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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1890-01-17, Page 6• HAY 'RYtl1 • ,,Vale *het e OOIlil4pseos, ler that they, Pree ot1ivlr3; par itee fining eneT brelle 4S the nose and P beg. Uicreseep a researeh, 'VS ,, ilea preyed this to be a fact, cud 'ltlt of tii18 dieeevery i8 that a xemedy has been formulated where - b, catarrhal deafness and bay ire permanently cured in from ane Usti three simple applications made at home y si=te patient once in two weeks. 1',•13,—Thio treatment is not a snuff or an ointment ; both have been discarded kr reputable physicians As injurious. A pattlphlet explaining this new treatment xs pent on receipt of ten cents by A. H. Dixon dt Sow, 803 West Ring Street, Toronto, Canada.—Toronto Globe. ?5ufxerere from Catarrhal trouIees should `^• ••ilJ. Bead tn..ern Llltiilfl Bruises FOR Sore Eyes Catarrh Lameness Female Complaints Sunburn Soreness Sprains Chafing raises Scalds pit& �. AVOID ALL ralTA- TIONS. THEY MAY BE DANGEROUS. FAC -SIMILE OF BOTTLE WITH 3L.FF WRAPPER. B � � SSE POND'S. �o�nas EXTRACT a�,sect Bites Stings Sore Feet INFLAMMATIONS HEMORRHAGES IA LL ^ i THIS IS THED.ONLY �Ll\ r1 1 RIGHT KIND. DONOT TAKE ANY OTHER, 4M4railmex'4'oa"s9��Ed a romg ..x e^dg'•gea 'az o � - `° L it a ,. 5 4 h,'dy'ay 7Pp itlfao•tlm i`10"4=To.ti4^A ..fa -.,g olgO�wF`1�aB �Eop my mem q .s ,nv rrb6�'.��'��0 ��29L Q iBn�SOA ootid m'il o9't9C�R• g3°dad�m4a«nee �9d Om�h°...M a DEMAND POND'S EX. TRACT. ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTE FOR IT Zs rot, sea eiwei 9e;Oas. e�sP e 21-1F,4s P o".,oae, 'OQpq Ceg .,,sense sem. szasere rHE EST AMINO PO1DER j ! CL LIEN'S GEIIINE Cook's Ring g No Alum. Nothing Injurious. w ;NE.T [[ED EVERMIERE, GARTH FACTORY SUPPLIES Valves, Iron & Lead Plpe Loose Pulley Oilers, Steam Jet Pumps, Farm Pumps, wind Milts, Cream Separators, Dairy and Laundry Utensils. E36 CRAIG STREET; MONTREAL. C�tAp�IICN'S POOL oTT0I yei• Sand and ' ;1l(achtne"Tragi, , Igo 'NO SUPERIOR. r'.. As FOR IT. QTEL RALINORAL sous Dame St., one of the most central ,and elegantly furnished Hotels in the pti . Accommodation for 400 guests. Hates: cj v V TooDRUFF tto $S per day. . V s TY Manager LEATHEROID STEEL -LINED TRUNKS III Samplo, Ladies' and all ether kinds. Lintel and Strcazest TRUNK$ la the World; I . EVEEEIGH & CO MONTREAL, Sole Mfrs, for the DOIDIIl'R o 't far t Canada, l P MER&SON 'oftO1edate Imy'tre of MRUGCISTS' SUNDRIES i.7 NOR DAME 8T., 'MONTREAL.. DOMINION LEATHER BOARD COMPANY. Manufacturers of ASBESTOS SURDAS!) Steam Packinx. FRICTION PULLEY BOARD, • 77�isisaPayeotPrietion IECKITT'S BLUE. "Alli. Bast FOR LAUNDRY USE. ALL SIZES ANO WE laNte h ORDER Zarb, olent, 11"9 ,meat, a OH $ OKS ]tuvo EF,' ErHE GREAT STRENSTH GIVER 15PERFECroc a JI P R ?NE SICK 'A WARMING & QIOTRITIOUSOEVERAGE J A POWERFUL INVIGORATOR Y$ isliMiliTROlicite re Ake Aiker a,/'t&a slezopRrcortt. S? t mix A.x'metrgpg'begine We es.. wilee'e hitter lir iaaulting ;Gatholiail, when, 1 e calie their priests "Itemish *OW OW. breeding and a regard ex the feelings of Roman Cathgligs should dictate to bins the propriety of not applying to us the epithet "Papist, 'lowish or Bomauiet." "Call us," a writer has truly Bait, "As we call aur• selves. British and Canadian laws de- scribe the Catholic ()burgh as."'Etonian Catholic." It a Catholic should retali- ate, and cell Mr Armstrong a "Harry- ite," because Catholics believe that he holds his belief to Harry, woald not he very justly consider it an insult, and yet the language he uses himself is not leas insulting to Catholics. His attempt at making a distinction between "Head of the Church, and only Sti renje Governor of the realm," as well an all spiritual and ecclesiastical things as tempors 1. Thompson, page 182, is supremely ridiculous. If Eliza- beth, as governor in spiritual or mole - all her that re- ctised, is tor than timed title Lingard isles she nal laws onform- nce sake. o, Arm- ard says. emptible ment of He tells f Cam- ome en - n 1560, came to ed fact an un bete as utcher- sy, who her un • ere Ro- rpoaely ders to abeth's usiness cter as ike her ot, the ecame. seldom latter h. III. atten- ors he r page n. As eating to be iter.