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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton New Era, 1895-03-01, Page 6rt ' WINDSOR Iilouk TACll'is OMgTHING OF THE FAVORITE HOME 1 (51,41.N VON ��, !t try 4+_441 WARE. A PROFESSION NOT OVER, PAID THAT .RAS MANY DANGERS. *ADLY` VENTILATED SCHOOLS AND CONTACT WITH DISEASE. !she's Celery Compound Cleanses the Blood and Keeps up Strength and Vitality. AT BANISHESLANGUOR, DES- PONDENCY AND IRRI- TABILITY. The majority of our public school teach- ers, male and female, have many dangers to face in a profession that is never over- paid. Many teachers are suffering to -day from maladies and diseases contracted iu crowd- ed and badly ventilated school buildings; the seedd of fatal troubles are taken into the'eystem from imperfect drainage, and contract with children who carry in f adjoin diseases from their homes. Afi • this moment hundreds of school teachers are invalids, or go about the per- fortnance of their duties in a half-dead way.. Nervous troubles are prevalent among t sobers; headache, dyspepsia, 1anghor, irritability and diepondenoy are common troubles, and make life truly mis- erable,. The school teacher's friend and life -giver, Paine's Celery Compound, has done a, won- derous work in the rank of the afflicted ones. During the year 1894 scores of cases have come before our notioe, of sick and suffering ones having been restored to new ilife, energy -and aotiVity through the use ref natures.wonderful-medicine. Paine's Celery Compound has been a true blessing to every teacher and who has meed it. The great medicine has done its *work promptly and efficabionaly. It al- ways brings its operatiens at the great nerve centres; it cleanses and purified the blood, and takes all impurities from the system; it strengthens every digestive organ, and builds up the entire system. Every school teacher in the land male and female, should use Paine's Celery Com- pound if 'sound health and perfect bodily strength is desired. WHAT A MAN WITHOUT HANDS CAN DO. The man with steel fingers promises -to become almost as famous as the man with the iron mask. Mr ' J. Cooper Chadwick is a good looking English - moan in the prime of life, who some years ago had the misfortune to have th his hands blown off by the dis- charge of a gun. As soon as he was well enough .to think, Mr Chadwick set about devising ways to cheat fate after all out of her victory over him. It required a year to solvehe pro- lem, which Mr Chadwick did With the aid,of,a London manufacturer of.arti- ficiel limbs. Steel casings were fitted to the thumbs of the man'a arms. At the place where the wrists should be an assortment of hooks and steel Singers was fitted on. Then imple- ments especially designed to be held by the hooks and fingers were invent- ed The result is that Mr Chadwick is able to feed and shave himself, button his clothing, brush his hair and hold a pipe or cigar. He soon learned to write by means of a pen held in the steel hook at the teanilnus of his arm, and actually wrote'.) book thus. He says indeed that be -can write as well with his tees hands as he could with his flesh and blood ones. It is rather odd his handwriting looks as it used to 'when he wrote with the hands nature gave him, showing that a man writes with his brain. not with his hands. DOMINION FISHERY OVERSEER HENRY W. GILL Gives a Few Pointers and Some Good Advice 'WHICH MANY WILL BE GLAD TO FOLLOW. UPFORD, Oct. 14, 1894. Messrs Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto: GENTLEMEN,—I think itis.. due to you t0 let you know the benefits I., have received from Dr. Chase's kidney -liver pills. 1 leave been suffering off and on for three years from bladder trouble with a con- stant desire to urinate, with its accompany- ing weakness. Medicine furnished by a skilful physician afforded me temporary relief, but the trouble would return, often at very awkward times. I was persuaded to try the pills andobtainecl relief from the first. Before I bad taken one 25c. box I felt better than I had for years, and have not the slightest symptoms of the com plaint since. As there are, no doubt, many others who are suffering from like troubles and to whom a cure would be a similar boon, you are welcome to use this com- munication as you please. I remain Yours faithfully, IIENRy W. GILL, A stranger who was shown round Peterborotigh cathedral, England, the other day gave the (lean a cheque for twenty thousand dollars toward the fund for a new organ. Children Cry for tcher'' Castorhs QF HER MAJESTY, How the Queen's Residence t. Heated Mn Lighted—Four Method. and 1tlaterial and How They Are Employed—Coal