Clinton New Era, 1895-08-02, Page 7a
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WI-l'it BEEF, IRON aud �VI11TE.
. Ae NEW AND WONDERFUL BLOOD PURIFIER AND NERVE TONIC.
Oonteins no Injurious Drugs! Every ingredient as a Health Builder. °snafu etre Permanent Relief ie guaranteed in cases of Cnn-
etipelion, Dyspepsia, Nervousness, All Weaknesses, Blood and Skin Diseases. It is based on Glycerine instead of Alcohol. For Pro-
ducing Soft, Clear Skin and Bright Complexion and Relieving all ills Peculiar to Women it is Unsttrpaeeed.
Selc1 at ell.14k1N a Wi.GSt)N'-i Urug Store, ()Anton. Be certain to Cwt "MANLEY'S." 'fake No other
THE (it,1..‘"'r S ':w RRA
0340 Degrees irately Zeros `.' „c r
Professor Dewar,tiie British a wenee of
extreme oo1d, " baa obtained results in his
eepuvinionts which have aeon redeemed to
Scott's emulsion
is. ,cod-liver Oil emulsified, or
made easy of digestion and as—
similation. To this is added the
Hypophosphites of Lime and
Soda, which aid in the digestion
of the Oil and increase materially
the potency of both. It is a re-
markable flesh -producer. Ema-
ciated, anaemic and consumptive
persons gain flesh upon it very
rapidly. The combination is a
most happy one.
Physicians recognize its su-
perio,linerit in all conditions of
/asting. It has had the en-
dorsement of the medical pro-
fession for 20 years.
Don't beperauaded to tab * *obtained
Scott 6t Bowao, Belleville. 50c. and $1.
- obarieseiertaft
Mr. hafour, it seems, never wears his
bat in the house. In this respect he fol-
lows the fashion set by Mr. Disraeli and
;Marx Gladstone. Sir William Haroourtson
theeother hand, is never without his hat.
Yet Mr Balfour's hat is worth seeing.
His head looks small, but the hat is large
and has at wide rim. It reminds one of
Lord Salisbury's which is usually in•need
of the brush after he makes it dance on
his knee,
When addressing the House, Mr. Balfour,
Ifr Is added, frequently takes himself in
charge by grasping the lapels of his ooat.
this wise he resembles Lord Rosebery.
He move§ backward and forward a good
deal, though not so regularly as the late
- Mr. Cardwell, who swayed like a ponda-
lnm. Sometimes he stands so close to the
h that, looking across the seats, you
ht imagine his legs grew from the top
of t e bench In vigorous declamation be
churches Ms small right hand very tight,
and he gives emphasis by laying a long,
White finger across the open palm of his
left hand.
Many stories have been told ahont ldr.
Balfour and the caddies. On one occasion,
when about to engage in a game, MMMT.
Balfour, recognizing in an opponent's
Saddle a former club -bearer of his pvrn,
gave him a nod of recognition, There-
on the caddie, with a satisfied smirk
tuned to 11,1® neighbourand rema'iked
"Ye see hoo we Gonservhtives ken ane an -
Other. "
Mr. Balfour does not object to com-
ments from a shrewd caddie, and ha tells
with great relish a story of one at Pau: An
English player who knew no Pkenoh, hav-
ing made a fine shot, turned round to his
French attendant for applause. The latter
scribed the shot in the only English
Words.whioh he had heard habitually as-
iioctated with airy remarkably successful
• stroke in the game. Looking full in his
employer's face, and with his most win -
rang and sympathetic smile, he uttered
the words, ".Beastly fluke!"
DR. FOWLE' It' -
Extract of Wild Strawberry is a reliable
remedy that can always be depended en
to care Cholera, Cholera Infantum, Colic,
Cramps, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, and all
losseness of the bowels. It never fails.
NO OTHER REMEDY.
No other remedy cures Summer Com-
plaint, " Diarrbcea, Dysentery, etc., so
promptly and quiets pain so quickly as Dr.
Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry, It
is a pocket doctor for tourists travellers etc.
