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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1890-09-26, Page 64,Iahy Ata sick, ea gave her Caston*, VirhPr1 *0 Wes a Child, she cried for Caataria, !n 'PI btwoma xiiaa, mho clang tD Cawteria, fripmainan,406.11dria4, ahs gave them Caateria i E *NEAT ENGLISH REMEDY >A' PURELY VEGETABLE INGREDIENTS rAMDI WITHOUT MERCURY, USED BY THE ENGLISH PEOPLE FOR OVER 120 YEARS, 18 t atZPOOND MIOXIS 'hlse Pills consist of a careful and peculiar admix - 4 tits best and mildest vegetable aperients and Ogee extract of Flowers of Chamomile. They will Iwlsibnuld a moat efficacious remedy for derangements erf':the digestive organs, and fpr obstruction, and tor - 101 m 'ion of the liver and boyfela which produce M- iter, •' and the several varieties of bilious and liver 'sow iwnte. Sold by all Chemists. wsotzast smarts I .*411'ANS AND SONS, LIMITED, MONTREAL. . THE BEST 'I1K1NG POWDER —1.1S +- a;sIAREN'S GENIIINM tilol('s Friold No Alum. Nothing Injurious. RETAILED EVERYWHERE., GARTH & CO. FACTORY SUPPLIES Valves, Iron & Lead Pipe Loose Pulley Oilers, Steam Jot Pumps, Farm Pump Wind M!Ils, Creat Separators, Dalry and Laundry Utensils. 536 CRAIG STREET, MONTREAL. zr, CARRIAGE UARN1SHES&i106 -r4 SiLVER MEDAISAWAROEO. MONTREAL ,;+::+r CHADWICK'S SPOOL COTTON For Hand and Machine Use. NO SUPERIOR. ASK FOR IT. LEATIIERQID STEEL -LINED TRUNKS Iu Sample, Ladies' and all ether kinds. !tallest and Strcnaest TRUNKS In the World. J. EVELEIGH & ZO MONTREAL, Sole Mfrs. far the Minn HOTEL BALMORAL. MONTREAL. RQotro Dame St., one of the most central and elegantly furnished Hotels in the Cite Accommodation for 400 guests. tuneslT WOODRUFF, SR to $8 day. ay, CY , Y Manager PEARS' ;Sale Ar'ts Ior Canada; LPALMER&SON 'Wholesale Imp'tre of !JGGISTS' SUNDRIES :743 NOTRE DAME ST., MONTREAL SOAP. DOMINION LEATHER BOARD COMPANY. Manufacturers of ASBESTOSMILLBDAPD Steam Packing, FRICTION PULLEY BOARD, iiia ie a Perfect Friction RECKITT'S BLUE THE BEST FOR LAUNnRY USE. t PAPERS Wrapping, �taipllcra, Q. �O 'et SiZES • AND • WEIGHTS TO ORDER 21 DeBIesoltsSt, Is PirlpEut.0 oHNS ONS VTLUiD�EEF 'THE GREAT STRENGTH GIVER 9PERFECT FOOD FOR THE SICK WARMING & UTRITIOUSOEVERAGE A. POWERFUL INVIGORATOR _moi r_�. FOR l nsect, (Stings Spre EYes Ertl ption, Sore: Feet Soreness 0'1a:fin •Cata $r a►' M Cuts i les' t nate lints scuit� Bites unborn aret II f�iaTrnm-gt'ion y- REF.U$EISUBSSTITUTES Ri.sUR •Tl 'C�180T.TLE WttH U_ ppEiR lb RS.LIKEITHiS • * MAfIurAClVAEo ONLY DV '� 1ACND'S t) RACT CDMPAII 76FiFTKAVE»uEWYORK, WANTED A MOWER. Mr D. Moody, in one of his ser- mons in London, relates the fol- lowing: A young man in America left the Southern army and joined the North. One day letters cave to every one except him. He said, 'I 'wish I was dead. No one cares for me. My mother is dead and my father would not own me now, because I joined the Northern cause.' Anotheryoung man wrote and told his own mother of this, and in a few days a letter came from Wisconsin, ad- dressed to the stranger. He told the chaplain who brought it, 'It isn't for me. Nobody would write to me.' But it was for him, and it began, 'My dear son,' The mother of his comrade wrote him that she wanted him to be her son, and she would be his mother. He cried, 'Boys, I've got a mother 1' And when the war was over, no one was more eager to go and see his mother than that friendless boy. Thous- ands of dear young men want a mother.' What are you Christains doing.. The appeal is an echo, instinct with pathos, from the sea. It is an appeal to thousands, and many of the thousands are among our own readers. There are boys and girls living not far from some of you who want • fathers, mothers, sisters, brothers, somebody to show them sympathy and tender- ness. There aro too many amid pleasant surroundings who an- swer all such appeals in the words of Cain, 'Am I my brother's keeper?' Jesus said that to feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, clothe the naked, care for the stranger, visit the sick and minister to the imprisoned is to do such service to himself. He also said that whosoever doeth the will of God is his mother, his sister, his brother. So these holy relationships are to be established by means of loving service to the friendless and needy.