Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton New Era, 1894-03-30, Page 3Mllk�a� is Castor's is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription fol' taints and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor ether Narcotic substance, It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant, Its guarantee is thirty years' use by 'Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverishness. Oastoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd. cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. °Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Case toriil► is the Children's Panacear-the Mother's Friend. Castoris.. '' `"1Qestorfa is an excellent medicine tor 010.! .lea. Mothers have repeatedly told meet hp good airiest upon their children." Da. O. C. O9000n. Lowell, Masa. •destorlalls the hest aetnedy foe children of c+ldch I am acquainted. 3 hope the day Is not far distant when mothers will considorthe real (interest of their children, and use Castorla in- stead of the varlousquack nostrums which aro destroying their loved ones, by forcing opiu m, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending them to premature graves." Da. J. F. KINUner oa, Conway, lir' Castorris. «Cestortaissoweil adaptedtOeiatientat recommend it aasaperiorioanyyteenrlptit( mown to Inv.„ f"L n, Amnia, N. 1R. 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. ° ur ,physician in the children's depot Ment have spoken highly of their expo*. ence In their outside erectile, with Castork and although we only have among out medical supplies what is knon-n as regular products, yet we are free to confess that the merits of caszona has won u.s to look with favor upon it." UNITED HOSPITAL AND DIMPENS/LItY, Boston, Masa AtL1IN C. Ssa n, Pees., The Centaur Company, 177 Murray Street, New Sok. City. • 4 cLtrivrozi NEW ERA 'Mar ii so, '094, ORRIS pianos MUSICAL EXCELLENCE; Nv ARTISTIC DESIGN ; DURABLE CONSTIWCTION 01,144o17ES SENT FERE ON APPLIoATA01r. Morris-Feild -Rogers-Co LISTQWEL. That's the Question; Under the heading "Is he a leader," the Globe shows how Mr Meredith's polios differs from that of the Patrons in the following comparison:— "Mr Meredith hopes to profit by the Patron movement. His party profess to be polical co-workers with the farm- ers. But outside of the maintenance of British connection Mr Meredith favors but few of the important planks in the platform of the Patrons. The platform demands the abolition of the Senate; Mr Meredith does not. The Patrons call for the election of Provin- cal officers; Mr Meredith favors ap- pointment by the Councils. The Pat- rons are for a tariff for revenue; Mr Meredith is fol protection. The Pat- rons are for reciprocal trade; Mr Mere- dith is not. The Patrons ask for legislation that will destroy monopolies; Mr Meredith stands by the system that breeds monopolies. The Patrons would prohibit the bonusing of rail- ways; the plank has not been endorsed by Mr Meredith. The Patrons ask for the preparation of the Dominion and Provincial voters' lists by the munici- pal officers; MI Meredith supports the party which obstinately adheres to the dual franchise system. The Patrons demand that electoral districts shall conform to the county boundaries; Mr Meredith has not condemned the arose mutilation of county boundaries by the Federal makers of partizan electoral districts. No, Mr Meredith is not a leader." War! on scrofula and every form of im- pure blood is boldly declared by Hood's Sarsaparilla, the great conqueror of all blood diseases. TEAT WOMAN'S VOTE. To the Editor of the Clinton New Era. Deer. Sne—Ever since the plebiscite has been taken and the woman's vote so nicely detected, it has been amusing to watch the more hopeful advocates of woman's rights making excuses for that vote not Doming up to their expectations. Mr Edi- tor, it puts me in mind of a political con- test and the losing party trying to account . r their defeat. I think anyone that wdid attempt to argue that the woman's vote was a good and satisfactory one, (especially when on their hobby question) would undertake to argue a hole through a -two-inch elm 'plant But od won "ii' Iooke £o the "other" ""and "says it is' a task that must be undertaken. It won't do to let this great question drop here and let the men go away with the idea that we dop't want the ballot. Then comes Mrs Thornley, of London, out with a