SUDDENLY ATTACKED,
Children are soddenly attacked by pain-
ful and dangerous Colic, Cramps, Diarrhoea,
Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Cholera In-
fantum, etc. Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild
Strawberry is a prompt and sure cure
which should always be kept in the house.
The latestprniect in electric railways
is a line from Cnicaeo to New York,
which, it is claimed, will reduce the
time between those cities to ten
hours.
Archbishop Langeein denies the
statements attributed to him by a
Montreal interviewer, to the effect
that the Catholics of Manitoba would
consider no compromise of the school
dispute.
Mr Nicholas Flood Davin, M.P„ of
Regi,ia, was mat r ied at Ottawa to Miss
Lizzie Reid.
Will. Castell, of Elginburg, was
struck with a baseball club byR. Wy-
cott., cf Odessa, and died a fw hours
afterwards.
SHILOH'S CURE is sold on a guaran-
tee. It cures incipient Consump'saon. It
is the best cough cure. Only one cent a
dose. 25cts., 50ets , and $1. bold by J. H.
Combe, Clinton.
Mr Wm..J. Robertson, who has just
completed a term in Montreal .Jail, is
repotted to have inherited $75,ONlil
from an aunt in Toronto.
As a result of the general elections
in New South Wales, the Government
have a majority, including the Labor
party, of thirty-six votes. The Free
Trade party will be strong in the new
house.
'serof. McEachran, who has returned
to Ottawa from the Northwest, te-
ports that the cattle business in Al-
berta is in a most flourishing condition.
The ge neral superintendent of the
Canadian Pacific railway has received
very favorable reports as to the con-
dition of the crops in the provinces
and territories. Hay, however, in
most places in Ontario, is a total
fent'? w e.
Hon. Dr. Montague has gone to the
Eastern States to recupet ate.
The name of the Queen's Avenue
Methodist church has been changed
to the "London Metropolitan Metho-
dist Church."
KARL'S CLOVER ROOT, the great
lood purifier, gives freshness and olear-
ean to the corn iexion and cures Consti-
pation. 25 eta., 0 eta, $1. •Sold by J. H
Combe, Clinton.
TAUGHT THE YANKEB$ TO LAUGH.
So Said an Eminent I'renehman of Oliver
Wendell Holmes.
Discussing the late Oliver Wendell
Hohnes,an'erninent Frenchman once said,_
that it was he who had taught the
Yankees to laugh, The poet's wit was
such. as put everyone around him in the
best of humor.
It was Holmes who said that although
it was Eve who tempted man to eats he
had an idea that she had nothing to do
with his drinking, for he undoubtedly took
to that on his own account. Then the poet
took his cigar from his lips and remark-
ed: "I really must not smoke so persist-
ently, I must turn over a new Ieaf—a to-
bacco leaf --and have a cigar only after
each — " —and as most of those pres-
ent imagined he was about to say"meal,"
he eontinned "after each meal" Lean-
ing back in his ohair he added—"a for-
eigner is an alien; a foreigner who drinks
too much is an acohabian; and why
should not a foreigner who smokes too
much be called a tobacoonalian."
When dining with Lord Coleridge, the
subject of lawyers came up and referring
to the American man of the Bar, Holmes
said that the poverty of the American
lawyer and the wealth of his client was his
glory. On another occasion Mrs, Siddons
trait being discussed and some one said
that the statesman Fox bad been smitten
by the great actress. To this the poet re-
plied that from all .he had ever heard of her
he could not nndeistand a pian falling in
love with her. His reason was that she
was so grand that a man might as well fall
in love with the Pyramida. She might
have been loved by the Worshipful Com-
pany of Coachniakors or a I3oard of Alder-
men but it was beyond the range of pos-
sibility that one man could ever love her.
After he had been lionized by a delega-
tion of Westerners, some one asked him
how ho liked it. "Lilco it?" he said "I
felt like the small elephant at the Zoo
with a cheap excursion party on his
back."
