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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1890-04-04, Page 3t.. 711' 1 4 A Alp 4.T IIAII sol,llolTA.1:►oltsl T.xicllap BSa tjf41346•ND A, Whitehall, Wis., 440114 pays ;--Thirty lyyiaobers .are nil trial for ono of the meet, remark - *be 041310 ever committed in this fitslte, Balla Job Olson was atx'aog up by }tis neighbors on tianday, Nov. 24th last. The deed Was done at the urgent and tear- 1.111 ea1.itl solicitation of his wife. The trial yesterday and to -day brought Qt>t the follow<ng facts: The lynchingarty was organ- ized by James Johnson and Ole $lotto. About thirty persons met t 7 o'clock Sunday . night and Went to Olson's house. They hur- ried the dazed lean out of bed in his shirt and rolled him round in the snow. His wife then handed 17i' clothes out of the door. A rope if (put round his neck, and Ile wait 'told that he would be giv- en twenty four hours to leave the country. His exact answer was : "This is my home, and I am going to stay here till God takes ms away." The rope was then thrown over the lower branch of a tree and drawn taut. Then it was loosen- ed, and the leaders of the crowd began to parley with him. "Boys," he answered in a plead- ing way, "you don't know what you are doing. You will be sorry some day. I shall remain here." Dick Martin led the conversa- tion, and insisted that he must leave or hang. "But I have done nothing," he replied. "Why shouldlleavethe country ?" "You 'plugged a grub' and put it in Strand's wood -pile," said Martin. "I have been punished for that in the penitentiary, I have a right to live here, and I intend to do so. You have no right to dis- turb me," he answered. The rope was again drawn tight, and Olson was lifted from the ground, but let down gasping for breath. Then the parley was re- sumed. In the midst of the hub- bub Mrs Olson came to the door and began to talk to the crowd in a very excited manner. She told them of Olson' e depravity, how he threatened his family as well as other people in Whitehall and Llair, and she cried and begged them not to leave him with her any longer. She was afraid of him. .tier speech worked the crowd to a fever heat, and a vote was taken on the question of hanging Olson. It was almost unanimous that he ought to die. A rush was then made for the doomed man. He was dragged to the tree again, and strong men tugged at the rope till his head was forced tightly against the limb. Oae of Olson's daughters, aged 14, stood et the window watching, • andwhen her father was pulled up she exclaimed: "Now he : he hangs 1" Most of the mob dispersed, but Ole Slott., and 'Charles Delmorewent into the house to comfort thewidow. She -entertained them pleasantly and made coffee for them, for they were 'tired after their exertions. Three of the each afterwards -confessed, and Charles Johnson has pleaded guilty to the ohage of murder, and the wife and son of the dead man and Ole Sletto are now on trial. Dick Martin has 'fled, MOTHERS? • Castoria is reeeraneuded by physio •lana forehi'ldreir teething, It iOEa ure- ly.vegetable�pprt+e�paration, its ingredients are publisbed�al`onnd•eaoh bottle. it ie pleasant to the taste and absolutely harmless. It relieves constipation, re- gulates the bowels, ,quiets pain, cares 4iarrhcea and wind colic, allays fever- iiihness, destroys worms, and prevents 110/ convulsions, soothes the child and gives it refreshing and natural sleep. Cas- toria is the children's panacea—the mother's friend. 35 doses, 35 cents. Jan. 10, to Mar. 28. John Benjamin, aged 35, farm laborer, while working on the G. T. R. track a mite west of Chat- ham, was struck and instantly killed by the afternoon accomoda- tion train, Jennie Pope, a 1:6 -year-old col- ored girl at .Rockville,- Md., pois- oned three children of Farmer Smith, for whom she worked. Tho girl said she wanted to attend a funeral, a pteasuro she bad never as yet had. One of the children will die. . Mrs `Mar (=ties; y w.bile craned with Iig.uor in Now ;York, cut off her left hand at the wrist with a bread knife and die.! :,t the hos- pital in a few hours. T1 roel. ' ew o tJtlditlon treaty be- tween o-tween the United States and Great Br'itain was officially proclaimed in Washington and London on Wednesday. It takes effect on April 4. CATARRH, CATAQRHAL DEAFNESS—HAY FE' -ER f- A NEW HOME TREATMENT. Sufferers are not generally aware that these diseases are contagions, or that they aro duq to the presence of living parasites in the lining membrane of the nose and eustaohian tubes. Microscopic research, bewet'er; has proved this to be a fact, and the result of this discovery ie that a simple remedy has been formulated where- by catarrh, catarrhal deafness and hay fever are permanently cured in from one to three simple applications made at home liy the patient onoo is two weeks. ND.