HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1890-01-24, Page 44
I Vs
/ $A!. BALM.
Acertaln andp sed cure for
Gold to the }load and d Catarrh
int all ita stages,
SQOTHINO, CLEANSING,
HEALiRIG.
Instant Relief, Permanent Cure,
Failure Impossible.
idanyy na•ca1 ed diseases are simply symptoms of
4tarrh, such as headache, partial deafness, losing
->tettsst of stnell, foul breath hawking and spitting,
`'i4Lusea, general feeling of debility,etc. If you are
bougie$ with any of these or kindred symptoms, you
have Catarrh. end should lose no time in procuring
Ate at ,bottle of `.'.sur. BALM. Bo warned in time
neglected co 1 in head results in Catarrh, followed
by consnmphr o awl death. NASAL BALM is sold by
alJ 4ruggista "1 be sent, post paid, on receipt of
Niles (50ccnt $t.00) by addressing
tii.FORD & CO., BROOKVILLE. INT.
:3 Sewer, imitations similar in n. -.no.
s i F„'Oa ea;°
®,ecu 0caa°e°c.?c'0
Ed
t�'-bip6° 4.049,. Ola It -3c1,,
19°15
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a'21.m Bleu
.°0.a aura
fililLiitgea0
it a
A
�ssoE -=ec
c°o i)eyE■
'R°?e E1
�c 11S.s 5 woo
FOR
S re Eyes.
atarrh
Lameness
.Female
Complaints
Sunburn
K Soreness
Sprains
Chafing
Bruises �SE
Scalds 9
Piles POND'S
rns
Ou SdsEXTRACT
AVOID ALL MUTA-
TIONS. THEY MAY
BE DANGEROUS.
FAC -SIMILE OF
BOTTLE W ITH BUFF
WRA
PPER.
Insect
Bites
Stings
,` Sore Feet
INFLAMMATIONS
HEMORRHAGES
ALL
i
DEMAND POND'S EX-
TRACT. ACCEPT NO
SUBSTITUTE FOR IT
1 S- I N TAKET ANY DO 13:44121
THIS IS THE ONLY
_ •
9a H E B EE S'i'
GING POWDER'
-s.IS 4-
VicLAllEy'S GEROIKE
- Cook's Fred
GARTH & CM
FACTORY SUPPLIES
Valves, Iron &Lead Pipe
Loose Pulley Oilers,
Steam Jet Pumps, Farm
Pumps, Wind Mills,
No Alum, Cream Separators, Dairy
Nothing Injurious. and Laundry Utensils.
535 CRAB; STREET
RETAILED—EERIER,
Ta
MON E AL.
CHADWICK'S
SPOOlk
COTTON.
For Hanel and
Machine Use.
NAS 10 SUPERIOR.
ASK FOR IT.
LEATHERN])
STEEL -LINED TRUNKS
Ist Sample, Ladies' and
&llutherkinds.
Lightest and Strangest
TRUNKS
In the World.
L EYELEIGH & CO
MONTREAL,
Sole Mfrs. for the Dolan
HOTEL BALMORAL.
MONTREAL.
Notre Dame St., ono of tine most central
and elegantly furnished Hotels in the
Ottr Accommodation for 400 guests.
ltateaf Ct TT WOODRUFF,,>Q to $S per day. . V s T f Manager
S. LDOMINION
EATHER BOARS
COMPANY.
Manufacturers of
ASBESTOS i@ILLBOARD
Steam Peeking,
FRICTION
PULLEY BOARD,
This iea PerfeoeJFietion
Sole A¢'ts for Canada,
iJ.PALIAEA&SON
Wholesale Imp'tre of
DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES
1743 NOTE DAM ST.,
MONTREAL
�ECKITT'$ BLUE.
',EIRE BEST FOR LAUNDRY USE.
