Clinton New Era, 1895-08-02, Page 2The Tri ph of Love,
VPSOOrtitittill. A tarViage
a
e- 4.r
nater:. Qrgge
wanted to hug every. bodyi and tell thettr
, my old ,self had died yesterday • and, my
new self was born to -day. Why didn't you
• tell me when a first wrote that I would find
it this way?"
And another thus:
"If you dumped a cartload- of gold at m-•
feet it would not bring such gladness in,o
my life as your method has done."
Write to the Erie Medical Compant,
Buffalo,N.Y., and ask, for the little book
called "COMPLETE MANHOOD." Re
fer to this paper, and the company prom-
• lees to send the book, in sealed envelope,
without any marks, and entirely free, um'
it ie well iutrodueed.
otaiied afoot nods
�fq•Btlt[tr• 1pt11lmOI40
VCI Ottt
PERSONS TO TRAVEL!
WANTED - Several faithful gen-
tlemen and ladies to travel for an es-
tablished house.
SALARY $780 and EXPENSES
Position•permanent if suited; also in-
, crease. State reference and enclose
self-addressed stamped envelope.
THE NATIONAL,
316-317318 Omaha Building, CHICAGO.
' The Humane Society of Pittsburg
has decided that young girls must
cease selling papers on the streets.
"Mamma, was that a sugar plumb yon
-just gave ma?' asked little Mable. "No,
r,` dear, it was one of Dr. Ayers Pills."-
-"Please may I hove another?" "Not now,
idear; one of those nice pills is all you need
Tait present, because every dose is effective.
TRAM RELATIONS WITH BRITAIN.
The extracts in the following article are
from the Globe, and should set people
' thinking. Comment hereon is hardly ne
pessary, for the figures and statements
• carry their own commentary :
"The British trade returns for 1894,which
'have just been published in detail, are not
pleasant reading for Canadians. The ex-
ports of goods the produce of Britain to
these colonies show a larE,e falling off in the
last twenty yeare. In 1875 they Dame to
£9,000,000; in 1894 to only £6,300,000. The
yearly average for the five years 1890.1894
was a fraction oyer £7,000.000. It will not
'do to cast the blame on Newfoundland.
The exports to Canada in 1875 were £8,400-
' 000; in 1894 only £5,500,000, the average
for 1890.1894 being £6,500,( JO. Such is
, the answer of facts to the pretense of the
N. P. men that they meant to strengthen
-the connection. The gross trade (imports
;fiend exports , of all kinds) between the
`United Kingdom and the North American
roolonies amounted in 1875 to £19,900,000,
a, 1694 to £20.200,000, an insignificant
growth. In the same period the gross trade
of the 'United Kingdom with the United
'States rose from £94,000,000 to over £120,-
'.000,0t10. an increase of nearly 30 per cent.
'it ie quits true' that man for man the col.
°aids
ol-
onids do a larger trade with the mother
'deentry thab the United States does. But
ere Lord Farrar puts it, "the real question
"'fat ns in Britain, so fat' as the value of the
l'iradei is Cancetned, ie not the amount of
trade par man but the aggregate amount of
trade, including not only the actual amount
tag trade at the pre:",;�nt moment but the re
''cent'rogrese-of trade as including its prob-
4' ble ffutura"' -
"'ai The United States is stridirg ahead of
is the growth of its trade with Britain,
""and wears not ttiyaittg our heritage to the
f'beet account, now keeping the Canadian
"'fid me etainless before the world, so that on
the highest grounds of patriotism as well
-eft on tbole of golf -interest a change and a
`radical vile iN Called for.
A$ OAUTI0NI A WAltiNIN(lf
attain blowing the note in the morning
lentos and '$irkea are dieeliatged colored
With blood, Capeotallyt on one side, lose no
info iii applying a remedy. Catarrh(o�f the
'very+ wditgt kkih has become seated, the
avalla are sere and full of small ulcers, and
`'if Mit 06o't cured Will be hard to cure sad
"fitodioitt€', t' . stitch in title eaves nine,"
:The Chase's Catarrh Cttret.
lA�l ACt?'fES'r r ELL
IAN l l°#Ta SREPlE �4 ,A .