lengthy letter and taking one ward of that city trys to make out a good case forthe rest of the province. Now it is just as fair to take a ward in this corner as any where; I know of a ward where the women that did come out, voted two to one against the Temperance question. Again none"of those women writers (and by the way they are not few) try to account for the city papers coming out and stating that it was after great prevailing and expense in hir- ing hacks that the few women came out that did vote. I noticed in your columns some time ago that Myrtle Green (one of those advocates of woman's franchise) says when we get the use of franchise the same as the men. I say it with reverence, but God forbid that time ever coming. I am sure that any reasonable thinking man or woman will agree with me When I say thi re is enough strife and . turmoil in election contests now without having the women in it. We will snppese a family of mother, father and two sons; the mother in her youthful days was Conservative, the father has always voted Grit and brought the boys up to think the same, but the boys not hav- ing a very clear insight into political move- ments, have been allured into the P. of I. or the P. P. A., so when election time comes around will have to vote accordingly 'under snob circumstances. I think it is clear that the women's advice and counsel would be mach better than their opposi- tion. Now, Mr Editor, I wonld not ,.have written a word on this subject, but I have been talking to a number of the fair sex and more than three fourths of them say that they don't want anything to do with thepolitical squabble. Thanking yon for the space in your valuable paper, I remain yours truly, 46' Women's FIBBED. ALL MEN 'Young, old or middle-aged, who find them- selves nervous, weak and exhausted, who are broken down from excess or over -work, resulting in many ofthe following symp- toms :—Mental depression, premature old age, loss of vitality, loss of memory, bad dreams, dimness of sight, palpitation of the heart, emislions, lack of energy, pain in the kidneys, headache, pimples on the face and body, itching or peculiar sensation about the sordtum, wasting of the organs, dizzi- ness, specks before the eyes, twitching of the nannies, eyelids and elsewhere, harsh - fulness, deposits in the urine, loss of will power, tenderness of the scalp and spine, weak and flabby muscles, desire to sleep, failure to be rested by sleep, constipation, dullness of hearing, loss voice, desire for solitude, excitability of temper, .sunken eyes, surronnded with LEADEN cincr.Rs, oily looking skin, etc., are all symptoms of ner- vous debility, that lead to insanity, unless oared. The spring or vital force having lost its tension, every function wanes in oonsequense. Those who through abuse committed in ignorance, may be perma- nently cured. Send your address and 10e in stamps for book on diseases peculiar to man, sent sealed. Address M. V. LIMON. 24 Macdonnell.Ave. Toronto, On t,r Canada. Please mentidn this paper. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castor's. Strange Experience. ANINTERVIEW VQOU TY LAM'. WWiik ll BRANT POMO= son Tw.o $Mlle wZ ,Sunt Etna. AUBE, DIZZIN eH AND DRQPk7P8L&—^U0W BSE Potn» BErMIF--'TAT WRLIn-KNOWN CarasaalaTs SAY, 1?'rom the Brantford Expositor, Afro. S. W. Avery lives on Pleasant Ridge, about four miles out of the pity of Brantford, that being her nearest post office and where all her trading is done, Mr and Mra Avery have always lived in that neighborhood, and he is the owner of two splendid farms, the one where he lives consisting of 180 sores and the other lying near Brantford .00mprising 100 .aores. They are highly respected residents of the community in which they reside, and every person for miles around knows them. Hay. ing heard that Mrs Avery had bean oured of chronic dyspepsia and indigestion, by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, a reporter called there recently and asked if she was willing to make public the facts concerning the cure. Mrs Avery replied that she had benefitted by the use of Pink Pills, and was perfectly willing to give her experience for the benefit of those who might be similarly suffering. "For the past two years," said Mrs Avery, "I had been greatly (troubled with a very sick headache, dizziness, and a cough wbioh I believe were the symptoms of dyspepsia and indigestion,land 1 could find