PAPERS
*tipping,
'oak,
k,
S
41
d ALL
SIZES
Ce, AND
WEIGHTS
to ORDER
�'or, 21 DQBresoles St,
lliilsg.hrtnll1U,0
C! n
•
it T GRIS oils
R p rLUIDEEF
THE GREAT
STRENGTH GIVER
P'ERFEOT FOOD
OR THE SICK
ARMING Br
ruTRIrIOUSgEVERAGE
J' A POWERFUL
INVIGORATOR
DOLLS Tan 0.6.11 f MQ2sT rY IN STAMPS.
hplidibou works 4tt Orange are' 8iY4 years tk n bltitiness, raan iia
wko ad, ple>tty a.4.140/30Y0
dete'Inined to nollect a maga-1A•
out assortment Of foreign postage
stamre. Por six years he has
dove"Tittle else glias pursue this
ocellration. He became connect•
ed with all,tbe leading dealers in
the world, and left with them or.
dere to secure rare varieties at
any price. He has already ex-
panded 25.000, and has now a
collection of about 14,1)00 stamps.
This may include all the "adhes-
ives," as there are about 8,000 of
them in exlstanoe. Occasionally
you read, and so do I, of postage
stamp colleotipns containing mill-
ions of different stamps. Such
things aremyths, unless they con-
sist of innumerable duplicates.
Perhaps dealers and advanced col-
lector's consider the collections of
M. Ferari, son of the Dutohess of
Galatea, the finest colleotionl of
postage stamps in the world. It
is said to outrank even the Roth—
child collection. The Ferrari col-
lection is worth $250,000, and its
happy owner employs a well ed-
ucated secretary who does noth-
ing whatever but attend to it.
This secretary classifies and pastes
the stamps and corresponds with
all the leading dealers of the wor•T8
endeavouring to obtain what the
collectors call "unobtainables."
The stamp dealers frequently ob-
tain specimens of rare stamps in
queer ways. IV of long ago a book-
keeper employed by a Philadelphia
merchant entered the office of the
firm of which Mr Hanes is a
member, and throwing a stamp
on the counter asked whether it
was worth anything. This was
one of the first stamps issued in
the city of Baltimore many years
ago, and the book keeper said he
had found it on a letter of an old
correspondent of the firm for which
he worked. Apparently the man
did not think the stamp would
bring more than 50 cents or one
dollar.
You can judge of his
amazement, therefore, wheri he
was offered a sum very far beyond
this, and which semed to him fab-
ulous. He parted with the stamp
gladly, and hurried out of the
office as if he were afraid the
money would be asked back.
Several days later this stamp was
sold for $260. One of the most
famous collectors of the world, is
Mr Tapling, an English member
of Parliament. He lives at Dul-
wich, not far from London. His
collection valued at $200,000, is
mounted on cardboard r ; includ-
es a long list of what es:. ,soisseurs
call "unobtainables." Dozens:and
dozens of Mr Taplings, stamps are
worth from $100 t., $150 apiece.
Iupuing, thesso,Allorson .a new de-
light for little fo. •They are*
work on 410 of5Q,QOQ dolls, and
the first installment was complet,
ed on saturda_y. . Marvellous dolls
are these. Not only do these
dols have sure -enough hair -.and
eyebrows, not only can they roll
their eyes about as if looping for
mother, not. only can their eyes
be closed when they alae tucked
into dainty little cribs with snowy
linens and bright silks to, cover
them, not only can they walk and
clap their bands—they can talk
and sing. It is sure -enough talk,
too,and not the exasperating com-
bination of sounds produced by
reeds in the dolls hitherto called
talking babies. Great larks the
little folk are going to have with
these dolls, for mere talk is but
one of their accomplishments.—
They can sing as well. The pe—
culiarity of these dolls is that they
are modifications of Edison's pho-
nography. The interior of the
dolls contains mechanism for oper-
ating a phonograph. The cylinder
of wax is made harder than when
used in the phonograph, so thai
it will' stand rough usage, and it
is, of course by no means as large.
these cylinders are marked with
all sorts of MotherGoose melodies
and nursery rhymes, and as the
dolls aro to ..be sold everywhere,
the cylinders have to be impressed
with all sorts of languages. The
dolls will cost perhaps three dol-
lars more for having the ability to
talk within limits just as real folk
do.