MO Wald* of liaise * MO IIs ilei, Panna e .
OlQYGL.ES t1 Hp sYHf!' MIgN
5 IN Oats/FPI:MiA.-0'
dohase t'L1 Ro tnf o4 Of roma.
*bout a.. Yon! ' -r i>l,, rain#
JOhnso! or In .her pwnt ltn908'ilncodla
and roniantle uajie, ` itbe I�lrinol?sd
TekahletiWaker. , a ._i.,...uq a
• t30u In Batton', • With r,-- Inge train
OW ' poems, SM haeGh n r33091#4
89ifra-." The aleoblpe Suppler, ntlptf tlu, ti9x$p. Art
iii r `„ U6o 8ialtto- liertiprR lion° .pante 1 yotglf
tar' cmatieir Novel Stfeds-Thu Jpliltrubt►ila
bar t
1-1"dgu, wheat id ►p won
/ triumphs than over poor `1Tittle P
tea ever dreamed of winning.
Jehal vera. #aI3 re dy a- volylaae 7f
teleuted arid, beautiful Indian woman
poems spud they will, be shortly issuer'
Boston by Taannem. V'olffe drr''Qom
Rea* distinctively futile': and dra
. pieoaa,tx+gatfie .14 •-thatr,-, haat. enj0yit:teeraat
the liveg voice, but some ot,the lyri
peelus aro • very rautloaL f will qu
ane or tw9- • Hera }s, , on9 entitled -"
rrarrtpor '
oaallari-
Mr, w Yaoexn�iker.
,.•;a. Sording sheep ou,a.bioyole le aft tnnava,
p tion tntroduoed by Frank Smith on the .
pa�ly1 ,11;,;,1;074° isb lain 1 i bee',
s Plains
. y ng yoeit
matin pug .,and ' the, footbille'of the•
coact range, iri the western part of Fresno
.geality, er
R haps.,•t;he wheel wui•. not
come tufo gepprat use coir drat purpose, as
ete it is nearly always tale atiticabie to ride
Tho : r bicycle over ranges where sheep l fled
pasturage, but nature has provided, ono
o
k'ne, , of ,the finest oourses in the world on -the
i open plains of the west side, where the
art 1 ground Is as level as a floor, and the
wheelmau eon often aide fifty miles with-
y- out changing he oourie, and all the time
over a country where roads are almost
unknown, and where not a fonot, or a
• 'ditch interpose td stop the journey. The
eir cabins of a 'few horuesteaders sometimes
•meet the view, clotting the horizon hero
nd and there,. but aside from these there is
little or no evidenoe of civilization in all
jn the country as tar as the eye can roach.
` That' region is a dead waste, almost
, without vegetation, except during the
rainyweeks , of winter and early eprigg.
When the hot weather poi ce the short
growth of alfllarla dries and the winds.
ees sweep every vestige of It from the face of
the earth, leaving the ground smooth
and level as a rade course.
of This season the unusual rains and the
phenomenal warmth have produced a
ow
grth of verdure such as bas seldom
been known there, covering the earth
Ube a carpet. The sbeopmen have driven
e their herds to that quarter from all sides
because pasturage there oosta nothing.
Fra;,k Srnith, who has charge of several
herds, breaks the monotony, says the San
Frai:cisco Chronicle, by gliding on;his
wheel iron hand to band, thus dispensing
rn with a horse and deriving pleasure from
what was before work. He can round up
a herd quicker than a dog can do it. The
dogs seem to view the bicycle with dis-
gust, and look upon it as the latest device
of laborsaving machinery.
The meet novel experience is in riding
after ooyotee, which always hang upon
the outskirts of a band of sheep, ready
to put a sick or crippled one out of its
misery the moment the herder's back is
turned. A coyote is able to keep ahead of
a bicycle, and enjoys the exercise for the
first few miles. But when he has had an
hour or two of the sport, and the tireless
and unflagging wheel continues to hang
upon his line of retreat, the fun begins to
wear off, and the long-eared galloper of
the plains realizes that the transaction is
not intended for a joke. By the time
another hour has passed, and ten or a
dozen miles more of the level plain have
been measured off, and the remorseless
wheel continues not more thau two hund-
red and twenty yards in the rear, or per-
haps bas gained a little, the situation be-
comes decidedly unpleasant for the eoy
ote. The smile of scorn that purled his
Bp during the first ten miles of the race,
Oias he looked back, first over one shoulder
dllial a -baler the other, gradually- dis=
appears soon after the second teri miles
is entered upon. The animal looks back
as often as ever, but the expression on his
impudent face seems to say that the joke
has been carried far enough, and he is
willing to play quits if the wheel is wil-
ling.
