Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton New Era, 1895-06-28, Page 8• ervous 1 omen JR 1 LST b,`. IS NOT 41 u fl. Y. ONE. ,`IUME AND ABROAD THEY ,M1,4100LE. I'aiHe's Celery Compound es them a flew Life. al • A MAPS . THEN HAPPY AND STRONG, BRIGHT AND VIVACIOUS. EVLRY WO1%IAN SHOULD TRY IT, The life of the nervous woman is a most unhappy one.;:1-qbe 1eiAcontinnelly mieer able, and is fregl}enlly,s burden to hereplt and family. rMS;at 4a , Nervouenees is prodlieed by a great vari- ety of causes. Headaohes, 'biliousness, constipation, dyspepsia, vertigo or giddi• nese, lneomma des endeno , and a host of other it liileiivdr— .� -gid!.. .. ,,,.. — As al rule, lithe nee of !drugs and med- icines oontarnmg strong narcotics, only coos es to oink deeper'in suffer- ing a1t Y "` Niitnre',�#,true, nd permaneni.onre for all dieeeser irk kite's Celery :Compound, a medicine no Oily and isely pirescribea by thalbel'it.. 'yl ioiane.. The proprietors of Paine's Celery Compound have more testimonials from the women of Canada than have ever been given in favor of any other medicine in tde world. ,Thousands have been saved who wereonoe declared to be hopeless sod incurable by the dooeore. Mrs Joseplti Vallient, of Cache Bdy, Nip- ising district, Ont., who was recently cured of nervous prostration and neuralgia of the heart, writes as follows: f" Furse, , length of tinne I ,pnffered very mMehtfromFnervons pr3airation and neur- algia of theeheart, and was unable to get regular sleep and rest. I used your great medicine, Paine's Celery Compound, with ost benefioial results. I am happy to say y condition of health has wonderfully i•• .roved; my sleep is sweet and natural, an• •e p d r-eryous fears that trou- bled me are banielre{l. I cannot speak too highly of Paine's Ceibty Compcund." SHORT JOURNEYS ON A LONG ROAD Is the characteristic title of a profusely illustrated book containing over one hun- dred pages of charmingly written desorip. tione...ofranmmerresorts in the country north and west of Chicago. The reading matter is new, the illustrations are new, and the information therein will be new to almost everyone. MIA copy of "Short Journey's on a Long Road" will be sent free to anyone who will enclose ten penis (to pay postage) to GEO. H. HEAsironl~1, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, Chicago, Ill. KILLING HIS FIRST MAN. The killing of a brother -man, even in battle, is a painful thing to remember. A soldier of the late war thus vividly describes his first experience: "My firet man I saw but twenty seconds, but I shall remember him forever. I was standing by my gun when a Confederate infantry soldier rushed up. I whipped out my revolver and took him through the breast. He tossed up his arms gave me the strangest look in the world, and fell forward upon his faoe. He had bine eyes, brown curling hair, a dark mus- tache, and a handsome face. I thought the instant I fired that I should have loved that man if I had known him. I tell you this war is a terrible buss. ness."—Youth's Companion. A boy named Lorrain was fatally stabbed by a companion in Montreal while performing school theatricals. Queen Victoria on Friday entered on the 59th year of her reign. HEART DISEASE BELIEVED INS° MINUTES Dr Agnew's Cure for the Heart gives perfect re- lief in all caeee of Organic or Sympathetic Heart Disease in 30 minutes and speedily effects a cure. It is a peerless remedy for Palpitation, Shortness of Breath, Smothering Spells, Pain in Left Side and all symptoms of Diseased Heart One dose convinces. Sold byWATTS & CO„ Clinton A gander, which may have been a direct descendant of the geese that saved Rome, died at Moose Creek•the other day, at the tough cld age of thir- ty-four years. Its career was a re- markable one, but it survived in early life the viscissitudes of pioneer settle- ment, and saw the virgin forest sup- planted by cultivated fields. Of late years it enjoyed perfect immunity from molestation by foxes, polecats, etc.,who realized in it an argument too tough to be trifled with. 8RI$TOI7S Sarsaparill Cures Rheumatism, Gout, Sciatica, Neuralgia, Scrofula, Sores, and all Eruptions. BRISTOL'S SarLiaparil Cures vet 'Stomach and • Kidney Troubles, and Cleanses the Blood of all Impurities. SRISTOL?S al Sarsaparill Cures Old Chronic Cases where