DON'T BE A CLAM.
When troubled with a Cough or Cold,
get a bottle of Wilson's Wild Cherry and
cure it at once, before it has time to set-
tle on your lungs. Why experiment
with new and untried remedies, when
this old and reliable cure may be got
from all leading druggists. Thousands
bear testimony to the remarkable cur-
ative properties of Wilson's Wild Cherry
in such diseases as Bronchitis, Croup,
Whooping Cough, Colds, Coughs, eto.
Get the genuine in white wrappers only.
HOW HE PAID THE BILL.
Some years ago, when Judge H.
G. Hicks was not as prosperous as
he has been in later years,he owed
a little bill of $25 to a well known
firm, and one of the members
came to see him about it. The
judge, then a plain colonel, lately
returned from the war, frankly
confessed that he was 'busted' and
asked for an extension of time.
'Can't do it,' said the gentleman
'if you don't pay it we'll have to
sue you.'
'How can I pay when I haven't
got the money?' asked the colonel.
'All I want is a little time.
'Well, we'll have to bring suit.'
said the gentleman, as be started
off.
'Hold on,' said the colonel, as a
bright idea struck him; 'if you
must sue me, why pot give me the
case? You will have to employ
some lawyer.'
'That's sp,' said the gentleman ;
'all right bring the suit.'
Col. Hicks brought the suit,con-
fessed judgment, sent in his bill
for $50 attorney's fee, collected it,
then settled the judgment. From
that time on he had all the firm's
saw business.—Minneapolis Tri-
bune.
Minard's Liniment cures colds, etc.
C. C. RICHARDS & Co.
GENTS.—I certify that MINARD'S
LINIMENT cured my daughter of a
severe and what appeared to be a fatal
attack of diphtheria after all other re-
medies had failed, and recommend it to
all who may be afflicted with that ter-
rible disease.
JOHN D. BOUTILIER.
French Village, Jany., 1883.
Christopher Rice Mansel Talbot,
Liberal member of the House of
Commons for the middle division
of Glamorganshire is dead. Mr. Tal
bot was the oldest member of the
House of commons, having sat
for the county uninterruptedly for
60 yeah.
The action of the Lloydville wo-
man for $1,000 damages against a
saloon -keeper of the same place for
supplying her husband with liquor
till he was helplessly drunk, and
was as a consequence frozen to
death, was non -suited Wednesday
at Toronto by Sir Thos. Galt.
The death is announced in Mit.
obeli of Mrs Davis, mother of
Rev. Canon Danis, of London
South, and also of Davis Bros.,
publishers of the Advocate. The
deceased caught the "grippe" and
complications set in to which she
succu m bed.
Harper•'4Weekly warmly eulo-
gises Mr. Gladstone on his enter-
ing his 81st year, It says that
" even the fatal hand of time
cannot steal bis true glory, the
example of,1 great powers con-
secrated to the highest patriotism
and unabated intellectual vigor
and freshness of feeling at three-
score and twenty-one. Every
man of the Eng)ish race may well
be proud of so sturdy and com-
manding an illustration of the
higher and characteristic qualities
of the .English stock.'
SOFT WHITE HANDS.
A little of Gnibourt's Parisian Balm
applied at night, will soon render the
hands soft and white. Parisian halm in
delightfully perfumed. Sold by all
druggists.
OPENING SOUTH AMERICA.
A project is on foot in the,Unit-
ed States to build a railway
straight through to the Pacific
coast in South America. It is
not generally understood, says
the New York Sun, that the build-
ing of less than two thousand
miles of railroad, extending from
Caragena to Cuzco, would prac-
tically connect the United States
with the entire railway system of
South America and open up new
fields of commerce of the greatest
importance. The completion of
this enterprise, which has been
fairly launched, wilt change,in no
small degree, the present course
of trade, and compel passengers
and mail from Liverpool to South
America to seek the shorter route
by the United States, If this
railway in built England would'
be obliged to send mail matter to
New York, thence by rail to Pen-
sacola, a journey of fourteen hun-
dred miles, and thence by steamer
from Pensacola to Cartagena.