The coyote is a long-winded animal,
and it takes a good wheelman to ride one
down. Under ordinary circumstances it
is impossible, for he will strike for a
thicket when he discovers that it is to be
a survival of the fittest. But on the west
side plains there aro so few places of con-
cealment and the prairies are so level and
limitless that the coyote may have to run
two or three hours before he can find
cover. Tho latter part of such a run is
a weary one for him. Ho may be able
to escape, but sometimes he falls a victim
to the revolver of the wheelnran, and once
in awhile he is lassoed, although in such
-a case he must be shot anyway, for his
teeth aro called into action as soon as he
finds himself at the end of a rope. Re-
sides, be is apt to jerk the rider off his
wheel by sudden turns.
The jackrabbit is not so noble game as
the coyote from the point of view of the
bicyclist, but is harder to run down. It
is not because of greater speed or greater
endurance, but because the rabbit will
not run very far in a straight line. When
1t finds itself pursued it may run in one
direction for awhile, but it soon doubles
back, and from that time on it runs in
circles or more probably in an angular
course, defying the wheelnran, and con,
tinnally keeping out of range of the
pistol.
Efforts have been made two or three
times to run down the only antelope In
central California perhaps, but the efforts
did not meet with success, because these
animals never venture very far from the
foothills of the coast range, and when
pursued they run for rough ground. An
antelope, after it has drunk Its fill, could
not outrun a bicycle ton miles on smooth
Around. Tho animals are swift for a mile
or two, hut they cannot keep up their
pace long at a time. Those in Fresno
county have their home in the brush
back of the first range of foothills and
seldom venture out upoia the plains.
- light 'neath the nort!tern skies, 1
blaoand grim:
Naught but the, etar'light lies 4w1'
• heaven and. him,
Of man no need�has be, of (od; no pr
. er;
He and his Deity are brothers there.
°A.bove his bivouac the fire .fling down
Through- branches, gaunt and black th
i,; 'needles brown. '
Afar, some mountain' etreams,rook-bon
and fleet, o
'Sing themselves 'throklgh his dreams
,•r' ' -cadence sweet.
Theipiue trees whispering -the her'on's ory
15114e 0iover's passing 'wing, his lu,'laby,
'Aind"blinking overhead the *white stars
keep
vier iiia hemlook 'bed -his sin'
sleep
A qd lteree is a rondeau entitled "A
Husking -time." It has a sly humor, n
'without' obarm
At husking -time the tassel fades
To brown above the yellow blade,
Whose. rustling sheath enswathes th
corn,,
That burst its chrysalis in soorn
Sanger to lie in prison shades.
Ainong the merry lads and maids
The creaking ox -cart sloe ty wades
'Twist stalks and stubble; sacked and to
At husking -time.
The -prying pilot orow persuades
The flock to join in thieving raids;
The sly racoon with oraft inborn
His portion steals; from plenty's horn
His pouch the saucy chipmunk lades
At husking -time.
A stanza from a poem devoted to the
crows is rather fine in its vivid picture:
O'er what vast lakes that stretch superbly
dead
Till lashed to rife by storm clouds, have
they flown?
In what wild lands, in laggard flight have
led
Their aerial career unseen, unknown.
Till now with twilight oome their cries
in lonely monotone?
Taken all in a!I there is oonsiderable
variety of mood and feeling in the little
volume which contains only 88 pages, and
I do not see why it ehould not have some
vogue, eapeolally as the work of a genuine
Indian. It would be easy to pick out cer-
tain faults of taste, but the good linos are
sufficient to redeem crudeness.