—This treatment is not a snuff or an °intinent ; both have been discarded by+ reputable , , • sioians as injnrione. A pais jihleet eaplai . ' g this new treatment is sent, on reeelpt of ten °ante by A. lI. DIltok de' 8o14 808 West ling Street, Tomei°, Canada.-••-Torbrlto Globe. Waren* Iron Catarrhal troubles should ,tttotally teed the sloth. HOW BER BROIC.P1 ITT.. 11JT TA'kr aA vrivssa. {fly lauebanfi ,lue;;an't glum any (roofs i"red icki'ka'aone, mors, tobacco,' Bald n IfelOY:1nftr- im. in the New YorkLedger, rietl lady to a p-lrty of Mende, :"Tile writer wee dinitt' at a °Ors At least, ho uuesn't where tart' arness if) °FArt iliam, caliJl eco la.im.' oltttid, one evonipg,, when, the How did you stop him ? they cert being on the 'table, it wa all asked. nouneod that a Fakir of 'Tho morning after wo were Celebrity was 0n band, and v married,' began the lady, 'aud ho like to be permitted to give a and I were sitting on the :front formance. He was collectin porch, I noticed that be was ill at soma temple, for these Fa ease, and finally I asked him what never accept money for, t was the matter with him.' selves, or any reward that ca 'My darling,' he said, taking considoredpersonal,beyond si my hands, 'there is something I food.. He was introduced should have told you before we proved a tall, thin, very dark were married.' rather dirty personage, appal. 'What is it'?' I gasped as the ly well on in years. He w vision of another woman swept through an ordinaryperforman over me. took up his collection, and 'Love,' he iinswered, '1 am about to withdraw, when a so inveterate tobacco -chewer. Can what lively dispute arose am you, will you, forgive me ?' some of the officers as to As he finished I slipped my amount of trickery in his fe hands from his, and, drawing out Some insisted that it was all a box of snuff and a brush, I said : thing but slight of hand. Oth '0, John, I'm so geld you spoke were as confident that there of it, for I'm nearly crazy for a more than legerdemain in it. 'dip.' last somebody turned to the Fa His face was a picture, I can and asked him if he was willing tell you, and in less than three do something out of his regu minutes we had entered into a program, to convince the ske solemn compact to forever abstain cal. He bowed, glanced arou from the weed. the mess -room and fixed his And did you really use snuff upon the wax candles rn scon before you were married ?' asked which were fixed against the w one of the ladies. all round the apartment. St 'No,' answered the wife, but I ping near the door, he extend was fixed for John.'—Atlanta his hand toward the nearest c Constitution. dle, the flame of which, as his dex finger pointed to it, flicker bent over as by a puff of wind, a went out. The Fakir's'finger' w then pointed to the next cand which was extinguished in t same way, and without movi from where he stood, he put o every candle in the sconces, t most distant being full five•a thirty feet from him. With similar simple motion he next lighted all the candles: the fla returning to each at its full beig and not increasing by degrees when one lights a cold candle. This feat was naturally very festive, and the younger men the mess (it is always the youn est mon who find the least diffic ty in explaininggstrange phen mena) were at first almost redu ed to silence. A few momen GEMS OF THOUGHT. however, sufficed to rally the discouraged skepticism, and th A false flag means a rotten keel a crossfire of suggestions, coni below. tures, theories and guesses roll all round the table, Then t candles were all alight. It w easy enough to refuse to belie that they bad ever been esti guished. Those who really kne something about the Fakirs f the most part kept silence, prob bly thinking it useless to was any energy en a sultry