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The Clinton New Era, 1889-09-13, Page 6.4 CUPID'S HARNESS. `"'bloat 'women naturally look forward to • daatsimony aa their proper sphere in life, but l they should constants benefit mind that a ; lair, rosy face, bright eyes, and a healthy, Well-developed form, are the beet passports �efutilirruarorders, w , and All those -ties peculiar to their sex, destroy beauty :and attractiveness and make life miserable. An unfailing specific for these maladies is to be found in Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. dt is the only medicine for women, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfaction fa every case. or money will be re- funded. This guarantee has been printed on , the bottle -wrappers, and faithfully carried out for many years. $1.00 per Bottle, or Six Bottles for $5.00. Copyright, 1888, by WORLD'S Die. MSD. Ass'N. DR. PIERCE'S PELLETS Purely Vegetable I Perfectly Harmless ! UNEQUALED AS A LIVER PILL. Smallest, cheapest, to take. One tiny, Su -coated -Pellet a dose. Cures Headache, Bilious Headache, Coned a - tion, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all dde- • cents a vial, bye�g�tsh and Bowels. REDUCED RATES To MANITOBA, BRIT. COLUMBIA And,the NOR -WESTERN STATLu.y. VIA BEATYS SARK A :Aro Steamers, United Emp e, Ontario and Campnna, sailing from Sarnia • ''ging navi- gation (weather permtttingl ever, uw8" and Friday night, and calling on l,Vedne. day Pnd Saturdays at Goderich and Kincar dine, connecting at the latter place with the G. T. R. train leaving Winton at 10 a. m., to St Joe's Island, Garden River, Sault Ste. Mar..?, Port Arthur and Duluth, connecting at Port, Arthur with the Canadian Pacific Railway. and at Duluth with the Red River Valley Railway. Lowest Rates, best accom- modations, Express time and choice of routes. JAMES H. BI:ATTY, W. JACKSON Gaul. Manager Sarnia A. O. PATTISON • - Agents, Clinton 1 nitikso) , 7, ' 111/ (RADE ./...'':;0;1..-: MARK \ . ----/---4,•-7,7.----- LIQUiD'C ORS ' ARRANTED PURE LINSEED OIL PAINT. 'ON A RUSH.' We millet toll from the time- tables how fast we travel. The st3 tedu1ektimes do not indicate the delays thht must be made up by spurts between stations. The tra- veller who is curious to know just how fast he is going, and likes the stimulus of thinking that he is in a little danger, may find amusement in taking the time between mile posts; aad when these are not to e seen,he can often get the speed very 'accurately by counting the rails passed in a given time. This may be done by listening atten- HINTS ABOUT HORSES AND CATTLE. There can be no first-class pay- ing animals without good feed and cure. As a rule all but one of the work teams should be mares, and the mare should bring a good colt every year. Use the currycomb lightly. Alien used roughly it is a source ofgreat pain ; brushing and rub- bing are the proper means of se- curing a glossy coat. Halter the colts early, and if they must go to town with the tentively at an open window or mares teach them to lead along - door. The regular clicks of the side of their mothers, and thereby wheels over the rail joints can usually soon be singled- out from the other noises, and counted. The number of' rail lengths passed in twenty seconds is almost ex- actly the number of miles run in an hour. But if one wants to get a lively sense of what it means to rush through space at 50 or 60 miles an hour he must get on a locomo- tive. Then only does he begin to realize what trifles stand between him and destruction. A few weeks ago a lady sat an hour in the cab of a locomotive hauling a fast express train over a moun- tain road. She saw tha narrow bright line of' the rails and the slender points of' the switches. She heard the thunder of the bridges and saw the track shut in by rocky bluffs, and new perils suddenly revealed as the engine swept around sharp curves. The experience was to her magnificent. but the sense of danger was al- most appalling. To have made her experience complete. she should have taken one --engine ride on a dark and rainy night. in a daylight ride on a locomotive we come to realize how slender is the rail and how fragile is its fasten- ings, compared with tho ponde- i•ous machine which they carry.. We see what a trifling movement of a switch makes the difference between life and death. We learn how short the look ahead must often be, and how. close danger sits on either hand. But it is only in a night ride that we learn how dependent the engineer must be, after all, upon the faithful vigilance of others. The head light reveals a few yards of glis- tening rail, and the ghostly tele- graph poles and switch targets. Were a switch open, a rail taken up, or a pilo of ties on the'track, we, could not see the danger in time to stop.