4:.t�21Go IS
A Clerk tto lie Eriiulate'
"Will you lend me your watch, sir for a
few minutes? I want to use the s000nd
hand." Billy is to be trusted with any-
athing, so I promptly handed him my
ramble time -piece without a question as
to the use he would make of it. A few
nannies later I glanced toward the rear of
the store, and saw Billy rapidly doing up
different aorta of merchandise into neat
parcels and as rapidly undoing them. I
walked toward the scene of action to see
what he was about.
"I'm just practising, " said he, in answer
to my meatal inquiry. "When I was over
to your oompetitor's store the other day,
there was a young man there who could
do up a bottle into a package while I
counted ten. I thought maybe if I prac-
tised lou enough I could learn to do it,
too." While Billy talked his busy fingers
made neat knots, and one eye was kept
steadily on the small hand of my watch,
which lay before him.
"Do you think It's worth ail the trouble
it will be to learn?" I asked.
'Course I do," he answered promptly.
"I don't believe it will take me more than
a month or two, and then I shall know
how as long as I live. You sett, you never
forget the things you learn with your
hands or your feet."
I said nothing, but watched the boy's
dexterous fingers as ho skilfully shaped
the stiff wrapping paper around various
objeots. After a minute or so he went
on:
"It's so much easier to do anything
after you know exactly how; and I hate to
be a chump with my hands, anyway.
Have yon noticed that new clerk you got
last week? He's a nice man, and every-
body likes him, but he's the clumsiest
chap I ever saw. He always spills a little
of everything he touchea about a table-
spoonful on the average. After he's had
a real busy morning there are enough
spilled groceries behilitd the counter to
make a square meal for a tramp, only they
are too miaod even for that.
"That man ought to live with my
mother a little while. When I was a little
ahavor I had a bad habit of spilling things
.on the tablecloth. Mother spoke to me
once or twice about it. Then one day after
dinner, she lifted me up to the table and
showed mo the place where my plata bird
been. There was a clean white circle with
a Iot of different spots around it.
'My son,' said she, "if it made your
dinner tanto better or made you any hap-
pier to put those spots there I would let
you go on doing it, but as. I am sure it
will not you must break yourself of the
habit at once. I well take one oent out of
your pocket -money for every spot you get
on the tablecloth, and sea wtjothet yon
can't learn to be a little tidier It to a
matter of habit, either way, and yon will
always find that on the whole agoodhab't
is easier than a bad one.'
"Well, sir, I was pretty poor for a week
or two, but after that my place was the
cleanest at the table, and I guess I am
cured of spilling things as long as I live.
"I don't like to do up pe ekages specially
well, but if I can learn to do up twice as
many in a morning as anybody else, I
suppose I would be worth twice as much
Wages; wouldn't 1, sir?"
I embed, but said nothing. I am afraid
sometimes that Billy is geting too sharp
for me. --but.
Wife -Prof. Garner says the gorillas
have only eight words, lInbbje-Thou
there are no females among them.
A little fellow bad boon lonely lector.
ed by his' mother and fine y stint into the
garden to find a (Avis • with which he
teras to be punished Ile returned exon
and said, "I could r t Lind a switch, but
here's a stone yon , :n tbrow at tab"
In an interview at Winnipeg, Arch
bishop Langevin is reported to have
said thai he thought the ManitobaGov-
ernment, having rejected the remedial
order, should etate in definite terms
what concessions they were prepared
to make. His Grace denied that he
had said in Montreal that the policy of
the Catholics was "no compromise."
Deadly Cancer Cured by B B II
HERE IS THE PROOF.
Messrs, T .Milburn & Co.
Sire, -About four years ago I was taken
Rick with stomach trouble. I consulted
several physiciane, all of whom pronounced
my disease incurable canner of the stomach
and told me I had not long to live. Two
doctors attending me gave me up to die.--
through reading your advertisment, and by
advice of friends, I tried Burdook Blood
Bitters and I am happy to say that after
using one bottle I was able to leave my bed
to which I had been confined a long time
I am thankful to state that B. B. B. cured
my disease which baffled the doctors, and
I am firmly convinced that B.B.B, saved
my life. Gratefully vonre.
ELIZABETH GILHULA,
South Buxton, Ont.
