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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton New Era, 1894-03-09, Page 74 ,r 6c th a Terribie Stoiy of Suffering,• Ireunztor Smre Could. ozay ILe> 't on, igbowa and Zz o s. ,1,.m. Y_ J AINE's CELERY COD1POUND ACHIEVES ANOTHER C i3OWNINC* SUCCES. GEORGE J. SMYE. 19Ir George J. Smye, of Sheffield, Ont., says: "I am a living witness to•the worth of Paine's Celery Compound." Mr Smye is a man of such oharaoter, honesty and reputation, that one of On- tario's most estimable druggists, R. Ferrah, of Galt says: "I certify that I am ac- quainted with Mr George J. Smye, and know his statement to be true." Dar Smye's story of his terrible sufferings, his crowning success with Paine's Celery Compound, and his delivery from the tor_ meats of disease, is forcibly and briefly told in the following letter which he has given for publication for the benefit of oth- ers:— "It is with great pleasure that I testify to the value of your great medicine, Paine's Celery Compound. For nearly two years I suffered from indigestion, kidney and liver troubles. After trying several medicines that did not effect a cure, I decided to try. your compound Before „nsing.it.I was thatsp. lore in health 1 could not eat 'or steep. I could not lie in bed owing to pain in my • baok; it was only by resting on elbows and knees I was enabled to obtain a slight de. gree of ease. Before I had taken one bot- tle of °your medicine I began to improve. I have now taken in all fourteen bottles with grand results. 1 am a farmer and am now working every day. Anyone may re- ferr to me in regard to these statements, or to any of my neighbors around Sheffield, where I am well known. I am a living witness to the worth of Paine's Celery Com- pound." Are any of our readers suffering ae' Mr Smye once suffered? Is life trying, weary and miserable to them owing to dyspepsia, indigestion, rheumatism. kidney and liver troubles, nervousness and sleeplessness? If any sufferer, the path of wisdom has been clearly defined. In addition to Mr Smye's unassailable testimony, thousands of others have testified to the tratn that Paine's Celery . Compound is the true path to -health, the" all in fall to the diteased and suffering. EW ARRIVALS For Xmas Trade at the ( orner Stcre, McKay Block. NEW RAISINS NEW CURRANTS NEW FIGS NEW PEELS NEW VALENCIA ALMONDS Choice Extracts and Pure Ground Spices and a full line of Canned Goods HAMS & BACON FLAKE PEAS HERRINGS & TROUT ROLLED BARLEY SCALED HERRINGS ROLLED WHEAT Ixighest price in Trade or Cash for But ter and Eggs. J. W. Irwin, Grocer MACKAY BLOCK, - - - CLINTON. A SIDE$OARD IN EITHER DARK or ANTIQUE OAK FINISH FOR $6.57. :-- Ourai m isgive to our customers First-class Goods for very little money. We mark our goods down to a bare -living profit, and have but one price. We do not advertise any Big Discount Sale in "order to draw trade, for every intelligent person knows what that means. When a firm advertises in that way, it Is quite easy to understand what they do; they simply add to the regular price the percentage they intend taking off. This is a fact than has been proven in the so-called Great Discount Sales. When buying, don't.eimply look at the discount offered, but deduct that discount from the regnrar price, and then compare it with the prices of others. If you call on us w) can show you the best assortment of Furni- ture in the County, and ourpr'ices are as low as the lowest. JOSEPH CHIDLEY, FURNITURE DEALER Al4D UNDERTAKER. JOS. CHIDLEY JR.,Funeral Director aid Embalmer. Night Calls Answered at his residence, King Street, 0 ?polite the Foundry. Have a Very Ba UAre Suffering Have Ldst nes GJ Ares 1'hreaten+e Remember that the • , '41510/•. 4 IS WHAT YOU AQUI Cough. rom Lung Troubles. through illness. with Consumption. • 1 THE. PAYMENT • Op' :SIktATiL • QHLIGATION$. 