This harbor is one of the best of
South America. It is walled and
fortified by Spaniards at a cost of
$58,000,000 and today presents
the most imposing frontage of any
in the Western Hemisphere.
Some of the advantages of this
route into South America to the.
manufacturing regions of tho
Southern States are pointed out
by our contemporary. A travell-
er may leave Washington at night
and the first day cross the cotton
fields, the second pass through
the orange groves of Florida, the
third call at Havana at noon, at
sunrise of the sixth day enter the
ancient city of Cartagena, with
the first rays of the sun of the
seventh see the flashing summit
of Tolima, beside which Mt. Cenis
would reach only the meridian
lino; at midnight cross the Ama-
zon, approach the next morning
the spot where Church painted
"The Heart of the Andres," pass
Cuzco, the capital of the Incos, in
the afternoon ; and the morning
of the ninth day buret through
the Andes at a level of 2,000 feet
above the top of Mt Blanc from
the car windows, looking down
upon the Pacific beyond the; city
of Peru and before evening reach
Molendo by the giddy decent of
one of those marvelous roads
which Meiggs built, at a cost to
Peru of $140,000,000 and the lives
of 7,000 workmen. A three days'
sail will bring him to the noble
cities of Santiago and Valparaiso,
where he may re -cross the Andes
to Buenos Ayres. It is difficult
to realize that the building of less
than'2,000 miles of railway will
accomplish all this, and yet it is
true. Are we American people
about to emulate the Canadians
in the C. P. R. enterprise.
Children Cry for
- Pitcher'stCastorla.
for Infants and Children..
"Oa.lelrLl.aowaII l.ptetiioehf&entL.t l auteele earell l7olle. t7o0glil>sUon,
I tu,..npaiDcto.D,pre ipfiw, sem' Stoia�ch. Dlarr+tce.. Et,actativD.
ImgVY$oiz&.n H. A.AsDEn)R,iID., BiIMWOSAtY,SlveY.1eep.apilluvgtq/el{t1M
1118w Ogled 6$. &cetyl{, N. T. Wdpt keit' maktgloa.
Tari CFarsus CopPA,x, T! Murray Street. N. Y.
---THE
Furniture Dealers
Cabinet Makers,
Undertakers,
And Upholsterers
PICTURE FRAMING A SPFCIALTY.
CALL AT THE
Red Roc ke rF u rn itu re Eem po ri u m
Albert Street, Brick Block, Clinton.
(CUBE
VTHOUSANDS OF BOTTLES
GIVEN AWAY YEARLY.
When I say Cure 1 do not mean
® merely to stop them for a time, and then
have them return again. 1 MEAN A R A D I CA L C U R E. I have made the disease of Fits,
Epilepsy or Failing Sickness a life-long study. I 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 I,.fallIble Remedy. Give Express and
Post Office. It costs you nothing for a trial, and it will cure you. Address:—H. Q. ROOT,
M.C., Branch Office, 186 WEST ADELAIDE STREET, TORONTO.
Mr Cowan, banker, while assisting Mr
J. V. Roman at threshing at Black-
water, was caught in the driving belt
and w hirled around and then thrown on
the floor of the barn, where he lay for
two hours. Stange to say, no bones
were broken, and the patient is progress-
ing very favorably.
That beautiful glossy sheen, so
much admired inhair, can be
secured by the use of Ayer's H:iir
Vigor. There is nothing bettor
than this preparation for streng-
thening the scalp and keeping it
free from dandruff and itching
eruptions.
`No use talking, to me about lay-
ing up money for a rainy day,'
said Uncle Ebo, addressing an at-
tentive group, `no use taking dat
way t3 a man wid rich luck as I
always hab. Why, Great Scott !
if I were to lay up money for a
rainy day we'd hab a drought for
forty years. No, sah ; you don't
ketch dis nigger in dat sort o'
trap.'