— Dodd, page, quot- dd or ion is writes a bull ion of d her ull as Pope. a ori - r like ent in Eliza- iaaion ult of ntole- have rinci- ism." fit to the that da is otest- and , but was dis- tend beth, here eign d, if a to and e re- in test - e of tly, est• Par - w in 008, the ble" the ' is Bev ily es, ee, it an, sil to lie on, et, siastical matters, persecuted subjects who did not practice ligious worship which she pra she at�y less a religious perseou if she did this under the ass or head of the church. Dr does not condemn her for the t bore, but for the infamous pe with which she afflicted Non -c ists and Catholics; for console In order to deceive the publi strong misinterprets what Ling This shows plainly what e, omit individual help is. His treat Cabbet is not less disgusting. his readers, on the authority o den, that the Pope addressed e Bearing words to Elizabeth, i which was shortly after she the throne, and from this assum he concludes that Cabbet told ruth, when he represents Eliza The savage, ferocious, brutal, b ing, ranking and ripping -up Bet began ripping up the bowels of appy subjects, because they w man Catholics." Armstrong pu drawe the attention of his rea the first year or two of Eliz reign, when her "ripping up" b was not of such a marked chara itwas later on in her reign. L brutal father, the older she g ore ferocious and savage she b he rack," says Mr Hallam, " stood idle in the tower for all the part of her reign."—Court hist, c If Armstrong wishes that any don should be paid to the auth quotes he must give the chapter o from which he takes the quotatio heis so notorious for misrepres what writers say, it is necessary ina position to consult the wr For instance, when he quotes without- giving the chapter or how ate we to know whether he is ingthe Protestant historian Do not, or, if so, whether the quotat gennine or not. "In 1570," Armstrong, "Pope Pius V issued amnation and excommunicat zabeth, Queen of England, an °rents." There is no such a b in existence as written by any s a pure fabrication, having it in the head of some romance mstrong. Armstrong keeps ail and to the Protestants which It, by means of her Higb Comm rt, condemned as heretics. Romish persecution is the res mish principles, while the i ce of which Protestants may n guilty is contrary to the p and doctrines of Protestant omanist, as you have thought a Catholic, might fling ,back It into your face, and declare ✓ aptitude for telling falaehoo result of the principles of Pr sm. " Some of the priests anists perished on the scaffold as as violators of the law." It use they would not violate the s of their consciences and at church established by Eliza She Pope of England. No, t e Catholics in Elizabeth's r were willing to shed their bloo scary, rather than be traitor st. mstrong refers to " cutting ng the bibles, such an act i ed in Quebec at present." Eve yes of the Protestants, the Pro Bibles in Elizabeth's reign wer btful character, and consequen e following reign, a new Prot Bible was 'ordered, by Act of nt. The Protestant Bible no only a number of bible selecti is not supposed to contain all red writings. The "Ross Bi ins selections for children in c schools, whereas Ring dames ults as well. By -the -way, se dreds of the former have not o cut and burnt, but have actua burnt by Protestants themsely the last year. But, of cour is nothing wrong in this, as rotestants who did it. s an unlettered Catholic laym advise Armstrong, the fos gue of Goderieh, to apply ✓ West, or some other Catho man, for instruction in religi ny ten year old boy on the etre torical information. I rema truly, DANIEL MOIRAN. orth, Dec. '89, of d Eli adh this It i gin Ar reg bet Cou It I% ran bee pies AR call insu you the anti Rom it w been tate the the wer who nate Chri Ar the e teari ' al hIEM been been within there was P would pedago Fathe clergy or to a for his yours Seaf THE LITTLE SEED. A little seed lay in the carter's path ; A little shoot bowed in the strong wind's wrath ; A little shrub g:ew, by its roots held fast ; Then a stout tree braved all the winter's A little cough started----lwas only light ; A little chill shivered tbe hours of night ;- A littte came and began to grow. Then consumption laid all his brave strength low. Be wise in time. Check the little cough, cure the little chill, dispel! the little pain, ere the little ailment becomes tbe stong, uncenquerable giant of disease. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis- covery-, taken in time, is a remedy for these ills. WHAT IT MEANS. The cloud of paper flying daily from the humming presses is amazing to contemplate. Many of the Sunday editions of from twelve to forty pages would car- pet the cities where they ,,are printed. A short time ago on a gala occasion the Atlanta Consti- tution turned out a fifty-eix page edition. The San Francisco Ex- aminer, at the christening of its two monster Hoe perfecting presses, ‘Moriareh' and 'Jumbo, threw up on a startled community forty !segos of portraits and ilium- trations, and the St Penh; Pioneer Press came out with a sixty page sakes. ealliee„. edition, describing , the t newspaper butldzing to the vr,orld. its .Toa toil!' to ries r—n Ids on and PUS of he he ies nk� he of ns 08 at ne er pe 8; re s- he r - . .y n 8, I- B, 8 d e e • `or the $OOSU00 edition of PrOMIUu t ambo! The. .Yo Jest CPillpsnliout Boston publi at used 120! tons of I►aer; And illustrate tbis eteirtlxog feet p ted €, picture of the , i#fel tewe 1,000 feet high, and by its s a stack of paper piled ream ream 8,400 feet --three times over the height of the fam 'column. For the white paper 'Harper': Magazine' and 'T Century' it costs at Least $60 000 in a year. Many of t presses of the metropolitan dais eat up $ 1,000 worth of bla paper in a day. Add to t morning and evening -output these whirling monsters the to upon tons of weeklies, montbli and trade publicae:ens, and from 4 to 10 cf.„per pound, o gets finahera11y bewildered ov the uppi'inted sheet alone. Ty setting runs into :be million think of the field of flying finge all skilled and generously paid Then the toll of the telegraph the thousands of dollars for me sages by cable under the sea; t millions clicked through the ne vous keys on land. Nothing i the way of expense, as ever reader knows, stands betwee the newspaper and its news. Last the brain and brawn An army ! chiefs and subaltern rank and file, day and night ed tors,correapondents and reporter experts and specialists, artist and detectives, prize-fighters an preachers;everywhere at all times the pick of alert intelligence, th essence of quick thought and in stent action, giving the beat fibr of their lives for all sorts of pay (the ambitious hope just beyond) from the New York editor -in chief at an honorarium of $20,000 to the amateur 'editor, sole pro- prietor and publisher' of the Pea- nut, putting in his out-of-school time and surplus intelect for real love and glory. Out of it all ao you realize what your one -cent paper means and what it repre- sents ? Do you • fully appreciate the developing marvel of your day and generation --.the daily printed budget of a world ?— Current Literature. THE GREAT NORTHWEST joins the other parts of the Do- minion in its praises of tho won- derful virtues of Nasal Balm. Mr Wm. Sharp, Trebene, Man., says—I am delighted to be in a position to say that Nasal Balm is helping me wonderfully, although I have been using it but a short time. It speedily cleared out the head and stopped tbe disagreeable droppings in the throat. Fpr some time I have suffered seveily from catarrhal head ache, Nasal Balm has removed every trace of it. I have every confidence in its completely curing me. It is deser- ving all you claim of it :—'A posible Cure for Catarrh. Easy and Pleasant to use.' I hope it will soon befor sale in every town and village in Manitoba. trSES OF' OLD SHOES. It may be a surprise to so people to learn that the old sh cast into the ash barrel are lia to reappear in the boudoir a parlor. An inquisitive repor who saw a couple of ragpick quarrelling over a lot of worn o and seemingly worthless foot ge interviewed one of the chiffb niers' and found that they so them to inan*cturers of wall p per. He followed up the clu and upon questioning the forem of one of these establishment elicited the following informatio "We buy all the boots and sho that the scavengers can bring u We pay different prices for diffe of fine calfskin boots will bring high as fifteen cents. We don buy cowhide boots. The boo and shoes are first soaked in se eral waters to get the dirt o them. Then the nails and thread are removed, the leather is groun up into a fine pulp and is read for use. The embossed leather papering which have come into fashio lately, and the stamped Jeathe fire screens are really nothing bu thick paper covered with a laye of this pressed leather pulp. Th finer the quality of the leathe the better it takes the bronze and old gold and other expensive col ors in the designs painted on them. Fashionable people think they are going away back to me- dimval times when they have the walls of their lib, aries and dining room covered with embossed lea- ther. ,They don't know that the beets and shoes which their neigh- boriihrew into the ash barrel a month before form the beautiful material on their walls and on the screens which protect their eyes from the fire. '•We could buy the old shoes cheaper if it were not for the competition fi on' carriage rnakei and, corkbinders and picture frame makers. I don't know how many other trades use old boots and shoes, but the tops of' carriages ure largely made of them' ground into sheets. Bookbinders use them in the