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The Clinton New Era, 1896-10-23, Page 8BUTCHER SHOP. . T1}e undersigned desires to intimate to the people of Clinton and vicinity that he has opened a batoher shop in the store of W. Gore,Haron Street. He has had many years experience, and feels that he can give thai iettllyytfor Cush, t ion. lie will sell and at the lowest possible prices. ORDERS REePEOTFULLY SOLICITED Reid Bros., - - Clinton. CENTRAL BUTCHER SHOP FORD & MURPWe are doinbusiness on the cashpHY, d will supply (ur oustomerre with the be mleats at the lowest payhor prides. Petrone may rely up- on good service and prompt b.IUng of orders. FORD & MURPHY Central Butcher Shop, Clinton CITY BUTCHER SHOP I wish to inform the public that I willinot be undersold by any other person in the business. allmthee practical rbranehea of he busiand ness. We keep the veil beet meats and a full etoob always on hand, and will sell at the Lowest Cash trice.. Bring along your money and get the meat at the cash price. We at ()ash prices. Pleasell ive call eund�see what but not you oan do for Cash at R. FITZSIMONS' CITY MEAT MARKET COUCH & WII SON. Subsorlbers desire to notify the public that hey have bought out the butchering business lately conduoted by Mr Jae A.Ford and wlll con - Untie the same under their personal supervision. Orders will have prompt and oaretnl attention, Wreak meats of all kinds will be kept in season, sold at reasonable rates and delivered, anywhere in town. ARTHUR COUCH, CHAS. N. WILSON CLINTON. FLOUR AND FEED STORES. Produce Exchange Headquarters for all kinds of FIELD & GARDEN SEEDS Two cars:choice Seed Corn just ar- rived from Illinois. We have a large stock of Feed Corn. Oats, Barley, Peas, &c. Highest market price paid for Coarse Grains, or taken in exchange. Cash paid for Eggs. HILL 8 JOYNER HURON ST., CLINTON. 00OK'S FloutFeed Store BRAN & SHORTS In large or small quantities. OIL CAKE and MEAL OF ALL KINDS. 10 pounds C elcee fOaa tmeal for 1 bushD. COOK, CLINTON. BANKS. The Molsons Bank. Incorporated by Act of Parliament, 1855 cJAPIT,, T., - - $2,000,000. REST ), t ND, - $1,375,000 MURRAY LANMAN'S FLORIDA WATER THE SWEETEST MOST FRAGRANT MOST REFRESHING AND ENDURING OP ALL PERFUMES FOR THE HANDKERCHIEF, TOILET OR BATH. ALL DRUGGISTS, PERFUMERS AIN GENERAL DEALERS. _ - HEAD MONTREAL. J. g, R. F- SON President. F. W. IF, aB,....General Manager. Notes diaeonnvea Collections made, Drafte is- ned, Sterling and American exchange bought and sold at lowest cur ant rates.tInterest al- lowed FAla ID R.fg. Money advanced to farmos on their own note with one or more endorsers. No mortgage re qulred as security H. C. BREWER, Manager. (CEO. D. M cT A G O A RT. BANNER ALBERT ST, - CLINTON A. generalt Banking Business NOTES DISCOUNTED Drafts limed. Interest allowed on deposits. I'ARRA1% & TISDALL BANKERS OLIN .t. e,dvanoee made to farmere on their own notes at low rates of interest. A general Banking Business transacted Inteneat allowed on deposits. Sale Notes bengh P TIWPALL, Manager. R•I P•A•N•S The modern stand- ard Family Medi- cine: Cures the common every -day ills of humanity. Oros 4'217".'4 - 11. It;nadoMor Angry. "It's strange how seriously some wq. nlen seem t,, regard trlfiee," said the flat tenant thouo:u:..Uy. "Vi' bet's the na.+oter now, " asked the ho tnie holder, " Why, there's that woman with the up- rlgh I'',auo in Cie fiat next to mine, you know" "Yes. What of Ver?" ", "She has played one tune eighteen three a day for the last three months." "Of course. Nearly all women who play apartrliont building pianos do that. You can move, you kuow, 1f you don't like it." Weil, we didn't want to do that. It might seem rude and we didn't want to hurt her feelings, so we just got her a new song and sent it to her with the compliments of all the other tenants. And, do you know, she mad ad a hornet about it." "What was the title of it?" " 'Soft and Low,' I think. Something like that, anyway." Chicago Post. MaKiliop Mutual Fire . lnsuranoe Co FARM & ISOLATED TORN PROPERTY ONLY INSURED OaBIOins. Geo. Watt President, Harlook P.O.; Jaes Broadtoot,Pllbm e-Pres.Seaforth P.O.; R'. J. Shan- non, Seor-Prean., Seaforth P.O.; M. Mnrdie, in - evictor ot losses, Beatorth P. O. DIRECTORS. Jae. Broadfoot,Seafortb M. Mnrdie, Staforth; Geo. Dale Seaforth; Geo. Watt Watt, T. E. Hays, Sealortb; Alex Gardiner,�.eadbury; Thos Garbutt, Clinton ; John McLean, Ktppeu. AGENTS. Thos. Notions Harlook; Robt.McMillan ,Sea• forth and J. Comings, Egmondlville. Parties desirous to effect Insurances or tram east other business will be promptly attended to on application to any of the above officers adr rased to their reepeoltve offices CLINTON MARBLE WORKS. COOPER'S OLD STAND, Next to Commercial Hotel. his establishment ie in tell o' erasion and rder failed In the most eatlefaote y way Ceme tory and granite work a specialty. Prices a e&Monable as those of any ostabliahr..ent w5ALIt & IIOOVER.C1lnten. lm J. ADES FOWLER St CO . Architets t & Civil Engineers are prepared M tarnish plane, drawings, do .hall& and Ipeellloatlone of ail kinds of work S ,A.LLtATIO'G. ArtD IN.PIiCTIOtt. O.