One day last week an elderly lady re-
siding in Kenosha, Wis., soddenly drop-
ped dead from some heart trouble. She
was supposed to be very poor, having
worked hard all her life. The under-
taker was summoned to the residence to
prepare the body for burial, and while
removing the clothing it was noticed
that the bustle was rather heavy ; in
fact, it was so weighty as to attract at-
tention. It was ripped open and the
spectators were thunderstruck to
find secreted therein $b800 in bank notes
The old lady, instead of spending her
money had hoarded every cent and sav-
ed the above amount, which she prefer-
red to carry around, with her, rather
than entrust it to the banks.
There is not one of the 33 pri-
soners who are in the Kingston
penitentiary for life that does not
expect to get freedom some time
or other. In fact, they expect it
when they have been in fifteen
years. An old fellow is now serv-
ing his seventh term in prison.
Although he has now spent 331
years of bis life there. He is 75
years old. In Great Britain, a
man sentenced to imprisonment
for life gets out after he has served
20 years, always provided he has
behaved himself, and reached the
position of a first-class convict.
An absent minded German pro-
fessor was one day observed walk-
ing down the street with one foot
continually in the gutter and the
other on the pavement. A pu 1 it
meeting him, saluted him with,
"Good morning, Herr Professor.
How aro you?" "I war, vary well,
I thought," answered the profess-
or, "but now I don't know what's
the matter with me.. For the last
half hour I've been limping."
In a Perthshire parish a young
lady went to join the church. She
had never been to school,and could
not say the Shorter Catechism.
The first question the minister
asked her was, "Can you tell me
who brought you out of the land
of Egypt and out of the house of
bondage ?" Her reply was, "Woel
sir. that's just the vtay lees spread?
for I never was over the Brig of
Cally in my life."
MOTHERS?
Castoria is recommended by physio-
ians for children teething. It is a pure-
ly vegetable preparation, its ingredients
are published around each bottle. It is
pleasant to 'the taste and absolutely
harmless. It relieves constipation, re
plates the bowels, quiets pain, en res
diarrhoea and wind colic, allays fever-
ishness, destroys worms, and prevents
convulsions, soothes the child and gives
it refreshing and natural sleep. Cas
toric is the children's pmscea—the
mother's friend. Sfi doges, ;;.i cents.
Jan. 10, to ltliar. 24.
Wilson's Wild Cherry cures Coughs
and Colds.
jJack and Jill each took a pill, '
Old-fashioned kind—full grown;
Jack's went down—but with a frown
Jill died from "cause unknown."
Smiles will supersede many
frowns, and many discomforts
will be unknown,when DrPierce's
Pleasant purgative Pellets entire-
ly supersede, as they bid fair to
do, the large and less efficient
pill of our fore fathers. Every
day they gain new laurels!
Most popular when most life
abound
'What are yer doing,youyoung
rascal?' said a farmer to a remark-
ably small boy, on finding him
standing under a tree in his or-
chard with an apple in his hand.
"Please, sir, I was only goin' to
put this 'ere apple back on the
tree, sir; it had fallen down, sir."
Minard's Liniment cures Diphtheria.
Tho latest contrivance which is
;nteresting to the ladies is a glove
with a pocket in it. The pocket
is a tiny affair, fixed in the palm
of the left glove, and is thus silent
testimony to the fact that most
women are right -banded. It is for
nickels and dime. On entering a
car, the fingers of the right hand
deftly open thelittle-pocket, and
the necessary change is easily se-
cured. It is a question whether
the gloves will become the rage.
Most women are mighty particular
about the fit of their gloves, and
whether or not the insertion of a
pocket, ,no matter how tiny,in the
palm of one of them mars the
symmetry of the pair is a problem
which experience alone can solve.
The Safest
AND most powerful alterative is
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Young and
old are alike benefited by its use. For
tho eruptive
eases peculiar to
children nothing
else is so effective
as this medicine,
while its agreea-
ble flavor mnl:es
it ea?,; tj adniu-
ister.