Professor Agassiz, he used to say, was
the Liebig's extract of the wisdom of ages,
"and," ho would add, "whenever he goes
off on long voyages to remote islands I
can't help thinking what a feast the can-
nibals would have if they boiled such an
extract. "
Baffling the Mosquito.
The time of the year is arriving when
many people are keenly interested in any
measure that will lead to the circumven-
tion of the pestilent mosquito. An Ameri-
can agricultural expert finds that a film
of kerosene oil on the water tanks near his
house has rid it of mosquitoes. Kerosene
smeared on the face and hands, is quite
effective in keeping the insects at bay.
An Indian journal vouches for the castor-
oil plant as one of the best protections
against mosquitoes. In Egypt it is plant-
ed about the houses to drive the insects
away. In towns the young plants can al-
ways be had in pots, and they can be plac-
ed about the house for a day or two. After
that they must be put out in. the fresh air,
for the plant loves the sun. But with two
sets of pots, one for service within doors
and the other recouping, the plan can be
worked perfectly. In tropical countries
the ordinary belief is that the mosquitoes
are killed by a poison that is to be found
on the lower side of the leaf, but if a dozen
leaves are placed about a room that
swarms with the insects, they will disap-
pear without leaving any dead ones lying
about.
A True Fish Story.
Frank Plorce,a tinsmith, while angling
last week In the Delaware, near Strouds-
burg, was surprised to soon fish seize a fly
and sail up into the air with it. Mr.
Pierce was so dazed with this proceeding
that he allowed the fish to sail away with
about fifty feet of the lino before he hauled
it down and fastened it in his basket. Tho
fish was about five inches long, and has
the body and fins of a trout. Its skin is
also like that of a trout, but is not spotted,
and the belly is white. The head is shaped
like that of a bullhead, but has no thorny
proturberances. Tho eyes aro set closely
together in the top of the head, not more
than a sixteenth of an inch apart. Just at
tho back of the gills are a pair of wide-
spread wings an inch and three-quarters
long. Tho web of the wing is like that of
an ordinary fin, but much higher and
more delicate. About a year ago the Rev.
A. s1.Gesner,while fishing in Beaver Dam,
caught a white flesh measuring five inches
in length. He pronounce it to hod an c1-
bino trout. The fish,notbeing of the legal
size, he returned it to the brook.
COLD IN -THE HEAD AND HOW TO
CURE IT
One of the most unpleasant and danger -
ons maladies that afflicts Canadiang at this
season is cold in the bead. Unpleasant,
hecause of the dull, heavy heaeache, in-
flammed nostrils and other disagreeable
symptoms accompanying it; and danger-
ous, because if neglected it develops into
catarrh, with its disagreeable hawking and
Spitting. fonl breath frequent loss of taste
and smell, and in many cases ultimately
developing into conenmption. Nasal Balm
is the only remedy yet discovered that will
instantly relieve cold in the head and cures
in a few applications, while its faithful nee
will effectnelly eradicate the worst arise of
catarrh. Capt. D. 11. Lyon, president of
the C.P.R. Car Ferry, Preeeett, Ont., says
—"I need Nasal Balm for a prolonged case
of cold in the head. Two applications ef•
feeted a care in less than 24 hours. I
would not take $100 for my bottle of Nasal
Balm, if I could not replace it." Sold by
all dealers, or sent by mail postpaid at 50
cents per bottle, by addressing G. T. Fal-
fcrd&Co., Montreal.
According to the latest returns of the
British elections, the Liberal Unionists
have 364 and Liberals and all other parties
164, leaving a Government majority of 170
seats.
Robert Bateman, a milk-oollecter at Col-
lingw000d, while crossing the railway track
in that town with a waggon, was struck
by a train and so dreadfully injued that he
diad a few hours after the accident.
The habitues of Park Row, New York,
were electrified on Thursday by the appear-
ance of a pair of elks driven by Dr. John H.
Woodbury, of Orange, I'i.J., the facial soap
man. He parehased them from a man in
Exeter, Ont., who captured theta while
young, and teemed them to harneeat The
price paid was $1,500,
Atter August 1st no Miobiean girl under
18 years can be legally married without
the written consent of her parents beim;
filed with the ismer of the licence.