&* VLLT M.snn P,Aaserr D*LvnNas armor dt PATIIINT tli'79'AllI2;JD 41.112k it! reseseahle change. !i Mee Or! 1111000,1Migleatetir. P�ed coo* r el« a=rd yWe Be .miller Nuz eery FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL TREES NORWAY SPRUCE, SCOTCH AND ASTRACHAN PINE, The latter of which we make a specialty. LARGE STOCK ON HAND The above ornamental trees and shrubbery will be sold at very low prices, and those wanting any thing in this connection will save money by per chasing here. Orders by hfailwill be promptly attended to, Address, JOHN STEWART, BENMILLER For Twenty -Six Years DUNN'S BAK1NG POWDER THECOOKSBESTFRIEND L.ARGLST SALE IN CANADA. McLeod's System RENOVATOR AND OTHER Tested Remedies. SPECIFIC AND ANTIDOTE A Life of Martyrdom ENDURED BY THOSE WHO SUFFER FROM CONSTANT HEADACHE 011)1 WHO SUFFERED THOS FOR OVER TWENTY YEARS RELATES HER SEPRalilltl:E, WHICH WILL PROVE VALUABLE TO OTHERS. For Impure, Weak and Impoverished Blood Dyspepsia, Sleeplessness, Palpi- tation of the heart, Liver Complaint Neuralgia, Lose of Memory, Bronchitis Consumption, Oall Stones, Jaundice, Kid ney and Urinary Diseases, St. Vitus' Dance Female Irregularities and General Debility LABORATORY, GODERION, ONT J. M. MoLEOD, Prop. end Manufacturer Sold in Clinton by J. H. COMBE, and ALLAN dr WILSON J. C. STEVSSON, —THE LEADING— UNDERTAKER —AND— EMBALMER. A FULL LINE OF GOODS KEPT ill STOCK rhebeatEmbalming Fluidused Splendid hearse. ALBERT SP.,OLIirTOIL' BeeiJaia. over *f *ei of 'osIia sQ1i ruga HISS MQFFORD'S HEROINE My fleet glance at Jarvis when he et'spped Into my den that night told me that th. ,r tens r;r n3ec;Iing on hie mind. I ha'' ' a'uately for 15 years and fear -out lines of his large, ... , Dura had become se familiar to we that I was as well able to interpret every phase of his varied humors as was he himself. 4'1 called to see Mies Mofford this af- ternoon," he said, morosely, "and urged ler to hurry up our wedding day, but she parried all my argumepbe with the same threadbare excuse that has been dinned into my ears for the last six months: 'Walt till my book le finished.' Confound novels, anyway. $speolally those that are written by wittiest]. "She expecte bo have 10 In the hands of the publishers In two weeks' time and 1pelsts that, as It is lncempatlble with her views for a woman destitute of both mune and fortune to marry a man In my station. the wedding must be post- poned until at least a fair degree of fame has been acquired through her work, whioh she feels confident le bound to be a suoeeta. Do you know?" he added, bitterly, "I think 1t one of the moat pernicious results of our boasted modern- day liberty that young women whose minds should retain their natural freeh- neee and innocence should be contamin- ated by investigating all sorts of eoand- alone proceedings and the impulses that would lead a person to act thus and so just for the sake of writing a book that shall be true to life. Mies Mefferd out- lined to me to -day for the first time the plot of her novel and asked my opinion In regard to the consistent conduct of one of her characters." "If not violating any confidence," 1 said, "perhaps you will not be averse to giving me a few proof -sheets, orally, of this wonderful 19th oentury novel." "No," said he, "that is what I had in- tended to da As nearly as I can remem- ber this is the way she put it to me:— " '1 plane great value,' she said. 'upon your knowledge of human nature, and In or{ter that I may work out a oonsist- ent andtng for my story I want your suggestions and advice. Follow me close- ly, that you may lose no detail of what I have already written and may be $bre to judge fairly. Once upon a time there was a girl --of course. There could bays been no novel without her. She Was not a very pretty girl, and there was nothing in all her girlhood days that bore the faintest trace of prettinesa. She was brought up in poverty; not the abjeot poverty .of the tenement and the street, but a oonstant cringing strife for enough to eat and to wear, that is called re- spectable poverty but which Is very nearly as hard to endure as the more tn- terlor grade. " 'ltihe wag 19 when aha learned to Iowa 1t was a very short lesson and she mastered 11 easily. All her lite she had been lonely/ and longing for some ono to ennilde in and cling to and sbe ao- oepted him unquestioningly as her pro- tector and guide. 