nothing to relieve me although I tried several different medicines. I could not ever find anything which wouldtrelieve my cough, which at times would be very se- vere. Early last winter I read in the Ex- positorof Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and as the s, mtoms mentioned were psomewhat similiar to mine 1 was thus induced to try them. I procured a supply from Messrs , McGregor & Merrill, druggists of Brant- ford. Before I had used two boxes of the Pink Pills I felt so much better and relieved from my distressing symptoms that I thought it would be best to continue taking them through the winter, and I according- ly got another supply and used them with the result that I have been totally relieved. I have not onoe since had the severe head. aches whioh formerly made my life miser- able and my cough has entirely disappeared. I strongly recommend Pink Pills to any- one who suffers similar to what I did, from dizziness, headaches, indigestion, etc., and , I believe they will derive great benefit from their use. Mrs Avery's statement was corroborated by her husband, who was present during the interview, and who said that without a , shadow of a doubt Pink Pills had accom- plished more for his wife than any other medicine which she had taken. Messrs McGregor & Merrill were inter- viewed, and in reply to a query as to the sale of these pills, Mr McGregor said: "We have sold in the neighborhood of 5,000 boxes during the past twelve months, and there is no remedy we handle gives better satisfaction to our customers than Dr Wil- liams' Pink Pills. I have every confidence ' that Pink Pills are the best on the market,' and something the people can depend upon." i Mr Merrill, the other member of this well. known firm, said: "I have more pleasure ; in selling Pink Pills than any other medi. cine we handle. because it is rarely there is any disappointment in them, and the peo- ple who purchase them unagimonsly ex- press themselves as welt satisfied. I am well acquainted with Mrs Avery, and I know that all her statements are reliable, and I have watched the improvement pink pills have made in her case, and have seen a great change for the better. Maty other druggists recommend some preparations, so metimes their own, to be equally as good as Pink Pills, but we cannot conscientious- ly say ea,...knowiug••that:as- a system _tonic, Dr Williams'.Pink Pills:at>ind..:uniivalled.".- Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a perfect blood builder and nerve restorer, oaring such diseases as rheumatism, neuralgia, partial paralysis, locomotor ataxia, St. Vitus' dance, nervous headache, nervous prostration and the tired feeling therefrom, the after effects of la grippe, diseases depending on humors in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic ery- sipelas, eto. Pink Pills give a healthyglow to pale and sallow complexions, and are a specific for the troubles peculiar to the fe- male system, and in the 08,8e of men they effect a radical cure in all cases arising from mental worry, overwork or excesses of any nature. Dr Williams' Pink Pills are sold only in boxes bearing the firm's trade mark and wrapper, (printed in red ink.) Bear in mind that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are never sold in bulk, or by the dozen or hnadred, and any dealer who offers substi- tutes in this form is trying to defraud you. The publi3 are 'also cautioned against other so-called blood 'sunders and nerve tonics, put up in similar form and intended to deceive. They are imitations whose mak• ers hope to reap a pecuniary advantage from the wonderful reputation achieved by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. 1)r. Williams' Pink Pills may be had o; all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Brockville, Ont., or Schenectady, N. Y., at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50. The price at which these pills are sold makes a course of treatment comparatively inexpensive as compared with other remedies or medical treatment. "Mary," said Mr Henpeck. "why do you insist on sending the parrot to your aunt's while you are at the shore? Do you want me to die of loneliness?" Minard's Liniment for Rheumatism. Weight and Cost of First Cable. The original 1858 cable weighed 98 pounds per mile and had a conductor of seven copper wires of 22* gauge. Price of deep sea wire per mile, t+ 200;rice of spun yarn and iron wire per mile, 6265; poet of outside coating of tar and gutta-percha, $25 per mile; total stet por mile, $485. At $485 per mile the total cost of the 2,500 miles of deep sea Wire was $1,- 212, t00. To this add 25 miles of "shore end" wire, costing $1,450 per mile, and we find that the first ocean cable, exolusive of instruments, cost a million and a quarter dollars.