by the Train Load, For lighting tile castle four methods are available, all of which are more or less in operation, viz: Gas, oil, candles and th electric light, while for warming and coo ing, wood, coal and gas are used. Daring the residence of the court some hundreds of persons are in the castle, besides the royal family and the visitors, consequently the adequate provision c�f all these proces- ses is of a somewhat gigantic nature, keeping many servants constantly em- ployed, For the general lighting and heating gas and coal are adopted, but this isnot so in the Queen's own rooms, nor in many other of the royal apartments. In the matter of fires for her own rooms the Queen strictly banishes coal. She has a confirmed preference for wood only. Spe- :cial supplies of wood have to be obtained for this purpose from the thickly timbered hills a few miles up the river, above Wind- sor, where a number of workmen are re- gularly employed on this task. The tim- ber, when felled and roughly trimmed on the spot, is brought down to a wharf on the river side, where it is dressed and cut up auto blocks • of fixed sizes. It is then stacked to get seasoned, and as required supplies are brought down to the Castle for cousumption in the Queen's rooms. Gas and oil are excluded from her Ma- jesty's apartments. Her light is provided by means of wax candles, all of one special pattern, their daily removal being the duty of a special official. In some of the other aparttnents gas is utilized, and in other parts oil lamps are burned, gas sup .plying the quarters of the staff generally. Moreover, although the Queen bars all but candles for her own private use, she has permitted the introduction of an electric light plant, This.is placed underneath the north terrace, and is in charge of a special engineer, under the general supervision of a prominent electitician. This plant has never been largely used, but the light has been led into and a�plied to the main cor- ridors, to one or two of the royal apart ments and to the library. A year or so ago the original plant was replaced by newer and more powerful machinery, which would probably suffice to light the whole of the castle if the Queen so willed, but this has not yet occurred, nor is she likely to sanction it. Electric bells and telephones abound throughout the castle, but electric light is allowed very limited play. The coal required for Windsor Castle chiefly comes from certain collieries in North Wales, brought in train loads of perhaps 500 tons at a time. From the sta- tion it is carried to the castle, in various parts of which are deep and spacious 13431 - tare, into which it is tipped. Thence it is conveyed as required to the different rooms and offices, numbering some hundreds. Lifts are altnost unknown in the castle, consequently the coal has to be hoisted from the cavernous cellars and carried hither and thither by coal porters. The replenishing of the fires is carried out upon a most careful and efficient plan, footmen and other higher servants receiving the coal from the porters and passing it on to this royal apartments at intervals through- out the day. Each official connected With heating and lighting, the castle has his allotted duties and recognized position, and thus the resi- dence of the highest lady in the land is lighted and warmed in - efficient manner by many and various processes.—London News. RUEUMAii$M ASO Y t4, e81A A COMBINATION UP PiiO[T.t}J+ WFUOR MAD.F., 'Aril MISER- ABLE. d Ma ELI' Jet= $ICLATE. ate E3ri*ui~NOE, O WIT$ TIME TnounLIM--Copap NOT RETAIN FOOD AND WAS TUOUQUT To nE B xoNI) HOYE or COIiE—BDT RELIEr CAME AND 13S Ie Now A wsu M aAN. From the Coati000k, Que., Observer. e The readers of the Observer have become k- familiar with the remarkable cures effected by the use of Dr Williame' Fit,k Pills for Pale people through their recital in these eoluwne, se taken from other reputable newepapere. It is now our purpose to tell them of a ,cure, hardly short of miraculous, which was effected oa a person with whom many of our readers are acquainted. We refer to Mr Eli Joyce, formerly of Dixville, but now living at Averil, Vt. A few days ago we saw Mr Joyce and asked him about hie reoovery. He stated that for four or five years he had been afflicted with rheu- matism and dyspepsia.' Ile was laid up and unable to do anything on an average four months in a year, and was constantly growing worse, although treated by good physicians and trying numerous remedies recommended. A year ago last August he was taken seriously ill while at hie sister's, Mrs Dolloff, of Dixville. He could not re- tain anything on his stomach and the