That is a good law. Parents may err, but
-the chances are that a girl who marries
under 18 years of age against her parents'
wishes will live to regret ber haste and the
lax laws that facilitated the wrecking of
her life.
ARE YOU
ONE OF THE UN-
FORTUNATES?
ARE YOU SUFFERING
WHEN YOU SHOULD
BE WELL?
Paine's Celery Compound
Will bestow the Health
You Need.
Men and women during the heated term
of summer, who have those tired, languid
and despondent feelings that indicate
depleted blood, and a feeble condition of
the nervous system, need Paine's Celery
Compound, that remarkable nerve strength-
ener and flesh builder now so generally
prescribed by the best physicians.
Sick headaches, nervous prostration, ir-
ritability, languor, sleeplessness, and a
general feeling of mental and physical
depression are prevalent and common in
the hot weather. Life is made miserable,
and thousande suffer intense agony.
Paine's Celery Compond quickly and
surely repairs the wasted, worn-out, ner-
vous tissues, calms and regulates nervous
action, and brings that sweet rest and re-
freshing Bleep that makes recovery easy
and quick.
Men and women all over Cansda are
regularly using Paine's Celery Compound
for renewing their systems and storing
the nerve centres with strength and en•
ergy. The medicine that in the past has
done such grand work for others, is cer-
tainly what yon should use. Paine's
Celery Compound cures positively and
permanently.
OCEAN LINERS -
The Regularity of Speed With Which They
Make Their Passage.
Tho records of the foreign mall bureau
of the post office department show that,
as an ordinary thing, the ocean packets
are regular inthetadepartures antf_air-
rivals as railroad trains, and, considering
the distance they travel, more so. Tho
science of navigation has been reduced to
such acouarcy that they may be expected
almost on the hour.
Take, for example the Campania, of the
Cunard line. In 1893 she made eight trips
and her average voyage was 5 days, 20
hours and 18 minutes. In 1894 she made
ten trips, and her average was 5 days, 20
hours and 17 minutes, only one mint,tc
less in 1894 than in 1893 in a voyage of
2,770 miles in all sorts of wind and weath-
er. Nor is this exceptional.
The Teutonic, of the White Star Line,
made twelve trips in 1893 on an average
time of 8 days, 4 hours and 8 minutes. In
1,894 she made eleven trips, and her aver-
age was just a trifle slower -6 days, 4
hours and 17 minutes.
Tho Etruria is a little more irregular.
Her average in 1893 was 8 days, 6 hours
and 47 minutes. In 1894 it was 6 days, 7
hours and 28 minutes.
The Havel, of the North German Lloyd
Company, made ten trips in 1893, with
an average of 7 days, 7 hours and 88 min-
utes, for a distance of 3,080 miles, from
tho Needles to Fire Island. In 1894 she
made nine trips, with an !average of 7
days, 7 hours and '24 minutes.
The Fuerst Bismarck, of the Hamburg
line, made nine trips in 1893. Her aver-
age for the year for a voyage of 3,080
milds waas 7 days and 15 minutes. In
1894 she made six trips, and her average
was 7 days and 54 minutes,
The Columbia mitde nine trips in 1893,
with an average time of 6 days, 22 hours and
12 minutes. In 1894 she made six trips,
with an average of 6 clays, 22 hours and 8
minutes.
The New York, of the American line,
though not the fastest, has the hest record
for regularity of any of the Atlantic fleet.
Her average time has not 'varied for years.
And she can he expected almost on the
minute every voyage.
She has crossed the At'antic more times
and has carried many more passengers
than any other steamer of her age and has
been more regular about It. The Now
York made fourteen trips, west hound, in
1893, with an average time of 6 days, 21
hours and 31 minutes. In 1894 she made
fifteen trips, with an average of 6 days, 21
hours and 45 minutes.
Her sailing distance was 2,770 miles. In
1893 she made thirteen trips, east bound,
with an average of 6 days, 21 hours and
80 minutes, which was just one minute
Gaster than her west -hound time of that
year. In 1894 she made fifteen trips with
an average time of 6 days, 20 hours and
24 minutes.