"My iit:ie
bad lnrgtl scr,.ii-
lous ulcers on his
neck and throat
from which he
suffered terribly.
�G—
' Two physicians
attended him, bat' he grew continually
worse under their care, and everybody
expected he would die. I bad heard of
the remarkable cures effected by Ayer's
Sarsaparilla, and decided to have my
boy try it. Shortly after he began to
take •this medicine, the ulcers com-
menced healing, and, after using several
bottles, he was entirely cured. He is
now as healthy and strong as any boy
of his age."— William F. Dougherty,
Hampton, Va.
In May last, my youngest child,
fourteen months old, began to have sores
gather on its head and body. We ap-
plied various simple remedies without
avail. The sores increased in number
anal disebarged copiously. A physician
was called, brit the Bores continued to
multiply until in a' few months they
nearly covered the child's head and body.
,t. we began the use of Ayer's Sar-
snpr.rilla. In a few days a marked
. ha lige for the better was manifest, The
64,r -s assumed a more healthy condition,
t ;e discharges were gradually dimin-
i lied, and finally ceased altogether.
':'lie child is livelier, its skin is fresher,
cull its appetite better than we have ob-
s 'lived for months."—Frank M. Griffin,
1 .m, Point, Texas.
" The formula of Ayer's Sarsaparilla
rnts,for chronic diseases of almost
kind, the best remedy known to
mc•lieal world."—D. M. Wilson,
',I. 1:., Wiggs, Arkansas.
Dyer's Sarsaparilia,
PREPARED $Y
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mast.
Price $1 ; six botties, $S. Worth $unit bottle.
(
ST. CATSARxN'E$ ;
111,711SER'Y
S'o...
The undersigned offers al; extemely IQ^Gilf
prices, all kinds of Nursery Stood: ': `
GRAPE VINES A SPECIALTY.
These Vines will bear two years after'
planting. If well cared for will bear eve.
year and live for a century.
E. T. HOLMES, New Era Office, Clinton
�igal
XMAS COODS
The attention of the public is respeetfully invited to the superb stock o
Xmas Goods at Adams Emporium, consisting of a good assortment o
WATCHES from $5 up to $22, all warranted. ALBUMS from 75ots
to $2.75. AUTOGRAPHS from 5cts. up. Ladies and Gents Companion
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. I'he finest lot of CHINA and STONEWARE
we ever had. We have also quite a supply of PICTURE BOOKS and .
TOYS for Santa Claus to put in the stockings. All made welcome. -
WISHING ALL A MERRY XMAS.
R. ADAMS.
LONDESBORO
4541 A. A
Best and Cheapest Fence
STEEL RODS—IRON FOUNDATION.
BUILDERS' IRONWORK,
Office Railings, Lawn Furniture
AND FOUNTAINS, ETC.
ADDRESS
llllrlilllhl Wire & Irol Works
WALKERVILLE, ONTARIO.
INA HALL.
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-opportunitp-of-ser ' -
cnrirrg cheap bargains, as we are bound to reduce our stock.
.We Offer NEW SEASON JAPAN TEA at 40 cants, worth 0
We Offer NEW SEASON BLACK TEA at 25 cents, worth O.
We Offer NEW SEASON GREEN TEA at[25 cents, worth 85.
NEW CURRANTS and RAISINS, cheap, 2 BROOMS for 25c.
FRESH:FINAN HADDIE, SISCOS, EIERRINGABLOATERS, &c.
Goods promptly delivered to any part of the town. Give us a call.
BUTTER AND EGGS TAKEN AS CASH.
N. ROBSON. -CHINA . HALL.—
T H E
;LINTON SEW ERA
R. HOLMES, - - Publisher,
CLINTON, - - ON T.
THE NEW ERA is published every Friday ; it
gives about Thirty-two Columns of Fresh Reading
Matter Every Week ; Correct Market Reports
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 DEPARTMENT
We have;all the latest styles of type for Circulars, dale
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.
HOLMES,. BOX 74. CLINTON. -.
•