—St. Lonis Republio. Too Many Horses are very chew horse markets are g1 coffered, for which the Similar reports come fro Indeed the depression horses seems to be world orsesr, in Australia. The tted with animals is no demand. i�Great Britain. In the prices of wide. Vegetables for Vegetarians, Fer cabdrivers: Cabbages. For carpenters: Chips. For jailbirds: Cell•ory. For dancing men: Spin•aoh. For policemen: Beat•routes.—Judy. ." Daisy Bell." It is reported that the song "Daisy Ball" was boomed into popularity by an English manufacturer who had a storehouse stook - ed With obsolete tandem& THEY N.. • • r.) ,' . Remarkable 8ueevse An A.gricatture ,of A airyite 4xilea b`r9M, ;<luasla. • bl eu as ai'e Asuericane to oritioise the manners and customs of Russia, and infer- ior as the suhjeots of the ozar ere frequeut- iy considered, the settlers on the western prairies aught well learn a lesson: of the Russian& who have their unique settle. manta among them. The Mennonites, ex- iled from southern Russia, because of their religion, made as systematic an exodus as did the Israelites of old, says a Kansas correspondent of the St. Louie G1obe- Demoorat. They sent out their agents to spy out the land, and pnrohased 100,000 aores of the Santa Fe and Kansas Pacific Railways far homes. Then the people • packed up their household goods and came to America. On the depot platforms they landed wearing sheepskins coats, the wooly side out, and blaok kerchiefs over their heads. They oarried iron tea kettles, and regarded the gazing Americans with as much ouriosity as they themselves at- tracted. They built their villages of yellow limestone, the houses hav- ing queer hip roofs, green blinds and double doors like those seen in a mill. Curious ovens in which prairie hay or straw could be burned overcame the lack of fuel, and a street looked for all the world'as though it had dropped out of an illustration in a Siberian sketch. Such names as "Catherine Stadt," ''Leberthal" and "Pfeiffer" grape their towns, and no man not of Mennonite persuasion is allow- ed inside the limits as a resident, though visitors are cordially welcomed. . - The Mennonites number several thous- and, but they are never heard of in poli. tics. They are busy tilling their 100,000 acres, raising stook, planting orohards and piing up wealth. The wide-awake west- erner, standing on the street corner ex- plaining the "contraction of the currency" to a knot of listeners, sees a half-dozen odd-looking wagons come toiling up the road. They are loaded with wheat and solemn -faced Mrnnonites, who guide the soberer teams, pocket thepayment and trudge homeward. The orators hold forth in the country schoolhouse, and the eager real estate agent plats additions to the towns, but the Mennonites pay no atten- tion to either. They keep on selling wheat and corn and oattle until they have become the richest class of farm- ers, probably, their number considered, that Kansas affords. They take few pa- pers, they do not vote, they care nothing whether the government is Republican or Democratic in its management. They are as isolated as'though they were upon a sea island, except as they bring in, their pro- duce to the shipping station. It is noticeable that nearly all the lands ere in the much.discussed "arid belt," yet the Mennonites never ask and or seed wheat. They prosper every year, and their homes are veritable storehouses of garden and field products. To step into them is like a visit to the land of the Volga. Curious furniture, strange garb and peou- liar habits impress one with the feeling that he is in another land and another age. The hooses are for the most part, sur- rounded by stone walls and old country fashions in fencing; barns and implements are everywhere apparent. They have their own minister, their own church and their own schools. 