phy- sicians Who attended him were powerless in improving his condition. One of them stated that he had cancer of the stomach and could not live long. It was in this precarious condition that he determined to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and before long was able to retain food on his stomach. His pain gradually became less and in six weeks time he was bank to his home in Averil, feeling that he had obtained a new lease of life. He continued taking the Pink Pills for some time longer and gained so much in health and strength that he is now able to do the hardest kind of a days work, and he .frankly gives Dr William's Pink Pille all the credit for his rejuvenated con- dition, and says he believes their timely use saved his life. The Observer bas veri. Pied his story through several of his neigh.. bore, who say it was thought he was at the point of death when he began the use of rink Pills; in fact when we mentioned his case to one of the doctors who had attended him he said he supposed he was dead long ago. When such strong tributes as these can be had to the wonderful merit of Pink Pills is it little wonder that their sales reach such enormous proportions, and that they are the favorite remedy with all classes. Dr Williams' Pink Pills contain the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shat- tered nerves. They are an unfailing spec- ific for locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheu- matism, nervous headache, the after effects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, ner- vous prostration, all diseases depending upon vitiating humors in the blood such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, ete. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to fe- males, such as suppressions, irregularities and all forme of weakness. In men they effeot a radical cure in all forms arising from mental worry, overwork or exceeses of any nature. Dr. Williams's Pink Pills are manufac- tured by the Dr Williams' Medicine Com- pany, Brockville, Ont., and Schenetady, N. Y., and sold in boxes (never in loose form by the dozen or hundred, and the public are c ,ritioned against numerous imitations sold in this shape), at 506. a box, or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams' Me. dicing Company, at either address. Facts About the gins. The tongue of a lion is- so rough that a close look at it will almost take the skin off the looker. It is not safe to allow a lion to lick your hand, for if he licked the skin off and got a taste of the underlying blood, supposing it to be there, he would want the hand and everything adjoining thereto. Nothing more perfect in modern machinery exists than the mechanism by which a lion works his claws. lie has five toes on each of his fore feet and four on each of.hisbind feet. Each toe has a claw. Nothing about a lion is without reason, and' the reason he has more toes and claws on his fore than on his hind feet is that he has more use for them. If this were not so the majority would be the other way. The lion is nocturnal by choice. He has no particular objection to daylight, but likes to spend it in the bosom -of his family, or at least adjacent to it. It should not be supposed that be- cause he roams about at night he neglects his family. He roams in order to All the - family larder. He kills to eat, not for amusement. He never bothers small game so long as there is big game within reach. When feeling fit he can take an ox in his mouth and jump fences and ditches like a professional steeplechaser.—Wes53 minter Budget. STAGE DEATHS. • New Light on Courtship and Marriage. An English writer has recently been giving some what he calls "new light on love, courtship and marriage" that is worth considering. Anybody, he says, who has not yet fallen in love can readily raise the vision of the subsequent dear one by looking at himself in the glass. If he be stout, the girl will probably be thin; if he have a snub nose, his love will center about the Roman one; if he be dark, 10 to 1 a blonde ultimately captures him. Thus nature ' corrects -defects' and : strives to realize her ideal. The same holds good in a measure of the mental qualities. A fool should'make it his business to fall is love with a Clatter woman, and, conversely, a wise main- should marry a fool if he has any respect for-tiattire. Note, ftlrther,that girls withltokan noses are, as a rule,good house managers; but againtitthis amiable quality must be set the fact that your Roman nose is essentially managing in every direction and is not content with domestic duties alone. Your -Roman nose, in fact, requires a complete surrender