4 tri ' 1 t ping e know it ' Cl�.os a TO !StRINGTIME. e u' o ose o s..r n ttni _ by'the n• way of The OP iy stteaniin', giestiriin' in the off middle Cr' theday; s Know it by the river that is lazyin' aloe aY ; 11/4113 • the mookin' birds. a-primpin' o'ther feathers for a yang! Few women, let us hope, are ince tonally dishonest. The majority w omen ATV fastidious in the conduct their finances, shrinkingfrom debt a front disgrace, and preerring to fully and hanorably as they go. \e now and then one hears a wail of corn- Plaint trona people Who eater needless. ly because of the Heedless inanner in. which other people keep thetas waiting for money which they have earned. A dressmaker said, recently, to oneof her patrons: "I am nearly frantic when I think how hard I worked, and how late I sat up to finish Miss --'s -grad- uation gown, and now I am afraid I will never be paid. I have waited six months for that hill, and I cannot get one cent, though I have almost begged for it, even offering to take it in instal- ments. I am distresssed in these hard times, when everybody is retrenching, because people do not have so many new things, and others who have had them put off paying me." On her way home the sympathetic customer thought about it, happening to know that there were no indications of want or straitened means in the family of the- delinquent debtor, in- ferring that the thing was due to an ingrained indifference to paying for work when done. Probably there was at first a temporary inconvenience i settling the bill, and it was postponed for a day or two, and then the period lengthened insensibly, other creditors - brouglit . their bills, larger amounts were paid, and still the poor dressmak- er waited—and wondered, and grew frantic with worry, ppor thing. To defer even for one day the paying of the laundress who has acceptably finished her day's work in your kitchen is, it may be, "to force her to ask credit, grudgingly given to such as she, at the grocer's shop where she deals, or else to send her children meagrely fed to their beds. People who have a com- fortable balance in tank do not com- prehend the straitened circumstances of the people who live from hand to mouth. Coal -bins filled to the overflow are a very different thing from coal purchas- ed in the dearest way, by the pailful at a time, yet thousands of poor wo- men can buy their coal only in very small quantities or go without. Think of being calmly told to wait till to- morrow for one's wages; when neither stick of wood or ounce of • coal was on hand for the family fire. Apart from the inconvenience, em- barrassment and misery entailed by laxity in.paying what one owes, espec- ially when the creditors are the poor, and the debts 'are small, there is evi- dent a serious lack of principle in per- sons who can comfortably continue in debt. Any lapse in the rigid honor which insists on meeting each demand and paying it in full at the moment of its maturity involves a loss of self-respect, and brings in its train a warped mor- ality. There are few things more important in the education of children than the fostering in them the right estimate of personal obligation. The child should be enjoined against borrowing and begging in small transactions. Let him beheld to strict account and re- sponsibility as to his management of Ins allowance. Fidelity here will tell in years to come, when his dealings are no loner small, =but effect great commercial in terests, —Harpers ' Bazar. A PIECE OF HER MIND, A lady correspondent has this to say; - "I want to give a piece of my mind to a certain class who object to advertising, whey it costs them anything—this won't cost them a cent. I suffered a living death for nearly two years with headaches, backache, in pain standing or walking, was being literally dragged out of existence, my misery in- creased by drugging. At last, in despair, I committed the sin of trying an advertised medicine, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, and it re. - stored me to the blessedness of sound health. I honor the physician who *ben be knows he can cure, has the moral cour• age to advertise the fact."