Thus, in crossing the ocean fifty-seven
times in both directions. at all seasons of
the year, her wiriest variation for two
years was only 1 hour and 21 minutes. The
Old City of Chester, also of the American
line, is another steady boat, her average
being 9 days, 15 , hours and 11 minutes in
1898,and 9 days 15 hours and 28 minutes
in 1894.
by the journals of chemistry as "'wonders
of the nineteenth century." The profess-
or occupies the chair of chemistry in the
British Royal Instituto, and hos been ex-
perimenting on the results of evaporation
In producing extreme cold since about
VIn the latter half of 1898 he succeeded in
obtaining a temperature of 210 degrees be-
low zero on the centigrade scale, which is
equal to 846 degrees of the Fahrenheit in-
strument. In making these curious ex-
periments he uses a double compartment
air compressor. Into the outer chamber
of this apparatus he introduces liquid nit-
rous oxide through a pipe, the liquid en-
tering the machine under a pressure of 1,-
400 pounds to the square inch The nitrous
oxide evaporates almost instantly, and, as
a result, the temperature of the air sur-
rounding the inner chamber Is quloky re-
duced to 130 degrees below Fahrenheit's
zero. The inner ohamber,being thus cool-
ed, is almost instantly made, the receptacle
of liquid ethylene, which is introduced by
means of a pipe, as was the nitrous oxide
into the outt;r sham ber. . The ethylene also
enters its chamber under high pressure --
1,800 pounds to the square inch. It eva-
porates very rapidly, but hardly so quick-
ly as did the nitrous oxide. However, it
has the benefit of the outer chamber. By
the time evaporation is complete the tem,
perature of the inner chamber is reduced
to 340 to 346 degrees below zero Fahren-
heit.
In his experiments in the realm of ex-
treme cold the professor has found that
common oxygen gas will become liquified
at a temperature of 115 degrees below,
centigrade. He is the man who first pro-
duced "liquid air," which was obtained
at a temperature of 119.2 degrees below
centigrade,whlch is equal to exactly 822.0
of Fahrenheit's scale.
Mrs T C. Hawkins, Chattanooga, Tenn.,
says: Shiloh's Vitalizer "Saved My Life "
I consider it the best remedy for a debili-
tated s stem I ever need," For Dyspepsia,
Liver or Kidney trouble it excels. Price75
cts. Sold by J. Il. Combe, Clinton.
Why a Cemetery 1s So Called.
In tracing the derivation of the word
we find that the r. of is a Latin word
"coen eteriuna" meaning a dormitory, or
sleeping place. Later 00, the form of ex-
pression was changed to "ruquietorlum,"
In that section of "Camden's Remains"
which has the heading of "Concerning
British Epitaphs," the following passage
occurs: "The place of burial was called
by St Paul 'senlenaturia,' in the respect
of a sure hope of a resurrection." The
Greeks, call it "caaemeterlon," which
means "the house of the living," the idea
being that death is only is protracted sleep
that will terminate on the day when
Gabriel blows his trumpet.
for Infants and Children.
OTHERS; Do You Know -that sir!
Batemnn's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syr__
mostremedies for children are composed of opium er morphine f
Do You Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narootlo poisons?
Do Yon Know that in most countries druggists are not peraiitted to sell nose - '
without labeling them poisons i -
Do You Know that you should not permit any medicine to be given your
unless you or your physician know of what It Is composed i
Do You Know that Castorla is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list of
Its ingredients is published with every bottle f
Do You Know that Cactoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Pitcher.,
That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Caatorla Is now sold than
of all other remedies for children combined r
Do You Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, end of
other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher ane ns assigns to use the word
4 Oastoria" and its formula, and that to imitate them Is a stake prison offense?
Do Yon Know that one of the reasoris for granting thls government protection wet
)ecause Castorla had been proven to be absolutely harmless?
