ' peAted therteblyee a1angiheiijuarded , -plains of the:nee:of the Union Pacific • railroad With the.idea of catc.hing him its he went through. to Ogden. The robbers:proposed to take himinto the • British posseeSions Lind thereskeep • • until he shouldpey an immense ransem, Geoid .heard of the plot, lifierallY re- warded his:informant, and made hie es- cape. •• •Aria widow, lacking, only.two years ,• of half. a century. and dressing bee hair - -six- tiines-a ,:dayon-in n,' Ky,, felFin :love 'with: a youth of nineteen whb had been .working On her farm. Her two step.eons ordered hien to leave •the towie_and threatened to use a ahot-:- • . guu, if he should ever attempt to return. . The widow their he lad :to. town,' intr- • . chased Tor 'hire ft suit , of • clothes and charged, him to get • a- license. The young man did•as be eves told, and when they were married she carried him home and asked EV ., step -sons' what they • meant to do about it. •, , • ,A plot for the .wholesale release' �f . prisonere has, been frustrated at .Mase. •'State Prison. Several weeks wee a letter from one conviet to anothet was entereepted, which disclosed -a plot to - • capture certain. teilleers, "thus releasing 150 prisoners; then to.•take "possession of the railroad train which rune into. the prison yard -nearly every day, and using the train RS a battering -rain, batter down the atikance gate . to the prison, thus opening a' way of escape for several hundred Convicts, rriday was selected on account ot its being a visiting day, when the °Moors would be engaged With callers. Had an escape beemattemPted, Many lives would, no doubt, have been lost, and the prison emptied of nearly all its' Occupants. The details of The plot rere probably arranged on • the 'Fourth of .Tuly„ when the eonviete werq tOgetha in the yard, as is. the oustom on thee holiday. • • • .13 2s..t '�f TeXac) steels werelring &liven through Central Park, when eolue of the animels broke from the herd and went areeeie,:e thrangh the stiefeeliTelly per- iled h`y pellet)" and. erods. Several people were welted on their. horne, and severe) eterseeered. A fetefetn7awitee .0004;Iiiioritva • A man at Chapmanville, Va, heti :a tette:nee to find out hewlong •he cotild trod on, ,11),.tees, Rehhers took Ths money,' haft iikqiixetz'o' time, and left him. By pressing his toes On the ground he:J.1991d relieve the cheleing of the nooze around his mok, and in that way he steotl for thirteen hours, but was. on - he -point of-givi•nrupeerbenehelp wine. An impromptu inock,auotion sale of omen wae.amusing lapel profitable, at first in a Wisconsinchurch fait.. The yoeneemen bid liberally for the atteac- tive:eirls, until a hemely but influential sister Was put •The auctioneer was oompelled.tianock.heedetwnfor 25 Ole, 'and ishe.Wics so angry that she.- put on her things and went IMMO, . . Michael Stillivan; a farm hand atSgritigfield, N. 5., Was arrested on Sa- turday, charged with tryiue to kill an •tifivnrtardifeb"-tiffitit-Firifive".77§iiiti- van'e deughter,,Neyierug of1.5,,eae.'e birth to thee Child eti. Feidtlf nQraIng,1' and liivaiitok the childtoetliis gar - :den and.: buried it, face. downwaed: Suemicion • Was aroused, OA the :Childs, When unearthed, was still eliviebut died shoitly"after..!: : • . The pledges ofthe New York Iltisinees NIen's Society for'the encouragement of reodereitionitrdtheleinebteve been *lige. ed he 11,000 'persons eine& lest2April, and 20O business men are actively :line •Wasted in promoting its °Meet.. One of the rules of the :tiocietyis; that no one.intist ask another to take A drink or to iteeePt`„" of 7- IC drink NM' another. • Thet•e is,no doubt that . treatingiii One ' orthe !wort piiseible'ineentivee to . • • An irascible fether in Dalitenega, Va.; • one day last week sent his son after .a 'bucket of te'atterr The lad not returob!g in time, the father started -after •hitn in • forage, and -on arivina th7e.wAtil saw -a boy drawing tip water. - :Without talk- ing time t� lookolosely at the youth, be • thrashed .c him . severely.. When, he thought the by sufficiently penished he discovered:that, instead of his own, . he , had Whipped a neighbor's son,' • At GeneVa, imi;" Wednesday morning, Allan Richards, a Well-to-do harness maker; was, for some trivial Of, fence, chastising his Sonin the barn An older brother oP the boy took ()seep- • tion..