N,B,--Mrs Gilhubs is the wife of the -
Poat Master at South Buxton, ,and will
gladly answer ingniriee,
A RRiAllytvi oft
A Mther's. ,Forgetiil(` gnt,'Y; aide tst this
f''Qtiartrttfeai, of $IL "tituuogty l6`and.,0
rAtq pray rit'ternoau tlKo ,part •+utter filo
- uapai3er of a bio& bouMe iu' ow Yq
Pzei'a'ing to go : bgmcix eruct had`, tier'.
„p�fi a odlgx from his troupers aool�at to
,t tee for will. ateue when ,be desooyeret ala t hey
lett hie ott$'a in 0.e
wal'daotle; ii u1x
oinin0'ri'lomr Ea, Visaed the. bola on
tbe•top of his deak:but+wan• delayed en Ilia
return 1f3' a clerk on a matter of bnmiaos>a.
As a result the money remained o>r his
desk afttri'hfti depayrtUre;
Re reidaembarddthe olrctunetanociabow-
gver, When he reaobed hie Lome, but, con-
clucled that the piece was Ioit. Mab to
his, tt a Flet though he found the
quarter"qn e desk- ihen lie r`e efieThia
offioo neat umorginjg. At least doyen
nerariluet ha'l'e s� it 'alma there atter
is departure thy. night before.
The olroalnetanoe impressed him deep-
ly and he thought of'it many times dur-
;tug that day while !eagle battle for pre-
eferenoe on the floor of the+Ato4k,exohan
'Wren he strlrted for home , that gight 110
purposely ,forget the , ;nonpy aid tiro ai4xt
warning ire wa6 not swrprteed xo dod It still
on the desk. With a few etroke8 of h1spsn
be mode a small alma ii these Words:
°,A.d#ieut7 �`tuid"'md it ieeitte the
,gbuerLer, Bnetue� kept' f ain mr the tdt-
riGng0 meet of ttrat day, but Wbeft, ho
ed tar Home that 'ril$ht,'!o! rho !turd
had tier severity -ave vents It v4'aefn't
tauohed that night' Mid the next atoning
it had Swelled to nearly two dollars. He
had no idea ati to what he would do With
the money at -the time, 'but he oonolnded
that to longer let it remain exposed over
ni.ht would- be a aerate temptation to
some weak person and so he looked it up.
Thereafter It was under look. and key at
night, but was always exposed during
business hours, but how it grew! Busi-
ness friends, messengers from other
houses, clerks and customers contributed
to it, until at present it amounts to al-
most seventy-five dollace. The disposition
of the money puzzled him for some time,
but he conel}ided to glue a dinner to the+
employes as soon ea 111,11411+s1ono bnad�asli
CURES
COLIC,
CRAMPS,
CHOLERA,
0 DIARRHOEA,
DYSENTERY,
CH -ERA MORBUS,.
CHOLERA INFANTUM
aad all Summer Complaints and Fluxes of**
Bowels. It is safe and reliable for
Children or Adults,
For Sala by all Dealers.
September 3rd I!
Our fall term commences Sept. 3rd,and I
we expect a grand class of young men
and women. Would you not like to
join us. Can you think of a better way
to spend three or four months ? Send
in your name and let us tell you what
we are prepared to do for you.
Central Business College,
Stratford, Ont.
P. bfcINTOSH, Principal.
ALL MOTHERS
WHO HAVE USED
1"2; fr. PALMO TARSOAP
11111111
'lAv= ���f
1r i"`,�•;`� i MOMI AT IT
Kia T.
v dolt' (� j SORA
of
Oil S 40m.S,
Baby wee troubled with sores on head and legs.
!tried "Paimo-Tar Soap." In a very short time
the sores disappeared, skin became smooth attic
white, and the child got perfectly weft. a
Mea. Hoercatgr, Oraditon.
Only 28e. Big Cake.
(�' 11 1 srr
jl'1,NSl
-THE LEADING -
UNDERTAKER
—AND --
EMBALMER.
A FULL LINE OF
GOODS KEPI in STOCK
•r'he'1estEmbalming Fluidused
Splendid Hearse.