evenin There is no surer way of hay- in disputing an incredulity whio ing everybody's help than by try. was preverse rather than rations ing to held everybody. and consequently the harder to Minard's Liniment cares Diphtheria. mve• The Fakir himself, ho ever, seemed a little put out the inconclusive results of his formance, and advancing respect- fully to tbe conon�el, who sat a the bead of the table, be intima that he stood prepared to giv the sahibs a sisore cenvincin proof of his power, but -that wouit Self.eultnre is the storage -of out la preliminary d not venture anttes power. ft will introduce a 'man immunity. It 'might, he ea to a larger and more beautiful make some of the sahibs angry world than idleness and ignorance but be would engage most screw ever find. ly that it would loot injure an C. C. tltnettans & Co. one a particle. This exordiu Genoa—I had a valuable •oolt so bad roused the couroeity of the me with mange that I feared 1 would lose it. I need MINARD'a T.�,, IMENT and the Fakir quickly receive and it oared him like.magio. the assurance that, whatever b 'Dallmnsie Cum/moms 8avanl�as. did, no harm should befall him Upon this promise he stepped t the door as though to pass on stopped suddenly and turne round, and, lifting his hand, sai in Hin�dustanee: "No sahib can move until I -per mit him!" Of course, every one instant] tried to move—and every one fai ed. There we all sat, not precise ly as if glued to our chairs, bu rather as if paralyzed from th waist down. The general sensa- tion, as ascertained later by com- paring notes, was that of loss of feeling in the legs and feet. It was not the volition that was sus- pended. We could try to move. We could will to send the message to our legs, but the message some- how would not go. The telegraph line was broken. A more curious feeling it would be impossible to conceive of, and it is very hard to describe it intelligibly, but the central fact is, that the Fakir had spoken the truth, and that no- body in the room could stir from his chair, strive he never so fiercely. CCIy. 1 suppose it was in Ol- der to Ict our real; ,ation of the Jruth penetrate as thoroughly, that the Fakir kept us in that Homowhat awkward and humili- ating position nearly ten minutes. To several the time seemed much longer than that, and had the mutiny then occurred, probably the common and first thought would have been, how easily the throats ofall the officers of a regi- ment might be cut, with the help r. If a woman is to marry, there ofMupchf discussion);i followed the is nothing 80 much to bo valued departure of the Fakir, but the as good health and good sense and gallant officers of the —th were a really loving heart ; and then it mile% better fighters than think - will follow that she will ;adapt ors, and not one of them ap- herself to the calls upon her proaehed the true explanation of ability. When a woman marries the strange power exerted by the for a life of ease and does net got Fakir. it, there is certainly no remady in her case as long ea she forgets that life is a struggle anywhere and feels that she should be excus- ed from helping to carry the bur- dens of those by whom she may bo surrounded. grit. skysl lnlli. Cut. des- s an - some ould per- g for Mil's beln- n be mple and and ent- ent OP) was me - Ong tbe ate no- erA was At kir to lar pti- nd eyes cos all eped• an- in - ed, nd as le, he ng ut he nd a re - me ht as ef- in g- ul- O- 0- ts, it en 00 - ed he as ve n- or a- te 1re- at per ted hal of id n- n, t, 1- A LADY'S ANSWER. FBBo1i THE NEW ENGLAND nOIaE5TEAD. "A subscriber" wishes a receipt for coloring. I have used Diamond Dyes. They cost ten cents a color, and on each package is a reliable receipt for that color. Go according to that and you will be suited. There are some forty colors made and by" using them, weak or strong, or in different combin- ations, any desired shade can be ob-' tained. If you want to color cotton, be sure to get the special cotton dyes.