• The medicine mentioned is guaranteed to cure the delicate diseases peculiar to females, as "FemaleWeakness," periodical pains, irregularities, nervous prostration, spasms, chorea or St. Vitus's Dance, sleep- lessness, threatened insanity. To permanently cure constipation, bili- ousness, indigestion or dyspepsia, use Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. HE OBEYED HER. Most American women have had em- barrassing experiences in social emer- gencies. Perhaps none was ever more trying than the adventure of a lady noted in New York society for her courtesy and savoir faire. One winter day she started on the train for Philadelphia, taking her seat in what she supposed was an ordinary parlor car. There was but one other occupant, a somewhat stout man, who sat with his back to her. Presently he lighted a cigar and began to smoke. The lady coughed and moved uneasily, but her hints had no effect. She said at last tartly: "You probably are a foreigner, sir, and do not know that there is a smok- ing car attached to the train. Smok- ing is notP ermitted here." he man without reply threw his cigar out -of the window, A few minutes later the igonductor entered and stared at her inismay. "How do you come here, madam?" he inquired. "WYy, where am I 2" "In (len. Grant's private car." The mortified lady's usual tact failed her here. She looked at the dumb, immovable figure, and retreated with- out a word. TENNYSON ON SPRING. We have the word of Alfred Tennyson for it that in the spring the young man's fannies lightly turn to thoughts of love: It is singular that the great laureate omitted Hrapition the fact that it is in the spring elen a -considerable portion of the human race turn to taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Probably nothing ,but the difficulty of finding a good/rhyme for •that:tinvaluable remedy deterred hilt. 'Certain it is that the old-time domestic remedies are getter-, ally discarded in favor of the standard blood purifier, Hood's Sarsaparilla, which has attained the greatest popularity all .over the country as the favorite Spring. 'Medicine. It purifies the blood and gives nerve, Bleier'i;alsbeidilyand kjigestive strength 4 C!illdrOn Cry for Pitcher's CastoPIau Gtttin' elose to springtime—know it by the signs; Rear it in the wbisPer o' the maples an' the pined; Feel it in the blowin' o' the breezes, aingin' sweet; See it in the daisies that are dreamin' at my feet! Gettin' close to springtime; liope she'll come to stay; Got a million kisses for the red lips o' the May! S%earyin' to meet her—listenin' all the time For the tinkle o'her footsteps—her roses an' her rhyme! "As a noisless wing To waft nye from distraotion," Are those powders which everybody is using now for sick headache, neuralgia, biliousness, etc. They are called Starke headache and liver Powders. Write the name in your hat or on your cuff no that you will know what to ask for when you have need for them. If` you ,have twenty five omits in your pocket or good credit with your druggist, you can always` t e box. .. On Sunday, Feb. 4th, quite a number gathered at St. Margaret's church, Rather. glen, Ont., to attend divine service, Among thein was the Rev. Mr Jones, Methodist minister of the place. The English church minister having failed to arrive, Mr Jones said it was too bad to have the congregation go home without having prayer, so he led the prayers for a short time. Sometime after a person wrote to the Rev. Archdeacon Daykin, of Mattawa, telling him that Mr Jones had preached in the ohuroh that day, whereupon the archdeacon wrote to Mr Jones asking him if it was true that he had preached in St. Margaret's church. MrJones replied that he had not preached in it, but that he had prayed and that he had done nothing but what he had been request- ed to do, for on a motto in the porch are the words, "Let no one enter this church and leave it without one prayer," etc. HOW TO GET A "SUNLIGHT PICTURE. Send 25"Sunlight" Soapwrappers wrap- per bearing the words "Why Does a Wom- an Look Old Sooner Than a Man")to Liivan Bnos., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto, t and you will receive by post a pretty picture, free from advertising and well worth fram- ing. This is an easy way to decorate your home. The soap is the best in the market and it will only costlo postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write your address carefully. THE ACME OF HONESTY. At a patty one evening several con- tested the honor of having done the most extraordinary thing. and a re- verend gentleman was . appointed judge of their respective pretensions. One produced his tailor's bill with a receipt attached to it. A buzz ran through the room that this could not be outdone. .. "The palm is his!" was the general cry, where a second put in his claim: . "Gentlemen," said he, "I cannot boast of the acts of my predecessor, but I have just returned to the owners three lead pencils and two umbrellas that were left at my house." "I'll hear no more," cried the aston- ished arbitrator. "This is the acme of honesty: it is an act of virtue of which I never knew any one capable. The prize is his." METRE IN SIX HOURS.