all other remedies fail. Be sure and ask your Druggist for nRzs r Oda S ►: r pari .l Information for Those writ, are Burdened with Flesh, It is all very wel to laugh at the ab- surdity of sighing over growing old, but there are very few women_ who are sufficiently philosophical not `to b, a little chagrined at the advance of years showing Itself plainly' in fate. es figure. There would seem to be two dtetinet types of 4rnerioan women— thosa who grow stout as they grow older and those whohi grow thin. It i3 ail very well to say that Ole tgoe 'poke better when it is. plump .than when it is thin, but every pound of additional avoirdupois certainly adds to a wo- man's age, in appearance at least, whlb, the woman who does not grow stout rarely changes much in appearance from thirty-five to fifty. There a•s many physical reasons whioh induce added flesh, 'and we are told that th figure settles as one grows older ; but It Is this very settling that all women are anxious to avoid, and there is really no aeceesity for it whatever. Steady banting always has the de- sired result in so far as the reducing of flesh is concerned, but there are other results far from, satilefactory whioh are apt to accompany it, and very often 111 health and irritable nerves are the outcome of tt'yieg to grow thin. Th avoiding of starchy food is a siml1 matter, and by not eating potatoes and bread very often an astonishing difference in weight is goon pentefv:d Certain salts, which; however, should never be taken except under4the orders of one's physician. will sometimes start a disposition to lose flesh, which, 1f fol- lowed with giving up potatoes ar.d bread; will' woi•k°'marv•elih:s results. Indolence, one of the greatest 1it tots In increasing weight, ' lies w.taf n th • power of every woman to c irrect. It is so much the fashion now to take ex- ercise that there is no excuse for being lazy. It is impossible for some women to walk a great deal; but a certain amount of regular exercise will b:netit even the most delicate. Sitting invar- iably produces fat, and fat just where one does not want flesh—about the sto- mach and hips. When one begins to lose flesh—and this can be ascertained by being weighed every week—a little massage will be found a great help. The masseuge, if she understands her business, will soon be able to tell where the'surplus flesh is, and direct her ener- gies to the particular place or places. Of course massage is an exp •nsivc lux- ury, but it is not a thing that ne d' to be continued, and a few hours w'i' often work a wondrous change, Fo • instance, one, hour three times a week for a fortnight has been known to r' - duce the size of the waist half an Standing erect with the hands pre,s 'l well down on the hips and then, with the hands still on the hips, bending th.- body forward, backward and sideways several times, twice a day, will also work off accumulated fat about the hips and stomach. But this exercise must he conscientiously persevered in.—Har- per's Bazar. Site Had. He—Have you ever had your fortune told ? She—Oh, yes. indeed. He—By a gypsy ? She—No, by Bradstreet. They have told it to every heiress -hunting Count in Christendom. Hyphenated Names. Hyphenated names in Europe may be divided into two categories—namely: those wherein the hyphen is a mere piece of snobbery and affeeration, and those wherein It is consequent upon 0 legal obligation. The latter are in the minority and are borne almost invari- ably by legatees and their descendants, who have inherited property, usually real estate, contingent upon their tack- ing the name of the testator on to their own. Or else they are men who have married heiresses had been accepted as husbands for the latter on the condi- tion that they should append the family name of their wives to their own pa- tronymic. People In the other category who use the hyphen merely with the object of creating the impression that they a• e of more ancient lineage than Is r•al:y the •case invariably prefix, instead of ppending, the additional name. And It Is thls that enables one to distin- guish the " bona-flde double-barrel," call them, from those who are not. For you have only to ask Mr. Ponsonby- JonFs for the name of his paternal grandfather in order to find nut that the old gentleman was a simply Jones, devoid of the aristocratic Ponsonby : herreas, in the case of surnames ed opted in deference to testamentary dispositions one will invariably find on inquiry that the paternal grandfathe • and ancestors bore the Hest of two patronymics. The persons who make use of hy- phenated names without being rO.r.