— Floriline. S ho do their wnndying,eshshould ask hei" and all rdrug- gists for "Successful Hosie Dyeing," a book telling how to dye at home. Or if he has none on hand, send to Wells Richardson c& Co., 200 Mountain St., Montreal, who will forward a free copy if you mention the Ntw Ene. El) One thorn of experiences is worth a whole wilderness of warn- ing. Since we cannot get what we like bot us like what we can get. Try to regard present vexations as you will regard them a moth hence. The world is like a looking - glass. Laugh at it and it laughs back ; frown at it and it frowns back. The ehiefsecret of comfort lies in not suffering trifles to vex us, and in cultivating our under- growth of email pleasures. We need each other's forbear- ance as well as encouragement in order to do our best. We do not all see alike.; we cannot all work in the same way. The infliction of pain as a pun- ishment is only justified when the inflictor is certain or as nearly certain as can be that the pain will be productive of good. Take time; it is no use to foam or fret, or Uo as the angry house- keeper who has got hold of the wrong key, and pushes, shakes and rattles it about the lock until botch are =broken and the door is still unopened. It is the habitual thought that frames itself into our tifd, !-It af- fects us oven more than our in- timate social relations do. Our confidential friends have not so much to do in shaping our lives as thoughts have which wo hat'- bor. To try too hard to make people good is ono way to make them worse; the only way to make good cod is to bo good—remembering well the beam and the mote. The time for speaking comes raely ; the time fbr being never departs. Saving is a practice best begun early—and for this reason. It is a habit, and, like all habits, easily planted in a child,but taking root with difficulty in an adult. It is no kindness to teach children to spend,unloss you can ensure them money to spend to their lives' end. .41-4r Hare you a Covet ? Take Wilson's Wild Cherry. Oho a you flraed obitir ? e, Take aWilson's Cherry. Have your lost your ♦oioe } Tako Wilson's Wild MerNaveou Asthma t take Wilton's Wild Cherry Thee oeurar Cold rn the Head? Take Wilson a x OLD It LUABL8 et/Itt for sol dimmer of the Threat,,ehest And Lungs, Seta by druggists mTHREE STARS HEALTH HA PP 3naneWill,ntly euro absolutelythe andsnp ort N 0 I s. aggravated case of CATARRH, Hay Foyer or Catarrhal Deafness. This is not a snuff or ointment, both of which are discarded by reputable physi. oians as wholly worthless and generally injurious. Ask for Hospital R0D1edy for Catarrh. N.B.--This Is the only catarrh Remedy on the market which pima emanates from scientitlosources. $1.00. N® HOPE NiV i10iu Ar'ddidatO AU troubles of the LIVER AND KIDNEYS, and permanently cure Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Coft- stipation, Bright's Disease of theKidneys, Catarrh of the Stomach and Bladder. This is a marvellous medicine. It rapidly makes 000D BLOOD AND LOTS OF IT Alm THLI$7]11P iS urn. There isnot a blood meds. oine in the market as good as this. 1t is peerless. It loused to the 8ospltals of Europe, and Drew scribed by the most eminent physicians in the world, Suitable for old or young. .afar zoa VIOBpITAL ICIINEODT YOU /AV= AND =NETS. This is an incompar- able rem General & Nenus forus Debility It i. truly ISte Itself. Use It and ave ARM& Ask for 11l18PITAL RENEW for CEHERAL DEBUJTY. pen 51.00. PRICE $1,00. this extract from the scientific papers of Great Britain and Europe �/,. The four greatest medical centres of the world are London, Parte. Berlin and Vienna. These oltlee hadk Munn hospitals teeming with au fjerinyy humanity. Crowds of students throng the wards studying under the Professorsing charge. The most renowned ph-ysloiane o, f the world teach and praoticu here, and the institutions are storehouses of medical knowledge and experience. With a view of making this experlenoo available to the public the Hospital Remedy Co. at great expense secured the prescriptions of these hospitals, prepared the specifics, and although It would cost from $78 to $100 to secure the attention of their distinguished originators, yet in this way their pre. pared specifics are offered at the price of the quack patent medioinea that flood the market end absurdly olsrim to cure every Ill from a single bottle. OS P ONE DOLLAR EACH. TO BE HAD OF ALL DRIICGZSTS OR OF TIM HOSPITAL REMEDY COMPANY, Sole Proprietors, • o TORONTO, CANADA. CZ tCTIL.a ie DESCIUDINC} IrErsian BEDESDIES =MP ON APPLICATION. WHO CARRIES ON THE BUS- INESS? Men don'tbelieve in a devil now, as their fathers used to do ; They've forced the door