„to, the :punishment. • The father, enrierecl at something the .son said, threatenTdicenge.atieeon all,, especially his wife. The -son, as ho. supposed, tq save -hie mOther, -produced, a knife and cut his father's throat so, itie thought, he will clic., . , -Miss Greee.and -Mr. Newsier- stood at :the "aancel rail ire a:Roman Catholic, ehtteelt at Delehei, Ohio, in die presence of a large wedding asserobly.• The Mar; riage,SeevIce was sm-oolliiy-Perfiirined to the point where Mies Green. WAS ask- ed if she would take Aliellleeinier to be her husband. 'f No, 1 will nOt„'.elie re- sponded. The priest thought the was confused, and put the. question again, Thereupon she, declared, that she had changed her nun& but would give no explen tien . Of course the ceremony . was not cot:lauded. S' Mark Bytonsteyoung man aged' 28, -sidle battle froth Russia recently ant settled in -Lyonvple, 'Chester county; Pa., committed suicide, on Saturday, by shooting himself. He had propeeed marriage :to a.young lady in town named Mary .Stine, who refused •him. Ile forged his way into an empty' echoed- • house and deeseu handsetne portrait .of Miss Stine on the blackboard beside a portrait of himself. • 'Underneath be wrote A.be lovbd her; she no love inc.' -On• the other part of .the black. board he wrote :•-:‘ M. Byron, artiet, born hi Russia, 1/m:somber 26t1i, 1860 ; death in United States, Suly 3, 1879.'. His dead body was.feund in the seheeh room. Little is known of Ms history, as he spoke Init little English; but it is believed 40 was h fugitive from Russian justice, Ile was greatly esteemed by all in the victnity wherehe lived. - , • , • An Ohio editor has been fined one cent for calling a man a witlawee nava (BUD "Union Springi War) recently died from the eflects of eating thirteen bard-boilel eggs while intoxi. catNelel'al 'Winbusis, co.tored, wbo attempt- ed tape on. a young lade' in Cleyton County, Ga., Ictet week, was taken from the guesd ,on Thursday night and hung to a tree, The fifteen largest hotels in New York city consume weekly 68,600 pounds oe meat, of which 48,000 is beef; Of fish 700000 pounds per yeer; glee during the twelve months 10,000,000 oysters, 5,- .500,000 eggs, 1,800;000 chickene and poultry, 11,000 barrels of flour, 20,000 barrels of potatoes, 32,000 cane 170;000 quints. ereent, , and 480,000 pounds of butter. • It is estimated that the demage Iheeity of Port Huro4 by the Storm. of Friday, is over $100000. e Si, pereens weie injutod, Thee fair greunde et Pon- 'tiac wet e cleaned $20,000e • One man was killed at Thornton, and one at Da- ley City. A woman nameti Worthing, •!epal' Thorntop, hed the red Of her home 'blown off and two of her children killed She escaped with a broken erne • A:tl- vices from meny. other places report concsit ilt-ffeemegc-i-mrtherst-cn lEngiis.h Mad Foreign. • s An English elb4," Yteati-wholielittOvirs and tiec.onimoiletfd ;Borne of Nee parish- ionera with freiktOitic was rene#tit ORO for not tieing- regietered as a dealer.' A glass spinner of Vienna offers for human weer glass nniffs, white and du- ly; glass bete, feathers, cuffs, collars, veils and dresses for ladies, glass carpets and wool,. hardly' t�' be distinguished from the real. ••. :se • In 7;000 churcbeaeds of England it is stll impossible for a dissenting pafiele loner to be buried by his own minister, yet the highest church dignitaries 'have professed e'clesire to have a closer uniem ofseiatiment between the various Cheii• elan emits. The Orange celebrations in Ireland on the 'Iwelfth peseed,off. withent die. turban* ii.xcept