—Selected. HOW A COIN WAS TRACED. The old saying that ',money goes' was illustrated last week, says a correspondent of a St Louis paper. A customer tender- ed me a twenty dollar bill. I bad it changed by a neighbor, In ho being in a hurry, gave me a poc- ket -piece of $10 in gold of the issue of 1861, which he prized highly and did not want to part with. He came to me as soon as ho had found he had given me the valued coin, and I went out and hunted up the customer to whom I had given it. He had bought some cigars at a neighboring store and had given the gold piece it pay- ment. Upon going to the cigar store we found that the proprietor had transferred the coin to a saloon -keeper near by, and at that place we found that the saloon- keeper had used it in liquidating bis brewery bill. The next day my neighbor went to the brewery and found that the cashier of this institution had just parted with the coveted piece of money to a dissatisfied employe. The indi- vidual was at last located in a neighboring saloon and the coin was recovered. TURKISH PUNISHMENTS In Turkey twenty years ago men were hanged for trifles; tradesmen who sold Short weight might be nailed by the ear to their own door posts, and petty thieves, as well as men who were impertinent to officials or who refused to pay their taxes twice over, were bastinadoed on the soles of' the feet. This last pun- ishment, by the way; was light or cruel according as the patient was accustomed to go barefooted or to babouches. Tho water carries s, porters, street fruit sellers and peasants generally, whose soles were like horn, cared little for twenty-five cuts with a bamboo; but to the tradesmen, clerks, and women the stripes were excrucia- tingly painful and brought weeks of lameness. The present Sultan has abolish- ed the baetinado in the:European parts of his dominions, and prac- tically done away with capital punishment, except for brigand- age, and for attempts of assassin• ating high officials. Even brig- ands, however, are only hanged when they have laid hands on foreigners and caused an outcry in the European press. Genuine Turks seldom:find their way into jail, saving for murder or inabil- ity to pay taxes, and the murders aro often committed under the influence of religious fanaticism, when the Mussulman driven mad by the fast of the Ramadan or by the rejoicings of the l3airam holi- days, runs amuck with a knife among a crowd of Gisours. Such offenders, however, are always leniently dealt with by the Pashas unless, (f coarse, they happened to kill a foreign Chrtstain having an AmbasAadnr to avenge him. In Turki•In prisons the Mussul- mans and Cbriytains are kept apaat, and the former,a grave and gent.loman•like looking set of men bask in the sun most of the clay, smoking, and they perforin fre- quent ablutions at the trickling fountain in the center of their airing 3 Ard. They give no trouble and wait w:th the utmost patience until It shall please Allah to open the prison doors for them- The ('hristains, herd of Greeks, Bilk miens and Macedonians with the nsost villaiZIQuq #'aces, morals, and manners imaginable, b.ace to be ruled with a tight hand to be kept from strangling one another. When it becomes necessary to hang one of these gentry, the Greek goes to his punishment struggling and howling; the Turk makes no more ado about the matter than if be were going to have his heed shaved. As the Turkish Exchequer provides no hangman or ropes for execution, some curious things occasionally happen. Not long ago a Turk who had to be banged at Kirdjoli, walked about the town for an hour with two soldiers who had been ordered to execute him. The: a soldiers did not mean to buy a rope with their own money, and they failed to borrow one. Even- tually, they broke into a stable. stole a rope and hanged their man from a nail over the door.