of the broad- est creed to let hie majesty through. There isn't a print from his cloven foot or a fiery dart from his brow To be found in earth or air to day, for the world has voted it so. But who is mining the fatal draught that palsies heart and brain, And loads the bier of each passing year with ten hundred thousand slain? Who blights the bloom of the land to- day with the fiery breath of hell new devil isn't, and never was, will 'samebody rise and tell ? Who dogs the steps of the toiling saint, and digs the pits for his feet? Who Bows the tares on the field of time wherever God sows Rio wheat 2 The devil L voted not to be, and of course the thing is tree ; But who is doing the kind of work that the devil alone should do ? We are told that he does not go about like a roaring lion now ; But whom shall we hold responsible for the everlasting row To be heard in home, in church, in state, to the ear his remotest bound; If the devil by a unanimons vote, is no- where to be found ? Won't somebody step to the front forth- with, and make his bow and show How the frauds and. crimes of a Bingle w day spring. up? We want to know. The devil was fairly voted ont, and of course the devil's gone; But simply people would like to know who carries his business on ? Minard's Liniment for Rheumatism. Marriage is undoubtedly a fail- ure in many cases in Boston. Last year, according to municipal statistics just published, 129 lic- enses to marry in the city were taken out and yet worn never used. "There's many a slip," it s0ems. Paris officers going to sieze the goods of a woman against whom a judgment had been obtained found her lying apparently dead and pro - pared for burial in her rooms. They worn about to retire when ono of thorn could not resist the temptation to pinch the plump arm of the woman, Tho suppos- ed corpse promptly sat up on the bier and gave the impertinent officer a regular dressing down bo. fore she remembered that she was dead to her creditors if not to the world. The execution was made at once and the goods sold. Minard's Liniment curos el/da, etc. Tl'o southern fruit -growers whose crops were touched by the recent frost aro comforting one another with the story of the Georgian man who awoke one morning last year to find the young pears in his orchard hang- ing thick with icicles. One look was sufficient. He saddled his horse, rode to town, and in the excitement and despair of the moment offered to sell the entire crop, whatever it mrghtmako, for $100. A man who heard the of- fer handed out the moneyand the transfer -,was made, When the re- turns were in the man who bought the orchard had netted the sum of $3,000. Nature has lavishly provided onres for all the diseases flesh is heir to, but the proper preparation of many of them has not yet been discovered. in Wilson's Wild Cherry we have a cure for Coughs, Colds, Whooping Cough, Croup and kindred ailments, prepar- ed from vegetable drugs, in a pleasant and concentrated form and which var- iably gives prompt relief and effects a speedy onre. Sold by al] druggists. There is a famine of school teachers in Oscoda county, Mich. The examiner says they get mar- ried as soon as he has them start- ed, or else go back to logging. He talks of importing some un - marriageable school madams; but in a country where women r.re"so seance, even, old maids are at a premium„ Detective Murray, of Toronto, has received a letter from Alder- -eon Jr Sone, - oi'vil engineers, of Stewart Buildings, New York, telling of the mysterious disep- pearanoe of Augustus Rawlings and Prank Regbie, sone of English gentlemen, who were lured to Canada neder the impression that they were to be placed out with farmers as farm pupils. One of them, the writer understood, paid i £1,000 in England, and that one- third of this money was sent to agents in Toronto. The firer nam- ed young man paid £800 for a part interest in a farm north of Lind- say, where he seems to have dis- appeared, and the other sent a letter to friends in England after arriving at Niagara Falls, in which he said he would give an account of the place in Ms next letter. He bas not been heard from since. sufferers rROM Stomach and Liver derange- ments—Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Sick - Headache, and Constipation—find asafe and Certain relief in Ayer's Pills. In all cases where a ca- thartic Is needed, these Pillsare recom- mended by leading physicians. Dr. T. E. Hastings, of italtin:ore, says: "Ayer's Pills are the h,•sr estlta.rtie putt DI. J.l,n Va., write:: Pills fn repent. families." op, rutit \tin the rea'•14 of Illy proles- siun." VV. iilrouin. ,•f Oro•tnt. f I:•,;r I r •::, rih,,l Ayer's and `+:;.,I them ex- ; ;coral hila " For a i -,. i'. •.