a few eiolated.eare of sheeting. and. stoning—not : serious. -71 Qne "deedkieeeeportect the.autheejtiee. had taken extra precautions, because of the excitement in consequence of the •debate ,in;'PliAiement on the Govere- nteneceIrish "Unieersity BUJ. , • Twefve sets of telephones have been sent out to Sir Garnet Moleeley. for • use at the Seat of war in Spitth Africa. `The great advantage of the telehones °vet...telegraph is that thee:General cars, carry on confidential talk With the Off: cer at the district station, or a. soldier can creep out toward the enemy's •lines and Whisper back the infermation es to position. .A fine wire—,the thinnerthe better-- is all that is needed: This the soldier.carries on a reel upon his back, a mile—weighing only ft few .1 ounde. Tills will. be the irst time the telephone has been usedits.an instrument Of yeti.; An oriental traveller" describes this, busi s...eae, witnessed an hiatorie shores:. " Onr FURNITURE steamer lended on A beach which was the port of A.ntioeb, 'Where the disciples were first called! SPRING- BEDS Christians, There was no town at the water's I edge, no people, no wharf. The passengers and the merehandiee were put ashore in light. , ers, which. ran up into tliANDe,sand. .A. troop of 1VIATTRESSEs. camels, with their drivers, lay on the beach, ready to transfer the goods into the interior. among the articles landed were bexeamarhed 'D, J. a 'AYER * Co;,, LowELL, MASS., U. S. A.,' showing that they contained medicines and. whence they °erne: -These with other goods were hoisted on the batikeof •camele; forlraii- spereation to Antioch, Thus the skill of the West sends back its, remedies to heal the niaik. dies of populations that inhabit those easterh shores, Whence our ep.iritual manna came"- iredsor et). Veroteele. -• • e PR/ETERS AND Peperieto,—Mantewbo Condescend to illuminate this dark world with the flee .of their geniue throegli- the columns of it newspaper, little think of the lot of the prin.* who, ao up at vaideight tA eorreet their false 'grab:mar and oithegraphy and woi se punctuation, We live seen the iteguments of latryttee in high repute as scholars,- 'sent to the printers in their -owe halide's, itieg, many words—espeeially technical and foreign „terins--abbreviated, wads misspelled a few or no points, end- these few, if any, ceneainly in the wrong place, We have seen i the sermons of eminent • diyines sent to the press without points • or capitals to designate the division of e seeitenees fa-lso-the-lettersof-t4 laical and scientific) correspondents. Suppose all time bad beela so printed-- , the printer- :would -have been -treated •_ With` icolii-Ttnd Contenipir No obe eteettlateetei beliovedlliaksitehgrecia and; pelpettie 441 ts' were i.ateitig to ;ehe and.) Or eareleisneid of the aulth6re" and noone but the practical printer knows how many beers the.. compositor, and after him the proof reader; is compelled to vend in reducing to readable condi-. tion manescript that "oft•M the writers themselt es ivreuld be puzzled't� read, Enjoy Life. • . 1 What a truly 'beautiful world We live• in Nature gives .iia grandeur of mountains, glens and oceans, and thousands Of means for Oil. •joyment. We cad enjoy no bolter when in • perfect health; but how often do 'the majori- • ty of people feel like giving it up dishearten- • ed-, discouraged and worried out with disease, when there is nolocoasion for this feeling, as • every sufferer -can easily obtain satisfactory _proof that -Green Auggst.11ower will make them as 'free from disease akwhen born. pys. pepsia , arid Liver Campfaint is the ,direct ! cause of 'seventpliVe." per eent"of .thieh mala lliests-Bi11niusnees7 maigestion, .BE ea ache, Costiveness 'Nervous Prostration, Diz- ziness- a the Iletid, Palpitation of the'Neart, and other distressing tiymptoms. Throe doses of August•Flower will prove its- wonderful effect, Sample bottles, -10-cents. Try it. • •A London telegra _sayei-:--•The ReV. •Dr. Talmage lies preached and leetured' ten times. during the past week, On Tuesday ' be lectured in the.. Crystal Palace, SYdenheine • Trains from Lon don thithet took down immense crowds. It is estimated that hem 20,000 to 80;7 000 lietenedte, or ettleastUaw, the lee hirer; The Marquis Of Townsend pie - sided on - Wednesday ant Saturday. • When Mr Talmage lectured ot Exeter Hall Lord Kinthre presided. .Many of the nobility were. present: During the week'Talcuage,adelreseed front '70,000 tb , • , • . . • 0 • • . 