—Scribner. Theseready Mixed Paints are no chemical combination of benzind or soap mixture. but simply ohs -fashioned Paints. They are guaranteed, to give better results than any other paintA23.0 �(+ 1:Ey, u mem THE BEST -HMG POWDER -+•IS4- it HEltS t[RBIIE Cook' Fra No Alum. Nothing injurious. P.ETAI1E0 PO/WHERE,1 GARTH FACTORY Stlri3LlES Valves, iron & LeadPlpo Loose Pulley Oilers, Steam let Pumps, Farm Pumps, Wind Mills, Cream Separators, Dairy , and laundry Utensils. 536CA412 STRZET, MONTREAL. CHADWICK'S SPOOLk -COTTON ,For ,Band and 3faclyine Use. HAS! NO SUPERIOR. ASK FOR IT. LEATHERED EROED STEEL -LINED TRUNKS In Sample, Ladies' and ' all other kinds Liglte3t and Strap zest TRUNKS In the world. J. EYELEIGH & Ca MONTREAL, - Sole butts. for the Domini HOTEL BALMORAL Hill➢" TRE AL. Notre De. me St., ono of the most central • and elegantly, furn shed Hotels in the • City Aecommodu ion for 400 guests. states: S 'XT TOODRUFF, $2 to $3 per day. 1.). V s TV Manager ,PEARS' Sole A ¢'ts for Canada, J.PALMER&Son Wholesale Imp'tre of DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES 1743 NOTRE DAME ST., MONTREAL. DOMINION . . LEATHER BOARD.. COMPANY. Manufacturer. of ASBESTOS MILLBOARD Steam Packing. FRICTION PULLEY BOARD, O!"i P . ThiaisaPerfecalriotion RECKITT'S CLUE. THE BEST FOR LAUNDRY USE. - PAPERS Wrapping, Raailla, DEWS, G• 4) —Al. 464. SIZES • AND WEIGHTS _r. to CIDER 4 21 DeBreso:es7,t, MUIs ; P', oliNgpts FLuloisuf. ents CR�EAT STRENGTH GIVER /jPERFEC FOOD On THE SICtt ARMING & rUTRITIOUSOEVERAGE A POWERFUL NVI00RA save much trouble. The breed is an important fac- tor in stock raising. The breed adopted for the object sort will give better results and at a lower cost proportionately. When "scours" occur with an- imals, feed nothing but cut hay for a few days. Scald the hay and add a little salt to it. Diet is better than medicine. Tho color in a. horse is of not so much importance as the size, gait, action and form. These-areprin- cipally what tell when placed up- on the mai ket. The general-purpose cow to end up in a big bunch -of beef, is a fallacy, for a good cow should be kept for milk until she is hast profit to feed for beef. It does not pay to try Lo fatten old cows. When horses are suffering from bites of flies or stings of other in= sects, sponge the parts that can- not be protected by nets, with wat- er in which insect powder has been mixed—a tablespoonful to tw.o gallons of water. Raising mules pays for the reason that it costs less to raise mules thon horses, and, being hardier, there is " less 'risk of Toss. Where there is plenty of pasturage a young mule can se- cure all the food he may require. Mares in foal should have ex- erc'se and moderate work, and under no circumstances should they be subjected to harsh treat- ment, nor should they ever be al. lowed to go where they would be in danger of being frightened. Tho fall colt can be turned on the A film of oats at night, with hay pasture, and will cost but little is all it requires. Mares intend- ed for fall work should always foal in the fall, in order that the colt may be weaned in spring: . It will not pay to attempt to farm with fewer horses than are really required. An overworked, horse may be reduced in value More than. the sum that . may be derived from the crop he produc- es. Every farmer should have a horse or two in order to rest the. hard workers especially in sum- mer. IS THIS WHAT AILS YOU ? - Do you have "dull, heavy head- ache, obstruction of the nasal pas- sages,: discharges falling from the head into the throat, some- times profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenftttous, mu- cous, purulent, bloody and putrid;' eyes weak, watery and inflamed; ringing in the ears, doafness,hack- ing or coughing to clear the. throat, expectoration of offensive matter,._i.4gether..with_scebs from ulcers ;. voice changed and nasaF twang ; breath offensive; smell and taste impaired; is there a sen- sation of dizziness, with mental depression, a hacking cough and general debility ? If you have all or any considerable number of these symptoms, you are suffering from Nasal Catarrh. Tho more, complicated Stour disease has be- -come, ecome, the greater the number and diversity of symptoms. Thou- sands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, or less understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians. The manufacturers of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy offer, in good faith, a reward of $500 for a case of this disease which they cannot cure. The Remedy is sold by druggists, at only 50 cents. READ WHILE YOU RUN. Liberal feeling is the only feel- ing that pays. Air the milk thoroughly and salt the gowe ev •day,. The grade bull is a delusion arid - a snare. Don't use him. 