1 do not wish to do him an injustice. He was not a thor- oughly bad man; moreover. I do nos de- sire to excuse her or dstraob one iota from the magnitude of her crime. He did not deceive her. He told her the day before they were to be married that he had a wife living. And she—well, per- haps she ought not to have done it and of course neither an absolutely good woman nor a thoroughly unprincipled, selfish woman would have done it. But she was only an everyday, erring mortal and—she married him anyway. Do not start so. She le only an Imaginary hero- ine, Flesh -and -blood creations are not guilty of suoh acts of Indiscretion. " 'At the end of a year the very thing which he had always assured her would be an impossibility became an assured fact. He returned to his first love. It did not kill her. She schooled herself to look upon her punishment as the inevitable result of her transgression end, realizing that her love dream was ended, she turned onne more to the innate sources of power and ability whioh, with a little cultivation, would render her independ- ent of scoffing relatives and friends and faithless husband. While her baby lived there was Still some near and dear object for her to Dare for, but with the death of the little one she left the place that had been the scene of her deepest misery and greatest joy and began life again in a far away place. A new name was chosen, new work was commenced and the dead past buried its dead completely. " 'Three yeare of loneliness, privation and toll passed away, and then she found herself wooed by another man. But I am wearying you and must hasten on. She did not love this man in the full sense of the word, for she was a woman whose former vows of affection were not meant for time alone, but she knew that she oould be very happy with ham and could make him happy in re- turn, so one day, after many refusals, she rewarded his importunity by promis- ing to marry him. I have carried my obaraoters up to this point and now what I wish to get at is this: I hare portrayed this second suitor as being good, honest and kind- He knew nothing of the woman's past; indeed, he did not suspect that she had one, and I want to know if it would he an Inartlatio ending for her to marry him without undeceiving him?' " "So you sec, my friend," continued Jarvla, with an attempt to ghetto off his fit of melancholia, "I am going to be an author, after all, In a roundabout way. When 'our' book comes out you shall have the first oopy. But really you oan't wonder that It puts me out of aorta, now can you, to have my sweetheart mixed up In such an affair, even though 1t be In the moat innocent way?" And I, pondering deeply over what I had just heard, let Jarvis out of the front door without answering him. Jarvis left town the next day and it was six months later when I next met him. "I read your book," I said, jestingly, when our first greetings were over, "and was greatly fascinated with 1t. You and your collaborator deserve great credit. It Is undoubtedly the hook of the season. I anppose the wedding will come off soon now I" Jarvis's pale, thin Pane seemed to grow perceptibly thinner and his hands trem- bled nervously. "No," Raid he, "I guess not." "Why not!" I ejaculated, In unoon- trollable sure/lee "Decalitre," he returned, "Mise Mefferd was the heroine of her own book." Among the residents in the vioinity of Mattawa there is none better known or more highly esteemed than Mr. and Mrs. R. Ransom, who have been residents of this aeotion for the pant fifteen years. Mrs Ransom has been a great enfferer for years, her affliction taking the form of dizziness and violent headaches, and the attaoka would Dome upon her eo suddenly that she could sparely reach her bed unaided, and would be forded to remain for three or four days, enable to take any nourishment and suffering more than tongue oan express. She was but seventeen years of age when these attacks first came upon her, and the dootor who first'attended her, Said that in his opinion her life would not extend over a few years at most. Bub more than a score of years have since passed during the greater part of which, it is true, Mrs Ransom was a great sufferer. Bat that is happily now past, and she is enjoying better health than ever She did. To a