cheaper forms of lea- ther bindings and the new styles of loather f;•ames with leather mats are entirely made of tho cast-off coveringe of our feet." me oes ble nd ter ers ut ar Id a - an OS s. ir as ts tr Pitcher's Castoria; "Castor:Ws so maladapted toe1,114retttlIst distorts, onres-Colic, Constipation, Furniture Dealers Cabinet Makers, Undertakers, And ,Upholsterers PICTURE FRAMING A SPFCIALTY. . CALL AT THE RedRockerFurnitureEmporium Albert Street, Brick Block, Clinton. or 1 URE FIT I THOUSANDS OF BOTTLES MEN AWAY YEARLY. When I say Cure I do not mean III merely to stop th for a time, and then have them return again. MEAN A RADIOALCURE. I have nraedle the disease of Fite, EpilensY or Ealling Sickness a life-long study. 1 warrant my, remedy to Cure the worst cases. Because others have failed Is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of my Infallible Remedy. Give Express and Post Office. It costs you nothing for a trial, and it will cure you. Address Q. ROOT, MC., Branch Office, 186 WEST ADELAIDE STREET, TORONTO. Additional perticulars have been received of the theatre coll- apse at Hautong., China. The ac- cident occured October 13th Net. The temple where the perforni- ance was luastands in a high ter- race in the middle of the town. A hill was once theie, but it has all been cut away except a portion on which the temple stands. Dur- ing the performance the entire wall gay., way, either from being defective or from tho great pres- sure above, and the whole nen88, of men, women and eiiildren were burled to the street below. Groans and cries rent the air. The people who had first fallen some of whom had escaped with only bruisee, were killed outright a moment later by their comrades falling upon them. Many died of suffocation and others, mornen- tarily stunned, met death by be- ) ing trampled upon by their fol- lows, who were trying to escape. Immense blocks of stone and concrete from the broken wall fell .witb deadly force. Heads were burst open, bodies crushed, arms and legs broken, and in ofi number of cases almost severed from the body. Two hundred dead bodies were taken from the ruins, and it is thought the dead may number 250. Weak eyes and inflamed lids indicate an impure condition of the blood. The best remedy is Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It vitalizes the blood, regulates the secretions and expelle all scrofulous humors from the system. Try it Price PAY YOUR CHRISTMAS BILLS. There is searcely any duty more incumbent on everybody in these first days of the opening year than the duty of promptly paying the numerous small bills that the season brings. Though often matters of hut small import- ance to the individual debtors, i the aggregate they are of th greatest importance to the credi mei c ants. Promptness n meet- ing them is indiepensiblb to mak- I ing those largeer settlements in the business world which bear so prosperity of the country. A dollar spent in paying a bill early these January mornings will do a vast deal of good before night, liq- uidating accounts to many times its face value as it circulates about from hand to hand. Where the duty and advantage of promptness aro so obvious it is a singular evi- dence of the perversity of human nature that those who are best ab- le to meet their small bills as they come due are usually the most dilatory. It would be well for for every well-to-do man to be- gin the new year by asking him- self if he is not needlessly and habitually delinquent in this re- spect, and to correct the bad hab- it at once if he finds he has con- tracted it.—Providenvo Journal. 'TWINS, TRIPLETS AND Twins clo not happen more than 300 times a year in a population of 1,000,000, and seldom hit tho same family- twi co. Triplets aro rare enough to be curiosities.— It is estimated that not one wo- man in 100,000 has given birth to threechildren at one time, and, although there is on record in tho o medical works the case of a German peasant woman who had 12 children at 4 births -3 each time—and a Michigan woman who is given the credit of having pro- duced 12 children in five births in- side 7 years—quadruplets once, triplets once, twins twice, and a loneyoungster on the last occa- sion. Such instances of fecundity are rarer than new planets, and the lady entitled to the cake for having had four children at a birth is not be found once in a crowd of 300,000 married women. The woman who has given birth to five children at once is alone among 2,000,000 of her kind. SOFT WHITE HANDS. A little of Guibourt's Parisian Balm applied at night, will soon render the hands soft and white. Parisian balm is