Do Yon Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 311i
lents, or one cent a dote t
Do Yon Know that wnen possessed of this perfect preparation, your'chfdrDa >
)e kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest r
Well. these things are worth knowing. They are facts.
The fee-uipiile
signature of
is on every
wrapper.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla.
¢ 14:41,111iu. ,, a•
... 'fw .:.ria..+,, '-,M, etiarr•,
As many good things are likely_
to. But you are safe in running
the risk if you keep a bottle of
Ptrry Davis'
•
W. H. Ward.
Almost a
Hopeless Case.
A Terrible Cough. No Rest Night
nor Day. Given up by Doctors.
A LIFE SAVED
BY TAKING
PAIN
K1LLER
at hand. It's a never -failing
antidote for pains of all setts.
Sold by all Druggists.
Dona—One teaepoontal in a halt glass of water or milk (warm If convenient)
Clothing K-*
thr
spring:
READY 'f0 WEAR
1
1
• MEN'S SUITS
AYERPECT
CHERRALRY
o
"Several years ago, I caught a severe cold,
attended with a terrible cough that allowed
me no rest, either day or night. The doc-
tors, after working over me to the best of
their ability, pronounced my case hopeless,
and said they could do no more for me.
A friend, learning of my trouble, sent mo
a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, which I
began to take, and very soon I was greatly
relieved. By the time I had used the whole
bottle, I was completely cured. I have never
bad much of a cough since that time, and I
firmly believe that Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
saved my life."—W. II. WARD, 8 Quimby
Ave., Lowell, Mass.
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
HIGHEST AWARDS AT WORLD'S FAIR.
Ayer's Pitts the hest D'amilg Physio.
The best value in the trade.
$3.50 to $5 per Su
0 1-31 COATS & SO
CLINTON
NUB GROCERY
As regular as the seasons; as steady as the Polar star, as constant as the
compass. The quality of ou^ goods do not change; we buy the best in the
market. We have a big stock of
Ask your Druggist fot WOODEN WARE.
GET THE BEST.
The pallia are too intelligent to purchase
a worthless article a second time, on the
contrary they want the best! Physicians
are virtually unanimous in saying Scott's
Ernnleion is the beet form of Cod Liver Oil.
•
Children Cry for
P!tch ees Caeteria.
Murray &
Lanman's
FLORIDA WATER
A DAINTY FLORAL EXTRACT
For Handkerchief, Toilet and Satin.,
If you need a Washtub, a Pail, a Broom, a Mop or
Scrub brush, it will pay you to call.
A We have Ben Hur, Bee Brand, Monsoon, Maravilla, the finest off'
TEAS—Ceylons, Japans, the hest that can he had in the market.
COFFEE—Fresh Ground, leads them all. Take a look at our window for a
Bedroom Set.
Imo() SWALL T W . - (Minton
STR2CTLY CAS
After the 1st of Fehr Bary, I will sell
for Cosh or its equivalent—feeling as-
sured it will he the most satisfactory
to all. It will enable me to buy my
goods to better advantage, and conse-
quently will sell at' a closer ,margin,
giving my customers the benefit.
Thankintrsmy customers and Patrons
for the liberal support extended to me
in the past, 1 respectfully solicit a con-
tinuance of your favor, feeling assured
that the Cash System, being ,the true
principle, will recommend itself to all
right thinking ,peopie.
The Crown Blend and Rnss1a>b
Blend—We direct your attention to tholes
high grade Indian and Ceylon Blends. I
have had the exclusive sale of these Teas
with meet gratifying results; nothing bub
high grade Teas are need in these blends;
ask for these and take no other; get sample.
Sole agent for Sailor Boy orand Japan Tea,
80c., 41b for $1. Special valve in all Teas.
Fresh Lake Herring, Boneless Codfish
Fresh Haddook,Finan Haddie,CannodPIsEt
Canned Corn, Peas and Tomatoes, Flour
Oatmeal, &o. Bargains in Crookery,Chinw
Glassware, Dinner, and Toilet Sete, eta.
Produce taken
' SON
as Cash.
IOW
Cl intor4
D' .
1