'When a " higher " education . is desired (and some of the young people are as forward in their ambition for learning as American youth) there is plenty of money in the village bank to send them to Europe or to some eastern college to acquire it. During the laat year, when commonomplaint of hard times Went up from thW dwellers on the plains, when seed wheat has been sent by the thousand bushels to American settlers, the _Russians have continued to thrive. Their' ,.old-fashioned vehicles have come reglnlarly to the railroads, and car load after car load of wheat bas been sent east. Lumber dealers in the towns where they do their baying say that there bas been no diminu- tion fn their purchases, and that by far the larger portion of their yards' sales have gone to their Russian customers. There is an important lesson in theirsnccesa They have shown by their works what industry and frugality can accomplish upon the prairies, and what oan be done with the right kind of effort. Still, it is doubtful if the American settler could bring him- self and his family to the grinding economy of European peasant life which the Men- nonites have transplanted in their settle- ments, . ' Correct Form in ,Japan. .An invitation to dinner in Japan com- mences as follows: •' I beg pardon for thus insulting you, in begging your sal- pany at my house to dinner. The house is small and very dirty. Our habits are rude, and yon may not get anything fit to eat; and yet I hope that you will condescend to be present with ns at 6 o'cloox. •' PECULIAR TO ITSELF So eminently successful has Hood's Sarsaparilla been that many leading citi- zens from all over the United States furnish testimonials of cures which seem almost miraculous. Hood's Sarsaparilla is not an accident, bnt the ripe fruit of industry and study. It possesses merit "peculiar in it• self." Hood's Pills cure Nausea, Sick Headache, Indigestion, Billiousness. . Sold by all drug- gists. Sam. McLean, of Porter's Hill,' sold 40 acres on the 3rd con. to Jas. Blair, of the cut line, for $80 per acre. He also sold his pacing snare, Topsy, to Dr. W hitely, of Goderich, for $260, Many people, with the nothon that nature ought to take care of herself, allow a cough to plague them for wicks and months. Whereas, if nature were assisird with a dose or two of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, the cure might be effected in a very few days. Fritz Gigender, a well-known saloon keeper of St. Joseph city, a giant in stature, and who was never known to take a dare, was on Monday afternoon with a party of friends, when one of tho party chaffed him, and said:—"Oh, go and kill yourself." Gigender made no. reply, bnt went tibia room and an instant later a shot was heard, and bis friends found him dead, with a bullet in hie head. Do yon feel sad and weary?—The world is all right, and friends are kind, and the outlook hopeful; but, "Oh," you say, "this sick headache, that frightful twinge of neuralgia, that billions feeling which makes the thought of the dantiest edible a mis- ery." Stark's Powder. 25o a box. Ask for them at your druggist's, take them, and the sun shines again, the birds sing, and ell goes well. The sick or nervous headache s'i nishee, the torturing twinge cries "pews - vi," and gives up possession, and for the billions stomaoh thatloathes the ltoney- comb, there is the healthy appetite that waiter( upon digestion. • Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla. Iitalaotite. paves is Utah, Two of pile most wonderful etalactittr cave* of the world are located within the territory of Utah—Otte five miles eolith of Toquerville and the other 20 miles west of St. George. Neither is remarkable on so. count of size, and, according to the St. Louis Republic, the dignifying title of " cavern Alas never been bestowed upon either of the two. They simply come with- in the category of the wonderful because of the immense number of stalactites of various tises and colors which depend from their roofs. The fires, the one near To- querville, is known as "La Virgin," and the other by the name of the "B1aok War- r'lor." The Virgin woe discovered a few years ago by the contractor of an irrigating company, who was engaged in driving a tunnel through a mountain palled La Vir- gin Bench for the purpose of tapping the river beyond. When the light was first let into this wonderful underground cham- ber the effect is said to have been startling, the roof and floor glittering with pubes and points of crystal alum and the roof studded with millions of rain -colored stal- actites. The Black Warrior cave is'a counterpart of