- pel1'd to do so are usually the owners of patronymics excruciatingly plebian, who hope, vainly, It is true, to redeem the commonplace character of their name by prefixing thereto one calcu- lated, they trust, to create the Impres• sion that they are conneced with some of the great houses of the nobility. Thus it is quite common to find Mont morency-Smiths, Plantagenet -Robin- sons, and Vere de Vere -Browns. fie Wondered, but She Didn't. He—I wonder what I'd do if I had a million? The Widow—I know. "'What ?" i 1 "Marry me."—Lt, !' I ! .1 TEIE.. !CDINTO.N ERA , OREIGN. NOTES, - Of 4,029 children recently subjected to cruel treatment In England, it is sig• festive that 1,247 had had their lives in- sured. • Typhoid fever cannot be transmitted by sewer gas, is the report p4 .the experts to the London Common council. The baoillt of the disease,, also, ilndsit hard to live in town -sewage -. In 1875 the prtoe of silver was 67% pence per ounce, now It is 27X pence; maw; £84 now £ was then a ton, it is tin' whioh in 1886 was £95 alton is now £81. i Tin':platps,have dropped 20 per cent.{ ,Hatt 441,! aperdinki l *wording to the t Frankfurter Zietung, has refused $5,900' for two years' royalty . on "Hansel d+ (;betel" for Vienna alone; by the endf this year he will have made $50,000 Out of the opera. Mr. Patrick Boyle Smollet, the last of the Smollets of Bonhill,°and a direct dp-c soondant of the author of "Peregrine Pickle." and "Roderick Random,;' died recently, aged 92. )E le had represented »umbartonshire and Cambridge in Par- liament. Bovio's "St, Paul," the second play in the trilogy of which "Christ at the Feast of the Purim" forms the first, was given with great success at Turin lately. It is nu 1zily a discussion , carried on by St. Paul, the philosopher Seneca, and the Poet Lucian. When Baby wis sick, we gave her Cestoda. When she was a Child, she cried for Castor!*. When she became Mise, she clung to Castorla. Wheash•.had Children.ahe gore them Castorhrr HUMAN FAMILY STATISTICS. The estimated population of the world on January 1, 1885, was 1,500,000,000. The microscope shows that the body is covered with scales, each scale oovering 500 pores. Figures by coverts in vital tltniisacs prove that not less than 4,847,60001010 hu- man beings die on our globe each cen- tury. Only six persons out of eaoh 1,000 born live to be seventy -fly years old, and only one out of the same number reaches the century mark. Huxley's tables show that the human body is made up of thirteen different ele- ments, of which five are gases and eight solids. The latest anthropological . statistics prove that in America the daily, monthly and yearly niuubr of births exceeds the deaths in the ratio of three to one. The average height of pian in the Un- ited State; ie 5 fent lits_ inches;; in Eng- land, 5 feet ii inches; in Frame, S feet. 4 inches; in 13e1,•tuiii, 5 feet til, inches. Vital shitt'tie.s prove that, r:0;.1 ng tb world over, there are 1i'.) women to 1•v ; 100 men, Out of . ev, ry nine sn,LL.••• deaths reported. eight of the rumba • s. men. Taking the world over, there i; an tiv: r• age of one de nth null 1'., Lirt s • cond. Only one-half of all who are le r into the world live to the age of years. A BOON AND A BLESSING. A boon and a blessing to mankind is Hagyard's Yellow Oil, the great pain des- troyer and healing remedy for external and interpaiarse. Yellow Off, -cures all aches and pains, rhnematism, lame back, sore throat, croup, deafness, cramps, contracted cords and lameness. A calf on the farm of James Rogers, South Norwich, swallowed a silver watch belonging to Frank Rogers. A calf like that needs watching. CATARRH RELIEVED IN 10 To 60 MINDI ES. One short puff of the breath through the Blower supplied with each bottle of Dr. Agnew's Catar rhal Ponder, diffuses this Powder over the sur- face of the nasal passages. Painless and delight, ful to use, it relieves instantly, and permanently cures C.tarrh Hay Fever. Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Tonsilitis and Deafness. 