'LINT THE • oNE, or THE 80,000 people.. • . . . 'Tao Way' to Wealth. The"Rev...I) r . I): Hitchcock,'" "Who is not only a prominent theologian,. but ‘a profound thinker, says: ',Suppose •no Muscle is .put into the 'land :• no sweat moistens it; it gees back let° its -original -wilderness, -and- that-' which formerly supported one hundred civiliz- ed men, affords supportefor one savage. *The:value which land possesses bee veloped by tabor. Have you consider- ed how short-lived labor is? Crops last no .irtere then" a year. '-itailWayt, so long as you ktop Work upon them, go to pieces rapidly and cease to be valuable. Houses haVe to be made over constantly. St, Peter's Church; at Itome; one of the BEST LOCAL PAYERS . • - •'•• • IN CA.NAl.)A; WILL 11.MAILED . • .TO A.IsIT-,A.D.DRESS IN TIEXE UNIT - STATES OR CANADA, FREE Or. POSTAGE,' VO:R.TH SUM 911 , most solid ,structures, is repaired an - nuttily at a cost of $80,000. [The Reverend Docter might have added; meehanids ectually live in houses erect- ed on the top of St. Peter's, that they may watch for any. defect and attend to any leak in the roof.--EosA • A. great part of the wealth et the world is only .12 menthe old; when men step working it passes away.. 8upPose you earn $1.25 a day end spend the same, at the end of the year Stott ore .no bsetter oft than at the beginning. • Yell have only lived. Suppose you spend the $1, or, better still, 85 cents; then you have become a eaPitaliet. Capital is wages saved, and every men can becorno •a capitalist, I began to preach at $550 itzayeaf ; I've been there, and know what it is. ,My rule was then„tand Inca linen ever snide, to live within, my income. So it teotild hive been, no matter what my businese. Spend less than you earn; then you will acquire eapital, and your capital will be as geed Its that of any othev man.' eal fru-ric anseeriser begs to interns, the inhabitente of Clinton earl eurrounding country, that he him lined a New - Fulton Stant ON VICTORIA STREET, ONE DOOR- souvrt or 0. oirsuos. ratios in need of anything in ais une„ aro respeetfully` ie inprtradowlleoraleand examine hie goods before purehas. Rentember the place — Victoria Street. • W. B. CRICH. Clinton, inne IS, 1879. • .• , • •,"! ' . 1. Farm Let No,24 in the First Conceseion 0os.4i-6uolteremitlwebettilni08 spree ft 40141188e land, ▪ out ten Mile§ ftailt.Olinteri,boaidfeneivinefro4tikood, .)2srawooatimbtiv. iday be made a superi?r .deiry form. `rytt., 2. West Ralf of tiff Eight` in th'is'EfeiteitthConces- sion of Turnberry, fifty aeres, good wheat 1st:L603i* mime from Winghain an 0110, mile from the Olenannan Sta. tion of the Toronto, Grey and Bruce Railway. A small •elearanee on the front, „balance hardwood timber, otuo II�IIblfeep-forcrishroreschange-forfown proper. ty in Clinton. Apply to the owner, mue1Thower,ab Fotes suns, °Hilton, or to the Undersigned. • 4. The4argeend-eonvenient-Briek-atore, in the- Al, .peristreet Block, nowooeupled b Mr. Jas.11iddlecoMbee 0610.nFolrinsgt.et.a loase,..gittamini:lifoonre,,.at the errand Trunk station • •" •01 7. Yhelvrgo fagtory building and lot. g Grand 'Irunk Station, f rnaerly npi 1 ay °tele- the fry, with. engine and boeiler: Pt?eme ieesetwbell ItMinte.1.841; manufacturing purposes, pork -packing, die.- •• • iphoute 134boleYtilcyteoarniaigetrae. tcvilto.ridlovazveg,unrv4e3't neihvo irce bulwell-fenced, planted with trees! fmod S. Lot 24, Feederick street, beionging, 4oMr. Pam :Powell,- Good frame cottage of five rooms. Well and rump. flood garden. duet aouth of 1.1r. Wm. Shep- herd's residence. . Pr, • Olintondan. 