—Distressing lied ney and Bladder diseases relieved in six hours by the "NEW GREAT SOUTH AMERICAN IKIhNEY CURE." This new remedy is a great surprise and delight to physicians.on account of its exceeding promptness in re. lieving pain in the bladder, ]fidneys, back and every part of the urinary passages in male or female.. It relieves retention of water and pain in passing_ almoet,_im- mediately. If you want quick relief and cure this is your remedy. Sold by Watts & Co., Druggist. The Welsh Ladies' Choir that went to the'Chicago Fair, and Obtained a very remarkable success there, will sing before the Queen at Osborne, Minard's Liniment Cures LaGrippe. A dainty feast was spread not long ago by a tribe of Sitka Indians to en- tertain some visitors from other tribes. The rare dish 01 the feast consisted of last season's wild strawberries preserv- ed in seal oil, •Minard's Liniment the best Hair Restorer. Beggars swarm so in Malta that the only way to avoid being pestered by them is to put out your hand and an- ticipate them with their own whining, "Give me anything," "Me plenty poor man," "Me very large family." J. C. srEvEsoN, —THE LEADING— UNDERTAKER -AND-- EMBALMER. A PULL LINE OF GOODS KEPT in STOCK ThebestEmbalming Fluldused Splendid hearse. ALBERT ST.,CLIh1'TON —Residence o1P081TE TOWN HALL ADAMS' EMPORIUM, ..46,amommirommompoitimpio. •, - LONDESBORO- R. PON'T WORRY! $UNL1CHT_ !T BRINGS: cON FORT rpM WASH,. DAY it BELOW ' 4 Beaver Cellar and Muff $25 00' now $20 3 Beaver !Collars - - - 12 00 now 9, " 1 Otter Collar r - - - - 30 00 now. 22 . 1 Oppossum Collar - - - 9 00 now 6 1 Oppossum Collar . - - - 10 00 now 7 1 Oppossum Black Collar - 12 00 now S Oppossum Cape - - - 12 00 now 8 4. Greenland Seal Cape - - 12 50 now 9 Coney Cape 20 00 now 14 Astrachan Cape- - - - - 8 00 now , 6, Ladies' Furs in the same proportions 1 1 1 1 All other MEN'S FUR COATS - Coon was $40 00 now $30 00 Wallaby was :26 00 now 19 00 Wombat was 22 00 now 17 00 Carsican Lamb 20 00 now 16 00 • Robt,Coats & Son, Clinton. Now IN STOCK FOR. XMAS IRADB p -0--j`rr �'V Raisins,. London Layers, Black Baskets and for v .ice ,.1,, i�7 Dessert, Valencias off stalk, fine off stalk selected CURRANTS, Prime Provincials in barrels and half barrels, choicest Vostiaeas in New Prunes, Figs and Dates, Oranges and Lemons,. NUTS, new soft shelled Almonds New Grenoble Walnuts and Filberts, Shelled Almonds. New PEELS, Orange, Lemon and Citron. Fresh ground SPICES of all kinds. Full lines of CROCKERY, CHINA and GLASSWARE—Tea Setts, Dinner Sets, Toilet Setts. Special values in newlsea son TEAS and fragrant COFFEES. Cash for BUTTER and EGGS. N. ROBSON, ' - Clinton c GOMFORT IN CORSETS Can only be obtained by wearing - No. 391 " Improved All -Feather - bone Corsets." No side steels to break, hurt or rust. TRY A PAIR. All First-class Dry Goods Houses Sell Them. CLINTON. Sash, Door & Blind Factory 5. S. COOPER, Proprietor : Owing to my increasing business, I am building -an extensive addition to my premises, and also putting in one of the latett improved Patent Dry Kilns, and will then be in a better position than ever to fill all orders entrusted to me, We prepare plans and estimates for all kinds of residences, and execute contracts for the same on short notice, and in a workmanlike manner. We manufacture to order and also carry in stock all kinds of Window Sash, Door Frames, Blinds, Lumber, Lath, &o. Persons who intend to build will find it to their own interest to see me before sodoing. S. S. COOPER Clinton. ADAMS' 1 —, — EMPORIUM SPRING GOODS NEW MILLINERY—Such as Hats, Bonnets, Plaques, Sailors and handsome Muslin Hats and Bonnets for children. Ribbons, Silks, Flowers, Plumes and ornaments, etc. Tweeds strong, handsome and cheap. Flannellettes that please the eft and suits the purse. BOOTS AND SHOE'S in great variety; Rubbers to -keep you dry. See our readY made Pants at $2.85 and up,to $3.50. A trial order respectfnlly• solicited Highest price either in trade or cash for Butter an -d- Eggs. ADA/tS. 4. • •