60 cents. At WATTS & 0018., Clinton, Canada's debt is now $316,029,502. This is quite a big sum. It means about $65 for eyery man, woman and child in the country, and it costs about $12,000,000 a year to pay the interest and charges at the low rates now pre- vailing. Mrs T. C. Hawkins, Chattanooga, Tenn., says: Shiloh's Vitalizer "Saved My Life." I consider it the best remedy for a debili- tated system I everiused." For Dyspepsia, Liver or Kidney trouble it excels. Price 75 oto. Sold by J. H. Combe, Clinton. A means of forecasting the weather from a morning cup of coffee is given by the Leeds Mercury, which asserts that it has proved more trustworthy than the guesses. Drop the lumps of sugar carefully into the middle of the cup; if the air bubbles remain in the centre of the cup it will be fine. if they rise rapidly and go at once to the sides it will rain all day; if they gather in the center and then go in a cluster to one side, look out for showers. Ayer's Pills promote the natural motion of the bowels, without which there can be no regular, healthy operations. For the cure of biliousness; indigestion, sick head- ache, constipation, jaundice, and liver com- plaint, these pills have no equal. Every dose effective. Some people are born to hard luck. Here is a man out in Topeka, Kansas, petitioning to be hanged and unable to get anyone to grant the request. He is serving a life sentence, but -does not like the prospect. He prefers the rope and has prefrred a most touching ap- peal to the Governor to have his pre- ference allowed. One can scarcely con- ceive of a greater hardship than that of being compelled to live when one has become fascinated with a particu- lar way of dying. Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry cures Diarrhroa, Dysentery, Cramps, Colic, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum, and all other looseness of the bowels. Never travel without it. Price 35o. Doctor. Whatis_ood for Gleansig the Scalp and Hair, Ieeem to have Pried everyt'hie g and am in despair Why Mrs R.the very best MI5 is PALMO TAR SOAP itis splendid For Washig She head iFprevent dryness thus putts an end to Dandruff and freshens the !lair nicely. a 251 roRA LARGE TABLEt A had break in a curate'$ gene' op 10 reported in the °buret' ThiresrAfter appealing to the old with "And Your old men with hoary head,"he turned to the young men with the appeal "And you young men with your blooming cheek." He tried to change the phrase', but it was too late. The town of Morse, Wisconsin with; all things therein and thereunder, bite, been purchased' by a syndicate of Bon.,; ton capitalists. The one exception ie3;' the ifittbglhOuset which is not >negotiA; able'. Thi+, en vire pride paid is esttmaes ed at $2,/0 ,OQO, and,rhe buyerspropos a, ereting he tlarge t; tannery lir th State.,^tplaint o ;,which will cos '1 $500,11( ,,,,:,Thi,¢ wil he a small imfta L tion of 'the Pirllmani experiment in a different One Of marBilfacture, sum 11101.10, CRAMPS, CHOLERA, DIARRHOEA, DYSR.i TERY, CHOLERA MO taus, . CHOLERA INFANTIIM and all Summer Complaints and Fluxes ofthe Dowels. Children or Adults. for For Sala by all Dealer. Airy 1 POWDERS Cure SICK HEAOACKE and Neuralgia in 20 miNurrs, also Coated Tongue, Dizzi- aess, Biliousness, Pain in the Si de, Constipation, Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. to stay cured also regulate the bowels. VERY NICE TO TAKE. PRICE 26 CENTS AT DRUG STORES. CENTRAL BUSINESS COLLEGE Stratford, Ont. WHAT You are thinking of tak- ing a commercial course, ABOUT You want to become a good bookkeeper or an THE expert shorthander. Per- haps you don't want to be FALL. either, but want a,ggod 'every day practical edu- cation. You want to begin about,Sep- tember. Let its show you how we can help you. Write us for samples of work and catalogue. P. McINTOSH, Principal. Webster's International Dit fi ionary Invaluable in Office, Sehool,and Home New from Cover to Cover Sur^rssor of 1hr " Una:n: idged. " ttar,,lard cr 2113 I-. 5. 1.07.Z 1 1.7 01'''. t1:c 1- Stiprr,Co'irt: r•i •• a of I:early all the Warmly com- mended 1 •' Stine rin; endow'+ rf tie:,on;c, a: i erF..iuc.tte:rai- Inp?: without num- ber. The One (;rcat S .uu .ij i y nfhorfty, Fe rr•;.,.. n"'.. 1'. 