— Temple Bar. A FEELING OF CONFIDENCE W. R. Barber, 5 Beaver Hall, Square, Montreal writes : Please send me two bottles ofNasalBalm, I have nearly finished the small bottle sent. It has done my catarrh more good than all the remedies I ever used, and I feel confident of a permanent cure. TORTURED NINE YEARS. A HORSE IMPRISONED IN HIE STALL THAT LONG BY A CRUEL OWNER. A terrible case of cruelty was reported a few days ago to Super- intendent Whitehead, of the Socilty for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Samuel. J. Haynes, a Racine County farmer sags the Milwaukee Sentinel, had a beautiful horse. Nine years ago, while hitched to a mowing machine, the horse ran away with Haynes. This so enraged him that he swore he would keep him locked up froni that time on. He was true to his word, and May 1, 1881, until last week, the poor animal was nut allowed to leave his stall.! Haynes is about sixty years old, a bachelor, and bas the reputation among all who know him of being an unusally kind-hearted man,but Superintendent Whitehead tells the fearful' story of his brutality as follows; 'When we reached Haynes's place we went to the barn and found the horse. I never saw such a sight before. The ()nee beautiful sorrel horse was reduced to a skeleton, the eyes sunk deep in their sockets, the ribs • project- ing and both sides were covered with sores. The hoofs of the ani- mal had grown in a wonderful manner until they had formed a perfect half -circle, curving up. ward and coming within an inch of the shine. They appeared like the rockers under a chair. As the owner told us afterwards, be had once • sawed them off, or else they would have grown around the shins. 'While I untied the horse, the first time in nine years, Haynes protested, but I continued, and the horse hobbled slowly out of the stable. The moment it touched the [grass and saw the blue sky overhead it rubbed its bead against my arm and gave a low whinny. :lowly and lab- oriously propelling itself on the rocker -like hoofs, the animal be- gan to nibble the grass where ;t co,lld reach it.' The horse was killed and Haynes arrester!. He was tined ONE MIN UTE CURE FOR TOOTHACHE. Toothache, the most common and one of the most painful affec- tions, is instantly cured by the application of Poison's Nerviline. Poison's is a powerful anodyne, and it strikes at once to the nerves soothing them and affording in one minute total relief from pain. Mothers,try it for your children's toothache. Nerviline is sold in10 and 25 cent bottles by all drug- gists. Tho press of the south is record- ing as a curiosity of crime the death recently in Birmingham, Alabama, of a young man, who since 1584 had committed seven murders. IIis first victims were a woman and a girl, whom he shot dead because they would not give him some money. I3e was then then seventeen. The young hope- ful next killed a farmer, who was protecting his daughter from in- sult. His next affair was an exhibition of mere wantonness. Seeing an inoffensive negro co by ho toll a friend to watcq the "niggar" drop. The nigro did drop, because he was shot dead by murderer's revolver. Finally in a quarrel he shot a man he was quarrelling with, and, while about it, added the latter's landlady and a friend of 1:ers to the list. The law now stepped in and took notice of these trifling irregulari- ties, but he escaped the gallows and died in his bol at last. So much for American justice. Itch, Mange and Scratches of every kind, on human or animals, cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanita'r Lotion. This never fails. Sold by J. I1. Combe, Druggist. June 27 3m, Mrs Large, widow 0,' the mis- sionary who was murdered in Japon some months ng.i, delivered an in ie'esti ng add res., on 111 is- Sion work, in Hamilton, Monday, an J spoke 01' the work in which she had Leen engaged ir.Japan. l• CASTOR IA for Infanta and Children. "OartortaiseoweAadopte tocli ldeesahatD res a[tilG Oa PoloN Ir000mmenditasaapoeioetota*yprescription footDJ*Irho,a, 8hltetssttue. knows tome." ]i. A. Ammo, lir. D„ Mlle Worms, fires sleep• and pr°ma cta•db IU 8o, O;WN 84,1IIagkIJD N. T. Wlticato/niarloor medlcaitou. Tu& O& rraca Commas,' 77 Murray Street, N. Y. CURE FIT11 11 THOUSANDS OF BOTTLES CiYEN AWAY YEARLY. When I say Cure I do not mean i