A.LBF.RT:4T.,OLIN'rON
Residence overstore
OPPOSITE TOW HALL
MANY PI RT ULAR ',Amos
Who wan to look nicer feel good and make the >Y 4t of
themeelyes, And me an efficient help, for wake articiss
that make ladles beautiful of face and form, and heajth _ •
in body. What 1 do :for otllere ORO be dorap for yoti,We
Can't; t 1, all'atout it in this ttdveftlselnent,• Ask '
ALLEN & WILSON, elinto n Ont,,Urug ,sus
for ray ,book, These artielee are specially good for BUM*
se,
fa FADE BLEACH Si' pee ,bottle. Clears' the ,cram 104*
at ion. You must leave it if
myoueru°want to get rid of free ge..0a
math patches, &e.
FACE' -POWDER—White,' lash and Brunette, 60 cents a box. P•
erfectjal
p
powder,users,
VOLA MONTEZ CREME 75e, in oppal jars -creates and improves face
beauty for maid, wife M. widow, Foe to tv i}iklea-
Mrs Nettie Harrison, America's Beauty Doctor, 40 and 42 Geo ry
St., San Francisco, Cal. Eastern Office, 8OW ashington
Ave., Detroit, Michigan.
ThOASH GR0CE
THE letter G stands for GROCERIES, so do we, all the year round,
and for First -Class Groceries at that. Groceries are to eat, and what
is to eat should never bo tampered with, Any article we sell is To
and
giyGroceries eprices insures us nylied aivesou the Buying
of the lowest obtainble awhereforhigh
grade goods.`
Fruit is right in line now, and you will want
:GI-, M s.A, S
Our stook of Jars is large and the price is right.
Farn11 produce taken as cash. -Telephone No. 28.
OGLE COOPER & CO,
Cash Grocery 1 door North of News -Record,
Red Cap 2! Rd Cap
BIllTDER TWINE
4
limited quantity of the old reliable brand, only 62c,
Get it at once. Full stock of Scythes, Forks and Snaths
New
'tare B8OS.Gld StandAX'ackayBlock Brick Block
Not JJiwaged
by the FrosL
Onr Stock of Sugars were not damaged by Frost, but as the market is higher
and excited, we quote no prices, bet 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 Hots a pound, and the Saladin
Package at 40c., best value 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 give as good quality, and err
low prices as can be got anywhere, Canned Goods of all kinds. Soap tin great variety,
Hams. Bacon. Lard. Cottolene always in stock. Crockery and Glassware awav down
Give us a call and see what we can do for you.
I��CIIIIIRRA►Y & iWILTSE,
Near PoatOfce--C t'NTRAL GROCERY—Tclephoce 40
J. Brunsdon & Son,
LONDESBORO
Agts. for all Farm Implement
MASSEY-HARRIS Binders, Mowers, Drilla
Seeders, Cultivator9, Souiners and
all kinds of Plows
Full line of Machinery and Plow Repairs
BINDER TWINE -Best brands of Twine
at mew prices. A complete line of
Buggies, Road Carts, Waggons
µay
A''- Fino Buggies and Standard Waggons
`Vi -��. 'w a i40 -S S "�'�i gga specialty. •
Agents for Gould, Sharplyek Muir Wind Mills ,
OUR MOTTO—First-class work and beet materialprices consistent with good articles. Prompt
attentionlgiven to Repairing and all kinds of Job Work,
JOHN BKUNSDON & SON. Londesboro.
RUMBALL' 5 ilQZ FACTOIU;
Elairon Street, Clinton
We have in stock a few
Buggies and Waggons
Which we guarantee to be of first-class material and wol klnanship.
If you want a good article at the price of a poor one, call and see us.
F`. R111I%I13AIL, ILA - - CLXNtJDCl►
BOOTS : and : SHOES
We have a large stock of Boots and Shoes bought when prices were
low, and although there has been an advance in the price, we have not
increased, but on the contrary, decreased therice, in order to cleat out
the stock, and will give a ood discount for Cash on almost every line
in etock. It will pay intending purchasers to call and examine for them-
selves.
Any quantity of Good BUTTER in Tubs, and also Fresh EGGS wanted
at highest market price.
ADAMS' EMPORIUM{,
room3O Q
R. ADAMS.