'Rats are fond of sunflower seeds. Bait the traps with them. Supplement a brown pasture with fodder fairly mailured with bran. Don't try to keep up the flow of milk by putting a pail of wat- er in the can on the sly. Prof. Guiley, of the Texas Ex- periment Station, reports in fav- or of dehorning steers. A mare owned by E. H. Gar - colon, of Troy, Mo., has had two colts within seventeen days loss than one year. The stallion Gold Ring, that at cihe Detroit meeting made a re- cord of 2:18, was sold at • L. L. Dorsey's sale in 11381 for $100. Hoard's Dairyman devotes a threecolumn article to demon- strating that there is' no moral wrong in putting artificial color into butter. The American Cultivator re- commends farmers to sow pars- nip seed tone pound to the' acre) when the other crops are off, and plow down for green manure. Where there is little or no milk for young pigs, give them a mix- ture of wheat middlings and lin- seed meal, with one part of the last to three parts of the first. W. Brazelton, of Iowa, pre- vents calves' horns from growing by rubbing the place where they make their appearance thorough- ly with caustic potash when the animals are about ten days old. When you wash your hands and face and neck for supper, in good cold water, think how com- forting it would bo for the team to have the August sweat and dirt and' grime washed out of their shoulders. Poultry is everywhere the bust meat for summer eating, and es- pecially so for farmers who can- not always get fresh moat of oth- er kinds. Old hens past the age of profit will bo found better oat- ing than the half-grown chickens of this year's growth, unless the latter are of the breed for broil- ers. IN THE HOUSE OF A RICH JAPANESE. The wealthy Japanese make no display Dither in the architecture of their houses or in the display of ornaments. In the way of furnishing', their pride is in the delicacy of their mats ' and the richness of the satin cushions. The chief morn, in the -louse of a rich Japanese is thus described : "The salon was about 25 feet long by 15 wide. At one end, in the corner, was a smell raised plat- form in a little niche and on it a find Imari vase three feet high, holding flowering branches of the cherry troe. Behind,' upon the wall, hung' a vary valuable bat very ugly kakamono of a god. Twelve blue satin foutons lay in two rows upon the floor and three standing lamps stood in a line be- tween. A folding screen was placed to protect us from draught and that was°tho entire furniture of the millionaire's drawing room. Tho 'mats' upon the floor were of tho whitest and finest straw. Tho screen was a. gorgeous ono, with, a battle scone painted upon a gold, background." The Japanoso keep their brio-a-brac in fire proof buildings, to be taken out one at it time and admired, and then re- Tplaced by another. — Chicago imes. If you could sec your own scalp through an ordinary magnifying glass, you would bo amazed at the amount of dust, dandruff and dead skin thereon accumulated. Tho best and most popular preparation for cleansing the scalp is Ayer's Hair• Vigor. for Infante and children. "OMtorirai.sowwiladaptedtochfdrenthat Vestals cures Oolio. Constipation, trecommend ita'ssuperiortobuy Pmacriptoa Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation, kaowa to me." ELL Mama, td. D., IOUs gives aleep, and promotes di - 1W 80. Oxford Ks bl eklya, N.. T. olo utions medication. Tan Czwetvs Cossp n r, i7 Murray Street, N. • THE POPULAR R1' LiOODS HOUSE LON DErSBORO a~ We are now showing the richest and most complete stock of DRESS GOODS we have every offered to our customers. Many lines have been imported direct, and the balance has been purchased from one of the best Dress Goods Houses in Canada. )✓linard's Liniment Cures ,ijurus, etc, • A soft yet persistent answer turnoth away a borrowing neigh• bor. The prices range from 10o. to $1.25 a yard, and the styles, colors and patterns are so varied that it would be useless to attempt to describe them. See them early and make your selection. A little warm, perhaps to talk about KNITTED WOOL SHAWLS and WOOL FASCINATORS, however, the choicest Goods will be the first sold, and the early customers have the greatest number to choose from. We have several styles in the leading colors. NOW, A WORD TO GENTLEMEN. We have a grand range of TROUSERINGS, HATS,. CAPS, TOP SHIRTS, buttoned or laced, and UNDER- CLOTHING. figrIn READY-MADE CLOTHING, SUITS and OVERCOATS, we still hold our place in the front rank. Will be pleased to have all close cash buyers look care - "fully through our entire stock, and compare values be- fore making fall purchases. „ otton Root Compound Cmnposed of Cotton Root, Tansy and Pen• nyyroyal—prepared by an old physician. 