delightfully perfumed. Sold by all The statement is made that up to the other day their was not a isquare foot of frozen surface in the whole system of the great lakes from the head of Lake Nepigon to the foot of Lake Ontario. Ayer's Hair Vigor IS the "ideal" Ilair-dressing. It re - I stores the color to gray hair ; promotes a fresh and vigorous growth ; prevents the formation of dandruff; makes the hair soft and silken; and Imparts a dell.. cate but lasting per. fume. "Several months ago my hair corn- inenced falling out, and in a few weeks my head was almost bald. I tried man „ ly bought a bottle of Ayee,s Hair Vigor, and, aftor using only a part of the con- t tents, my head was covered wiejl a heavy growth- of hair. recomsagrad your preparation as the best in the world."—T. munclay, Sharon Grove,Ky. " I 'have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for a number of years, and It has always given me satisfaction. It is an excellent dress- ing, prevents the hair trona turning gray, insures its vigorous growth, and keeps the scalp white and clean." — Mary A. Jackson, Salem, Masa. n remedies, but they did no Food. 1 i3nal! On Saturday Sir John Mac- donald was 75 years of age. The cleansing, antiseptic and healing qualities of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy are unequelled. "I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for promoting the growth of the hair, and think it unequaled. For restoring the hair to its original color, and for a dress- ing, it cannot be surpassed."—Mrs. Geo. La Fever, Eaton Rapids, Mich. "'Ayer's Hair Vigor is a most excel- lent preparation for the hair. I speak of it from my own experience. Its use promotes the -growth of new hair and makes it glossy and soft. The Vigor is also a cure for dandruff."—J. W. Bowen, Editor "Enquirer," McArthur, Ohio. " I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for the past two years, and found it all it is represented to be. It restores the natu- ral color to gray hair, causes the hair to grow freely, and keeps it soft and " Ntv father, at about the age of fifty, lost afl the hair from the top of his head. .After one month's trial of Ayer's Hair Vigor the hair began coming, and, in three months, he bad a fine growth of hair of the natural color."—P. J. Cullen, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. Ayer's Hair Vigor, PREPARED BY Bold by Druggists and Perfumers. Mit \IL ST. 0A.TIIA,RIN$ NIXTRSERT STOO The undersigned offers al; extemely lour prices, all kinds ot Nursery Stook. G -RAPE VINES A SPECIALTY. These Vines will bear two years atter, planting. If well oared for will bear every year and live for a century. E. T. HOLMES, New Era Office, Clinton XMAS COODS The attention of the public is respeetfully invited to the superb stook of Xmas Goods at Adams Emporium, consisting of a good assortment of WATCHES from $5 up to $22, all warranted. ALBUMS from 75cts. to $2.75. NUTOGRAPHS from 5cts. up. Ladies and Gents Companibus Scrap Books, Earrings, Brooches, Cuff and Collar Buttons, Xmas and New Year Cards, .) Vases, GrocerieS for the Xmas Trade. A few pieces of those beautiful MANTLE CLOTHS left, and some of the fine OVERCOATS. The finest lot of CHINA and STONEWARE we ever had. We have a/so quite a supply of PICTURE BOOKS and - TOYS for Santa Claus to put in the stockings. All made welcome. WISIIING ALL A MERRY' XMAS. R. ADAMS. LONDESBORO BUILDERS' IRON WORK, Office Railings, Lawn Furniture AND FOUNTAINS. ETC. . ADDRESS CHINA HALL .1 7„,,H, „.....,.............). ,.......:4, WALKERVILLE. ONTARIO. To make room for NeW Importations, we will, until Dee. lst. GIVE TEN PER CENT 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 opporttmity of se- curing oheap bargains, as we are botuid to reduce our stock. We Offer NEW SEASON JAPAN TEA at 40 cents, worth 0 We Offer NEW SEASON BLACZ TEA. ati25 cents, worth 40;, We Offer NEW SEASON GREEN TEA atI25 cents, worth 35. NEW CURRANTS and RAISINS, cheap, 2 BROOMS for 25c. Goods promptlY delivered to any part of the town. Give ns a call. BUTTER AND EGGS TAKEN AS CASH. rir-- SP...* N. ROB ON. C INA HILLT, 1LINTON N- EW ERA CLINTON, - - X THE NEW ERX is published every Fxiday ; it gives aboiat Thirty-two Columns of Fresh Reading Matter Every Week ; Correct Market Reports, X from Toronto and in this neighborhood ; has a Large Circulation and is Unsurpassed as an Ad - X vertising Medium. Will be sent to any address. X for $1.50 a year, in advance. JOB DEPARTM EN tiakg 404 - We haveiall the latest styles of type for Circulars, ado Pills, 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. HOLMES,1BOX 74. CLINTON. •