•. r. i w:-.nfli, 1,41 with bilion .4. •ti r,.i• h •t11110:41ilrstrrycli •nc lav,lt1, 1•i„i c,uin+s n•tur,;irt+, 11,1'. incising :1, ,1 t.,,' ,04. r.••li, f 4.1,,11 1 Henan t,. tido; Ayer's Pills." (1. S. rt.nt,n,, 1'a. f bars• ,, teff Ayer's fill:, fat ti ,• 1,;,:;t, the t" pe : +•4, and ata satistit 41 1 n,4uahl e to -day if it had t.•,; linen for ti•tn. They cured nu' ,0f , 1c,.i4,• ,gia when all other remedies fnll,•,l and their sirn:a use has kept 110e in t1 health y ,ie::•1 ,•,4 over : in" "--'r. 1'. Drown, i'a•. ns.: been t.n:,j.•rt., for years, to ion, without being able to find ruc, 14 relief, I et last tried Ayer's Pills, and ,: •rm it both a duty and a pleasure r.. t,sufy that I have derived great ben- oflr from their use. For over two years past ken One ;ery night before retiring.of tI would notese lls willingly be without them.'—G. W. Bowman, 20 East Main st., Carlisle, Pa "Ayer's family npwards have twenty u y years,nand, have completely verified all that is claimed for there. In attacks of piles, from which I suffered teeny years, triey afi i edI eveed r greatered."relief s 1" an any •I.lolly•Springs, Texas. Ayer's Pills, 1l%5PA8ED n' Dr. .1, C. Ayer at CO., Lowell, Mass Hold by fill n1ngg1 t►Ynit beaters In Medicine ontiltrnoti SUR�t►Y CURED. TO THE EDITQIt:y our readers that I have a disease. Sy its rtimelease y usemtt,onsand of hopeless cases have beeremedy eranently curfor the bed. I shall:•', be glad to send two bottles of my remedy Fuss to any ofyour readers who have cos.• sumetion if they will send me their Express and Post Office Address. RasgeCtfgliy, u, T. A. SLOCUM, M.C., 188 West Adelaide at., TORONTO, ONTARIO. - The People's Grocery mousiness Change... The undersigned desires to intimate to his former patrons and hien that he has repurchased his former business, and will continue it the old stand, Corner of Albert and Ontario Street He intends to go out of the Crockery and Glassware line entirely, balance of which will be sold cheap, and will devote himself exelu� sively to GROCERIES, Fine Fruits, Confectionary S c� Of which he will keep nothing but first-class goods. The bnsinese will be conducted on a strictly cash basis, and prices will be fixed ao-.' cordingly. By giving close personal attention to the business he -- hopes to merit and receive the same liberal patronage tbat he enjoyed hitherto. JOHN CUNINGHIAME. - - ` CLINTON ooso CIoaoiogSea11 SPECIAL In CUTS In BROOMS, BRUSHES and SOAPS, BED- ROOM SETS, CROCKERY & GLASSWARE %: J. W. IRWIN, The Times Tea Warehouse* Cooper's Old Stand, Cor. Searle's Blo.,k, CLINTON - ADAMS' EMPO Rfl SP.rNG �� •:�a •. Last week we received and opened up a large ga'ntity of now goods for -• the spring trade. Lovely PRINTS, Fine DRESS (1()ODS, Extra Good '1 WEEDS, and cheap. CARPETS in Tapestry, hemp and Oil TIGKINGS, SIIII{TINGS and BUTCIIERS LINE, KENTUCKY JEAN, something new in dress lining. Full supply of small wares. MILLINERY, as usual the very best.. GROCERIES of hest quality. WALL PAPER &e. Field and Garden SEE DS. All are cordially in- vited to 800 the goods and be convinced that this is the right place. lam. ADAMS. LONDESBORO D'A vignon's Crean] of Witch -Daze', THE NEW TOILET LOTION. Softens the skin, removes roughness, eruptions and irritation fromtbe face and hands, and gives freshness and tone to the complexion. It is an invaluable application after shaving. Don't mistake thissuperior pre- paxation for any paints, enamels or injurious ooimetice or inferior complexion otions. It prevents eruptions, abrasions, roughness, redness, chapping, col. sores, and pain re;initing to sensitive skin from exposure to wind and cold. In abort D'AvrorroN's Cni&nt of WT!r n.IIAZELia at once a remedy and a prevehtiltivei for every form of surface inflammation or irritation. Price 25 cents per battle. Manufactured by dar,A..M.]ElaS 11. 40031111110, CHEMIST AND D1fl1GGIST, CLINTON, ONT, ,• r t •