18 SUCCESSFULLY USED DIONTHLY l,y tbmtsands of women, and hes been pre• scribed to a practice of. over 30 care, Price 41. Will be mailed to any address In Cnnndn and ti.8. Doctor's consnitetlon henna, 0 to 11 and 1 to 4, Diseases of women treated only, Sealed parties• )nra, twoatnmps, Lnit,e only, nddrrea POND LILY COMPANY, No. 3 Fisher t)loek,131 Woodward aarnur Detroit. Mich. dog 30.3mp W. L. OUIMETTE, LONDESBORO STIFF HATS — All the leading styles, bought from the best manufacturers. SOFT HATS — The best and cheapest goods in the market STRAW . HATS—Our stock is worth seeing, ex- cellent quality, and away down in price, Close buyers shonld not fail to call and see these goeds, the low price and good quality are selling them very fast. Gent's Furnishings and Fine Tailoring FRANK SHEPHERD, The Leading Tailor, Albert Sty CLINTON AS, .T H E 1LINTON NEW ERA R. HOLMES, - - Publisher, CLINTON, - e - ON T. AD BIG E'MPORI'UM 01\1-1) S 301?•0 BALANOEOFSUMMER GOODS At GREATLY REDUCED PRICES, to make room for FALL GOODS that are coming in. FARM and VILLAGE PROPERTY for sale or ex- change for good stock of merchandise. BUTTER, EGGS and FARM PRODUCE always wanted Aug 30th, 1889. R. ADAMS, IT THE LEADNIG Furniture Dealers, Cabinet Makers, Undertakers, And Upholsterers. PICTURE , FRAMING A SPECIALTY. CALL AT THJ - Red RockerFu rn itu re E m pori u m Albert Street, Brick Block, Clinton 99- GROCERY -99 Having bought the Grocery Stoclf' of A. ANGUS, I intend to continue the business in the old stand. We have everything that is to be bad in a first- class Grocery. - Nothing but first-class Goods will be kept and sold at the closest margin. We have a large stock of F=NE 1\TMIAT TEAS Which we guarantee to give satisfaction.. Callandget prices. We will not be undersold by any house in the trade James Amus, 99 Albert Si. Clinton CHINA HALL To make room for New Importations, we will, until Dec. 1st GIVE=TEN--PER-- --CE-N-T-DISCOUNT FOR CASH on our large stock of CROCKERY, CHINA AND GLASSWARE. DECORATED DINNER AND TEA SETS 10 PIECE TOILET SETS. Parties in need of anything in this line should not miss the opportunity of se- curing cheap bargains, as we are bound to reduce Our stock. We offer NEW SEASON JAPAN TEA at 40 cents, worth 60. We offer NEW SEASON BLACK TEA at 25 cents, worth 40. We offer NEW SEASON GREEN TEA at 25 cents, .worth 35. NEW CURRANTS and RAISINS, cheap. 2 BROOMS for 25c PRESS PIhTAN SADDIE, SISCOS, SEBRING, FLOATERS, &c Goods promptly delivered to any part of the town. (Give nejaacall.t BUTTER AND EGGS TAKEN AS CASH. X THE NEW ERA is•publishecl.0every Friday ; it X . gives about Thirty-two Columns of Fresh Reading X Matter Every Week ; Correct Market Reports from Toronto and in this neighborhood ; has a X Large Circulation and is Unsurpassed as an Ad - X vertising Medium. Will be sent to any address for $1.50 a year, in advance. X aii..r— JOB DEP*ARTMENTT. We have all the latest styles of type for Circulars, 3ale Bills, and any kind of printing that can be desired. Prices the Lowes, Work the Finest and satis- faction guaranteed. One trial is certain to bring another. R. HOLMES, BOX 74CLINTON. • N. ROBSON. CHINA HALL. B. LUARANCE'S Spectacles. Those celebrated Spectacles aro fitted in every instance with B. Lau- rance's'test, and a certainty of being suited is guaranteed. You can dependon gutting the GENUINE B. LAURA'NCE SPECTACLES by calling and,examining the stock at THOMAS JACKSOI�T'S, SR ., C..L.INTON The People's GROCERY CORNER HURON AND ONTARIO STREETS, Is the place to get cheap CHRISTMAS GOODS. We are receiving a fine new stock RAISINS --New Valencias, Sultanas, Black Basket, Layer, Layer Valencias CURRANTS—New Barrel Currants,'new box Currants. PEELS—Lemon, Orange and Citron Peels) NUTS—Soft-Shell Almonds, Brazil, Filberts,.Peacane, Peanuts, English Wal• nuts, best 'qualities. CONFECTIONERY—Our assortment cannot be snrpassed. LEMONS and ORANGES—Fresh Sweet Russell Oranges, California Oranges, Valencia and Malagas. GRAPY n—White Malaga and Rodgers Black Grapes CROCKERY and GLASSWARE — We are giving bargains in this line, and a liberal discount for cash. FISH, &c.—We also constantly keep in stock Oysters, Haddie, Bloaters Ciscoes, Rc SUNDRIES—Cranberries, Bermuda Onions, Common Onions. TEAS—Special values in Teas. We have them as low as five pounds for $, and as high as 70c. per lb., and we can guarantee the quality to be the best Our assortment is too large to enumerate, and we only mention a few leading articles. Come and see far vourseif, We will give you, good value and a liberal discount for cash. Cuninghame 8c McMurray, THE PEOPLE'S GROCERY, CLINTON