1. i'^r„• A College v ri : "Far "ease with which the rye keds the "word sought, for neonrne,- of deSnl- "tion, for efleolivo methods in ladi- "eating pro:iuncia'ion, fo: tr:•se yct "comprehensive etaterr:rnts r f f�rt5, "and for practical use as a working "dictionary, 'Webster's International' "excels any other single volume.” O. & C. MERRIAM CO., Publishers, Springfield, Mass., U.S.A. a.T send to the publishers for free pamphlet. aQ- Do not buy cheap reprints of ancient editions. J. C. STEVENSON, —THE LEADING— UNDERTAKER —AND— EMBALMER. A FULL LINE OF GOODS KEPT ill STOCK ThebestEmbalming Fluidused Splendid Hearse. ALBEIRTST.,CLINTON Residence overetore OPPOSPTE TOW BALL F •LIVER AND STOMACH TI tOU]KL HEPATIC WAFERS. Women, Children, Teachers, Scholars. ti.'hiukers„ Lawyers, Merchants, all bus!. 'ness men to enjoy good health and per - 'form their work must have liver and stowaoh in good condition. One half the lnliBery of life is caused by liver and stomach troubles. If you are a sufferer know that 1 Allen loon selliilepatioWafers. $1 pays for one znocit'hs"'treatn'ent. Only 3 to tx Months' treatment necessary. DIRECTION'S.—One wafer a day afterbreakfast or on retiring at night,/t• Once a week in addition take a Seidlitz Powder or Citrate Magnesia. Mrs Nettie Harrison, America's Beauty Doctor, 40 and 42 Geary St.. San k'rapcisco. (Jul. Eastern Office, 56Washington Ave., Detroit, Michigan. ' Not Pamaged by the Frost. 0 Our Stook of Sugars were not damaged by Frost, but as the market is higher and excited, we quote no prices, boa will not be undersold. Prices obtained by calling at our store, also Bargains in everything in our line In Black TEAS we have the Daln Kola Blend at 50ots a pound, and the Salads Package at 40o., best vain in town. In Japans at 25 and 35 cents we beat them all. In fact no matter what you need in our line, we guarantee to giye as god quality, and sr low. prices as can be got anywhere. Canned Goods of all kinds. Soairrin great variety, Hams, Bacon. Lard, Cottolene always in stook. Crockery and Glassware awav down Give ne a oall and see what we eau do for you. ..MC U�fl• 'tY & WILTSE, NearPostOftice—CENTRAL tatSCER—Telephoce 40 • A; (GOOD ' to SPRAY - and spray INVESTMENT a PUMP fruit trees WE HAVE THEM—ALL KINDS, FROM $1 to $10. PREPARE FOR CUTTING YOUR LAWN BY GETTING ONE OF OUR 18 inch Lawn Mowers only $5.50 �'' ' AVOID .THE TROUBHESOME'`FL''YS BY. PUTTING ON^`.--, - • Screen Windows and Doors (EARLY). WE HAVE THEM VERY CHEAP. New St1jre Old Stand MackayBlock fl AR LAND B R OS a Brick Block Cr r CASH IS RING GOOD EATING is the keystone to health. You can buy the keystone kind of Groceries at , The CASH GROCERY In Canned Goods, Vegetables, Meats and all kinds of table delicacies, we carry a full assortment. Teas & Coffees a Specialty or or For Sole agents for the Celebrated "Monsoon" Indian Tea. Extra good value in Young Hyson, 51bs for $1 Prompt Delivery, Good Goods and Fresh Groceries, Low Prices and Fair Dealing. Farm produce taken as cash.—Telephone No. 28. OGLE COOPER & CO, Cash Grocery 1 door North .of . News -Record. Adams' Empori um WE HAVE RECEIVED A ,Ready Made Clothing GRAND STOCK OF Clothing For Men's, Youths' and Children. They are splendid valve. HANDSOME DISPLAY OF MILLINERY Special value in BOOTS, SHOES and RUBBERS. A large line of Tan Shoes, very nice. We have also BARB WIRE, Black Wire, White Wire and Collins Patent Twist. Field and Garden Seeds of best quality. Special value in Sugar, Tea and every line of Groceries. Produce taken in exchange. ADAMS' EMPORIUM, LONDESBORO R. ADAMS J. Brunsdon & Son, ?' R LONDESBORO e p Ante. for all Farm Implement ort'" MASSEY-HARRIS Binders, Mowers, Drilla . Seeders, Cultivators, Scufere and all kinds of Plows Full line of Machinery and Plow Repairs BINDER TWINE—Best brands of Twine at low prices. A complete line of •-• .�, Buggles,Road Carts, Waggons Fine Buggies and Standard Waggons •,.,.Se "- ••uov,,,,, ...rw 1 tis••r••.+ .- a epeoialty• Agepte for Gould, Sharply & Muir Wind MilleOUR MOTTO—First-oiaas work and best material.; prices consistent with good artiolee. attention given to Repairing and all kinds of Job Work. JOHN BRUNSDON & SON, Londesboro. Prompt • ,r.r.,mn,n,• vvn+n.n.n,mnv R-I—PSA- N -S ONE GIVES RELIEF. ..u.,n wn.n.n...w.b... nv~. ,eUf Mary.. n060.0.04.0%0 oo.,.~„ ,u+www .nneoMR71.lWM/�M.tM ,nwn�bnnnmv