the Virgin and was discovered by min- ers at a point where their tunnel was 865 feet beneath the surface. Disease Among European Pine Trees, A new disease has attacked the pine for. eats of a certain locality in Alsace, and from Strasbourg comes the information that the pine forests of Grendelbrueh, a village situated at the foot of the famous castle of Guirbaden, have been entirely destroyed. No remedy has so far been dis- covered to stay the destructive malady. At first it was thought to out off the dis- eased branches would stop the ravages, but this has been found insufficient, be- cause it does not show itself until the branches are hopelessly diseased. The forests,of Grendelbruoh have been visited by a number of 'prominent scientists from France and Germany, and Professor Schwartz, of Ebersfeld, is now examining diseased branches, but so far without re- sults, Paper Money Statistics. In 1840 Great Britain had £35,000,000 of paper money. in 1890 £39,000,000; at the former date France had £9,000,000, at the latter £115,000,000; Austria had £70,000,• 000 and £123,000,000 respectively. Scrofula t . is Disease Germs living in the Blood and feeding upon its Life. Overcome these germs with Scott's.‚ Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oi1,, and make your blood healthy, skin pure and system strong. Physicians, the world over, endorse it., Don't be deceliid by Substitutes! soott& Boone, Belleville. All Druggists. coo, b$L St:226701.9S SUG4R-^CO4TED I I ryl "' • �s lTABLE P R ?^ " NI P •-r a- IF IT IS I ONLY ONE It will make more room for Spring Stock, In order to make room for large importation orders coming in this spring •we will give CUT PRICES "'k::;. 9 of STOVER Just -received another car load. of the CARBON LIGHT, A HIGH GRADE OIL Only 10c -per Gallon, Cash. 12c per Gal. if Charged New Store Old Stand 12ackay Black ll AR LA N D BROS , Brick Block RUMBALL' S CWIZ FACTORY H -111-0n Street, Cliixlltan We have on hand an assortment of splendid BUGGIES. CARRIAGES, & WAGGONS Which we guarantee to.of firstcclass material and workmanship. I you want a good article at the price of a poor one, call and see us. F. T2,UM:S AXAT4, -- CILTINTT )1N cAVEATS,TRADE MARKs COPYRIGHTS. CAN 1[ OBTAIN A PATENTS Fora prompt answer and an honest opinion, write tg M U N N A& CO., who have had nearly fifty years experience in the patent business. Communica- tions strictly confidential A Handbook of in. formation concerning Patents and bow to ob- tain them sent free. Also u catalogue of mechan- ical and scientific books sent free. Patents taken through Munn & Co. rdoelve speelal notice in the ici e n tl tic A rri crime, and thus are brought widely before the public with. out cost to the inventor. This splendidapes Issued weekly, elegantly illustrated. has b farethe largest circulation of any scientific work in the world. S3 a year. Saniple cokes sent free. Building Edition. monthly, 5,60 a voar. Single cotes, 2cents. Every number contains beau- tiful ., ul plate@, •n colors, and pbotoere:hs of ni.w tOuses. with pians, enabling builders to show tho latest designs and secure contracts. Address MUNN & CO., NEw eons, 361 BROADWAY. ►NERVE BEANS 1MEEVE BEANS are a new Na. eavq+ery that euro the worst oases of Nervous Debility. Lost Vigor and Bailing Manhood; restores the weakness of body or mind caused bp over -Werk or the errors or ex. eessesof ;youth. '.''hir. Remedj,nbb' 'elutely euieN ^'te y,os;• obstinate nae'm, anon all filer ^ a8ATS0414i8 a are failed ovoc to macre. :old cydrug• Etats at S1 ser package. or six for SO or sent by mail on fecctptofprice by5,1d"i� r,cl,'!.TT AM TE JO.. Toronto. Out. rY rata for namphl Boll in— Sold by Jas. PEATIIERBONE Corsets are now recognized to be the Standard Corset of Canada. Satisfaction guaranteed orr money refunded. ASK YOUR DRY GOODS DEALER FOR THEM. 1--Iv13 a -i 0 c :2 - We have made great preparations for the Xmas trade. Extra value in 'Currants, Raisins, Coffee, Cocoa, Oranges, Dates; Figs, Lemons, Candies, Nuts All kinds Canned Goods, English Peels, Lemon, Citron. Orange. Sage, Savory. Extra value in Teas and Coffees We think we can satisfy the most particular customer, and are here to show you the goods. . C-319'4 G`-vV -a�Lt�W. • Clixti.ton t flit Neura gc TRY ?Litt ONE APPLICATIO OF THE u Ulf n 1' MENTiHOI. 'Meal• PLASTER IT WILL DISPU. =PAIN UKP MAGICI. '��• WILL QUICKLY CURE BIPH''IIERIA, QUINSY,CO S AND COMM