and is rarely happy till she gets it. Noses, he thinks, are a leading index to character. Avoid asharp nose. If, besides being sharp, it is tinted with varying shades of red or blue, or is blue pointed, there is an asperity of temper. which it would not be well for you to encounter. Let your converse with "blue points" be confined to°the oyster bar, then. Avoid the blue -nosed maiden as you would the blue -nosed ourang-outang—both are capable of infinite mischief. He also cautions us against red hair and bushy eyebrows. In selecting ahusband "choose a sensible man, one of solid, mature judg- ment." Excellent advice, only a bit too general, as is his infallible recipe for win- ning his love. To do so a woman must possess womanly graces, the power of setting out her qualities so as to inspire the tender passion and gift of fascination. That is the whole secret. Medical Authority Declares They Out- rageously Violate Nature. A French dramatic critic, with some show of medical knowledge, represents that nearly all actors and actresses out- rageously violate nature in their imita- tions of death. He cites in corroboration of his charge, the customary th-Attrical death of Camille, in the younge, Ouma's favorite emotional play of that title. According to the author, his heroine is affected with pulmonary consumption, and an incidental attack of hemorrhage of the lungs extinguishes her life. There is absolutely nothing dramatic to be made out of this mode of dying; if fidelity to fact be obeyed. The gushing of a stream of blood from the mouth would be realistic. but the imitation of such a phenomenon is never made by actors, male or female, nor ny discreet manager tolerate such a piece stage business. Again, the over- helming suffocation which prodnces the pid death in Camille's case is never companies by convulsions, such as her ying refasalsiatatives on the stage almost ways assume. In natural death from is cause the sufferer simply collapses m failure of the vital powers. Theatrical poisoning scones are also us- Ily untrue to nature. 1t is popularly lieved that when a fatal dose of landau- mormorphine is swallowed the victim mediately sinks into a death -like sleep, is commonly seen on the stage, Where - the first effect of this poison taken in e -quantity is invariably to excite and liven. Nor is the mode of dying after the hack- neyed cardiac stage -',tab in conformity with the laws of sat IIre. The actor sim- ply falls at foil length, or in a heap, 1ereas the every -day member of society ves a spring when the heart is struck fore enter'ir,geternity by this unhappy te. Even do modern Othello has not herited enough of Shakespeare's won- rful fidelity to truth to die naturally er a stab thro igh the heart.—Cincinnati 1 a Stub Ends of Thought. of A woman talks at her best when she 'W doesn't know what she is talking about, ra Domestic felicity is of as many types as ac religion is. d We unconsciously judge all men by our- al selves. th While a man is thinking how a thing fro ought to be done, a woman will do it. Cupid always goes about with his bow ua and arrows loaded. be A wise man discovers by patient study u what a fool stumbles upon. im Women admire handsome men, and love as homely ones. as No woman should ever worry over the lik loss of a pian who hadn't the courage to en ask for her. — — Com pli/Mee. "Leave the h,lu., For an instant to, confronted the girl in w silence. gi "Very well," he answered, with an ef- be fort. ga Ile was true to his word. in Although a burglar and a social outcast. ale he left not only the house, but the station- aft -Ir. tubs it h 1 piali0. n e kitchen and the grand Enquirer. TAU.1.)(:1tk lama Pit iNi 11P-MA Air Geo. 1,n t e, ..t., t na' t ui {� ullt4f� ` ,.(to), writvti ii, 1u. �IU11 itn3 f..11u)%S vo11- ((L'uitig 1he iluu,iittr.ti�...l''l'ltlit•hiee Act, Q Allow ow to an) limit I have (ung been an etittiit:,ittsi 10 Ciltieert iii ive, but never was in love of, this espefiS4e and cuutbersinie >xieasut'e, and have lung felt that the .00uer it is effaced fromthe slat ute book the better it will he for both Conservatit es aid Reform- ers. And hating long been identified with municipal wafters, both as a township Clerk and for 'he last seven- teen years as move, I have been at a loss to learn what has been ar-wliat can be grained by the Conservative or any other party by a longer continu- ation of this .very vexatious system. The Perth County Council (of which I am a member), at its Jnne session last year, unanimously passed a resolution to memorialize the Dominion Govern- ment urging theta to adopt the 'Pro- vincial hots. In my experience as a politician