24, 1870. • , A CFR E-.A.T .0 F FE II, , . —7— : • • r)0;.— .^^We will send you, 'bound in ftill simep, an U00.1.4 idge • WorcOtet's Pictionary,.. • The Fortnightly:. Review • For one year. • Rani' price, Wtireedter's Dictionary • ,412.00- Subsbri9tion price, per annum, " rertniglatry"., 500 Or, We will glee an unabridged, borind in sheep. WOR- CESTER'S pit:MU:MAIM forflYe.yearly subscribers to /nu Ponrainsurialinview, or for font yearly.sub. ,ficribers to the setae, we will give a copy of that famone work, bound m 2 TOW., SUPERNAyIJRAVRELIOION. Agents-W4ntea-7te:ithem wo wlli rei a geed commiegibli.to Canvas their lorslity. .Por particulare; order Woke, specimen copies', stcq addrees the publish.' ors, ' • , DEL71'ORD.8, CLARKE •et CO, 80 York St., Toronto . A. 1R, i TT CONSTITUTIONAL' CR 1i1D 1.1".1:C•P S c ATAER Applaud it: Wandarful Ctro0. Het& vilotHt:Ileyerend'Obitleman &g,to qt. the '.• • Gonstitattonta Remaly • • *- • T. 11: Itiannvo, ESQ.; Drookvilret Out: Deaf Sir, -It Is now two years tuna your " Conetitu- tional Catairh 1ierae4y" was introduced to -rue. , I have waited this long to see if the cure Would, romaiu per., raiment before doing tills, my duty to you, as at •lirst •the happy effects ,seemed to me to be ." too good to be • true." I wag afflicted in . my head for years before' / suspected itto ,be Catarrh. fl reeding in yeur Cironlar Zettav mY caseleseribed in many particuiags, mom. „ward t' drop" f rota the headhad.become very disagree.' able, and a choking sensation often prevented rue triiii2 lying long; I 'would feel like smothering, and beam- • poileCtp .sit up in bed.' My health and spirite were seriously effected. Wheu your Agent 'came to Walker- ton, in August. 1878, I secured three bottles. Before.' liad:luiffd• a snorter ot thentintente Of one -bottle. I found decided relief, and when I had need two bottles and a.third, 3 qult taking it, feeling quite finked of Guit aliment, and have not used any sinceitill of late I have . taken some for a cold in my hoed. A sense a duty to sufferers from that loathsome disease, Catarrh', prtl rept s Oso to gelid you this Certificate, unsolicited, with leave • to make what use of 45 300 may see prefer. . • .• Yours truly,• • Pert Elgin, Ont• „. 41111g.. 2T418D7.81.',...L, Methodist minister; A.TTENTION".. rt leer NoTICE, that the appeintlueut 01 MOMS. 4„. Mnso's livosaa, of lieneell. as A gente of the Mutual Mc Insurance Company Of the CO uty of Welliegton, j thi day cancelled. W. W. VA.RIRA.K. Rug, boa been appointed Agent fer this town and vicinity, and Is now propered to take applieutions for this: Company, the aheepest In the Dominion. • P/ 01110rx etuatizs DAVIDSON, •^ Soy-Treaa Guelph, 4th Dee., 1878. tf. tgeopOIT et,011. pi, co =iy NAVY ea =2 14 -r -lib --4-1=4 VC33..t:' ',• 04 = 4.4 •• 4 4k•-• R eTofliet Inflammatory Rtily diseb.:1 euredia.a few hoar B 1 CI sox f la 0.V0 11 RN 0 par ago, skin irritatiop, ulcers 1 rem tiny 00000, and a dred other diseases are °Kneed by an acid ferm Which producee Inflammatory acti.. Brunton's -serhentonill positively offeot 0, cola In a few hour AbSorbing t e acid poison 1 rom the sierem. -80 druggiste. Price. flee. A'dvice in partioulat.oasee W. Y. BRTIGTON, -•••••• -Londoni- On Ayer's Cathartic' Pills For all the pprposes of a Famy Physic, and • for our= costiveness, 'Jaundice,, Indigestion, Foul Stomach, Ifreatli, • Readaohe„Erysipelas, Rheumatism, • Eruptions and kin Diseases, Bil- iousness, Dropsy, Tumors,Worras, Neuralgia, as Dinner Fill, • for Purifying the Blood, Are the most ef- • fective and cenge- ---- nialpurgativeever discovered. They • aorpeeramtiiora ldn, butoivn ef- fectual their - the bowels surely arid.without pain. Although' g e n tie • r-11"" t•in.their operation, 'r• they .are still the a most thorough and „ cathar-, tie medicine that can be employed : cleettie.