there is nothing to be gained by the Conservative party by ►i con- tinuation of the present system. Norway Pine Syrup ouree coughs. Norway Pine Syrup ouree colds. Norway Pine Syrup heals the lenge. "A Conservative," in the Toronto Star, gives a racy review of the history of the defunct Empire and charges that some of the Ottawa Ministers betrayed it into the hands of the Mail. He gives -_ his opinion as follows: -"After a care- ful study of political tactics in vogue in Canada for some years past, I have been able to come to no other conclu- sion than that the whole of Canada's population are dominated over by a score of designing machine politicians, backed by about eighty leading manu- facturers and capitalists." He bitterly condemns Hon. J. C. Patterson for al- leged double-dealing in connection with the Empire. 1 CURE FITS! Valuable treaties" and bottle of medicine sant Tree to any - 7 Barterer. Dive Express and Poet O®oe address. R. O. ROOT, Y.C, 186 West Adelaide Street, Toronto, Out SCALDS and Burns are soothed at once with Perry Davis' PAIN KILLER. It takes out the fire, reduces the inflam- mation, and prevents blistering. It is the quickest and most effectual remedy for pain that is known. Keep it by you. J. C. STEVENSON, —THE LEADING ----a UNDERTAKER —AND— EMBALMER. A FIILL LINE Op NODS KEPI' in STOCK rhebestEmbalming Fluidused Splendid Hearse. ALBERTST.,CLINTON Residence over atore . OPPOSITE TOW HALL COTTOLENE. Your husband will notice a great Improvement in your cooking, whoa You use CatYQwn Your house will not be filled with the odor of hot lard, whew 14u use Cd_riOLENn Your doctor will lose some of hfr Dyspepsia uses, when You use arToLENc Your children can safely eat the same food as yourself, what You use arToieaNe Your money will be saved, and your cooking praised, when You use @rroLEN, Famous cooks, prominent phy- sicians and thousands of ev-ry- day housekeepers endorse it. Will you give it a trial ? sold in 0 and b pound pall., by ail aroma Made only by The N. K. Falrbank Company, Wellington and Ann Stay 1(ys' TIEA . POWDERS Cure .S/CK HEADACHE and; Neuralgia In 20 MINUrEs, also Coated Tongue, Dizzi- ness, Bitionsness, Pain in the Side, Constipation, Torpid Liver Bad Breath. to stay oared also regulate the {rowels. VERT NIDE TO TAKE. PRICE 26 CENTS AT bAUo &TORE3. AXES In order to clear out our stock of Axes, we are offering t hem at cut prices. Reduced price 81.05 - - Regular price $1.26 Reduced price $6 cents - price 400 Reduced price 66 cents - Regular price 7Mctti Best Canadian Coal Oil only 10c per gallon. No second grade kept in stock. Mack ayock► D A R LA N D BROS ld Stand BCrick Block - CASH IS HIND - THE ONLY UP TO DATE OROCER'y IN TOWN IS The CASH GROCERY Tell us your wants and we will do the rest, if your wants refer to groceries. SATISFACTION 4. Is what we alai to give our customer's. :and by careful attention to tkeir wants, we hope to secure and merit a portion of the public patronage for the coming year. Bargain Day Prices, Our Every day Prices Every day Bargain Day with is. Sole Agents for the celebrated MONSOON TEA. Farm produce taken as cash.—Telephone No. 23. OGLE COOPER & CO. Cash Grocery 1 door North of News -Record. Panacea for Hard Times We have opened out this . • Ready Made.Clothing week a new stook of . . Of fine work and materiel and astonishingly low price°, a few of which we quote:— Child'e Suite from $2.25 up. Youth's Suits trout 54 up. Men's Snits ;4.75. Boys' Pante 76o. and up. Men's Vests, grand value, only 11. Men's Pants 42.60'and up. Groceries We have had quite a run for Raisins the poet week, but sae hold out a while on them yet. We are sorry that the 32 /be el Sugar for $1 did not show up, but we are in hopes of getting it yet; and -in the' time will give 30 ]be of another that is worth more money. If you want a really goof Syrup, fry ours at 4 cents per lb. We will give you as good valve for your money ae fi v is possible. Please give as a trial order and be convinced. ADAMS' EMPORIUM, LONDESBORO R. ADAMS C LAINTON. Sash, Door & Blind Factory C� ▪ .� st:x.H.2.111-21 I ter ®l�eGll� A awfJ Al ••�?1 IC r �r ?Il . 1 yll I1Y , Y1 il-+ till TJanip ti ,�I .th l(11i00err) M=1061. <�,.,.,_., gEOs -� rr.—' gar .. S. S. COOPER Proprietor : : Owing to my increasing business, I am building an extensive addition to my premises, and also putting in one of the latest 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 stook all kinds of Window Sash, Door Frames., Blinds, Lumber, Lath, &c. Persons who intend to build will find it to their own interest to see me before sodoing. s • S. COOPER , Clinton •.r.1 '- ..-1,..„..... „wail ;.,_ d .f