• , • iiig• the' itomach ad bosels, and even the' . ;blood. In small doses of one pill a day, • 4ige:stly4; - orgaytttnit • • promote vigorous health: .• • •••' AYER'S • PILLS have been known for.. ' • more thane, quarteiof a century, and hay.e Obtained :I. -world -elide eeputation for their • virtues, They eorrect diseased aetioa the several assimilative organs Of the - ,1160(01)se weinttelineretheeoii,ele_apingpe;eqdanthralollbswtrintlic:4,•- stand or evade thin. Not onlye'dei they• • ' cure the every -day complaints of every- . • body, but also formidable and dangerous ' diseases that. • have baffledthe. best .of • . human skill. • While they produeepowei-• ful effect's', they are, at the same time, the: safest and best :physic for children. By' their aperient action they gripe much less '• than the col -einem purgatives, and never givepem when the bowels are not inflamed. • liey.reech the vital fountains orthebloo and strengthen the s'stent by freeing it from the elements of,WeaknesS. ' Adapted to all age's and conditions iji , • all climates, containing neither calomel . . . nor any deleterious drug, these Pills mak be talcen• with safety by anybody. Then - suger-coutimie er.:41yes • them 'ever. fresh, - • ' and makes themliidereent-to take; While being parely vegeteble, no harm•can arise • Pont them Use in any quantity. Dr, J. C. AYER & CO, Lowell,' Mass, Practical *tine' A I4a3vti.6vorchen.l3se0. SOLD BY ALL DRCCiGliiTS EVERYWHERE.. . • ASk for TAtlelleld's Constitutio al Ca-, tarrh Remedy, and. take no prher. T B.. Ittatonvti, Dominion Agent', Brockyilir, Fur sole. by all Drugisti; at only, One Dollar. iier Bottle. • - BUN- IT. 8' TRY IT. „ , . NEiV- . DMINDi tt Tom standard artiele is compottud.. ed with the greatest .care. r Itsr 'effeets are GS wonderful itatt as • satisfactory as ever. • , It restores gray or faded hair to Re youthful What: . ••••• .0 • . It r.emoves all errptions, itelunte . . . • • , • and. dandruff:: It elves the head a, • I N BLYtH. cooling, soothino. sensation of great tz, . • PER ANNUM: Ibl" ADDITION TO Tai) LAGA:MOUITT OP Lcla AL NEWS. CONTAINED IN EVEItY ISSUE, THEIIE 15 A•••OOMPLETE • SUMM'AIII OP GENERAL E,W5 AND • OAIMPULLY. °SELECTED 11EADING MATTER, 111A1ING IT ONE OP TIIE MOST INTEREST- • JAMES CLARK • • pIcasare itt announcing to the inhabitantil of and Vidinity, that he has opened out in the Carriage making business, and is now prepared to fill RR orders foi °AMMONS, WAGGONS, IINGOIES, • upon the abortest tics, and at the meet reasonable rates. None but t.elese worknien employed, spa Oxeye:I beat material used, REPAIRING attended to promptly aria satisfactorily. 1101iSE O11G a specialty. • :AO cot Fltigy'$' krionitid .1ffip1ements, One of the best Infthilfactoriee in 0atiO4l5. Oail and 506 samples of Reapers, Mowera, Seed brine, Rose Rakes, Plough fie &0.4.10,, before parehesing elsewhere. ' L08° ififolei ON11TEEN STICEET. IN( I: PAPIertsptiliragnED, opposite the D Ion Telegraph Onrce. •- Myth, Matt 25,1878. • • • winfort,, nnd tiete scalp by IN use heeonaes White and Clean:: By its tonic, properties 'ft f'd;tores the capillary glands to their normal vigor, preyenting baldness, and mak- • • ing the hair glow thick and strong. As a dressing, nothing has Nee • found•so effectual•or desirable, • A. Hayes„M.D., State AsseYee of Massachusetts, says, "Tho oon- stituents, are pure, and carefully, Se- lected Tor excellent quality ; .end. I consider it *the Bits•r PREPARATION ,foe its intended purpOses." • Price, One Dollar. lituratingham'o•• • • 337c) • m5R THE WHiSKERS. This elegant 'preparation may be relied on to change the eolor tbe beard from gray or any °thee unties -ie. able shade, to brown oe"blaele., at cretion, It is easily applied, being in one Preparation; and quickly and of fectually produces a permanent color, which will neither rub, por wash' oft: littuuthetured bp R, P, RAU, & CO. , NASHUA. N.H. . ilakt by ail craned,' sti toshrs t tactican, • a