re- porter of the Tribune Mrs Ransom told her story, adding earnestly that she hoped her experienoe might prove of benefit to some other sufferer. She said: "The spells of dizziness and intense headaches would attack me every three or fear weeks, and would last from two to fear days at ooh attack, and with each attack my Suffering appeared to grow more intense. I had good medical advice, and tried many remedies, but with no beneficial results. In the spring of 1895 my appetite began to fe41, my heads and feet would swell, and my heart palpitate violently. I was utter- ly diaooaraged and felt that I would not live mach longer. One day my laughter urged me to give Dr Williams' Pink Pills a trial, but I had taken so much medicine with no benefit that I refused. However, the went to town and got four boxes, and to please her, more than for any hope of benefit 1 agreed to take them. I did not find the first do me any good, but by the time I had taken the second my appetite began to improve and I could sleep better. I then began to have faith in them and as as I continued their use found myself Don • stantly getting better. When I had finish- ed the fourth box, both myself and friends wars surprised to find that I bad nct had a headache for more than Sia weeks, the action of my heart had become regular, and I could sleep all night. I was Still weak, however, and decided to continue the nee of the pills, which I did until three more boxes were used. Since then I have been stronger than at any time for years before and have not had an ache or pain. I can do my work, have a new inter- est in life and feel ten yearn younger. I fecal that Dr Williams' Pink Pills will do for others what it has done for me, and believing this I am glad to make my story public in the hope that it will be of value to some sufferer." Mrs Ransom's husband and mother were both present and say that they look upon her recovery as miraculous. They further said that many and many a night they had sat up keeping hot cloths on her head, that being the only treatment that had helped her before she began the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. This greatremedy enriches and purifies the blood, strengthens the nerves, and in this way goes to the root of dietitian, driv- ing it from the system, and curing when other remedies fall. Every box of the genuine Dr Williams' Pink Pills, has ibe trade mark on the wrapper around the box, the purchaser can protect himself from imposition by refusing all others. Sold by all dealers at 50 Dents a box or six boxes for 82.50. Mr John McIntosh, of Southwold, was fatally injured in a runaway accident at Port Stanley. Prairie fires are raging In many parts of Manitoba, and the Light of them can be seen in Winnipeg. Ayer'a Hair Vigor, which has outlived and eapereeded hundreds of similar pre- parations, is undoubedly the moat fashion- able as well as eoonomioal hair-dresaing in the market. By it. use, the poorest heed of hair soon becomes luxuriant and beauti- ful. Write have been Issued against the townships of Mornington, Elmo and Logan in Perth county to compel thein to pay their share of costs incurred in the Maitland drain litigation. which has been in the courts for a couple of years. The total costs were in the nein' borhood of $11,000. Of thi" mount EIma is asked to contribute the snug little emu of $3,554.46, Logan 6034.73 and Mornington $144.58 TRAVELLED HALF THE GLOBE T() FIND HEALTH, WITHOUT SUCCESS. TOOT{ TUE ADVICE OF A FRIEND AND NOW CLAIMS IT then TOE fl0UawrOP— "00UTn AMERICAN NIIRVTNR RATED ar rIm" Mrs H. Stapleton of Wingham writes : "I have been verymach troubled for years —since 187e--wth nervous debility and dyapepala. Had been treated be Canada and England by some of the beet hyei- aias. w thont permaieat relief. I was Midi.& about Ytrea gooarWa ago be lake Ment* ,warier. Xesvli., tea/ I firmly believe I Ors say lilt to ib tS-day. I oan teeetkfnlly tat *hat I bars diads! more tl Aram *eft my .ver I kna lot by PR0- She Was Not So Lucky. "I found a good bargain in men's shoes t' -day," said Jorklws, after he had picked, everything on the supper table to New. "ton kala had better leek tbolltin retorted his Olfo.—Dehlat 011141111061040011411104000110101/(101040.10 Old bold CIGARETTES W. 13. Kimball & Co., ROCHESTER, N. Y. Retail everywhere 50 per Package 17 FIRST PRIZE MEDALS. CL.)TH'ING READY MADE 6UITS-- 153, $4.50, $5, $6.60, $6 and $7. Ordered Clothing from $7 up. A FULL RANGE OF LADIES' UNDERCLOTHING FOR THE SUMMER. PerfectOBatisfaction Guaranteed, ROBT. COATS & SON CLINTON Ra nbaw Footwear Red, yellow, and blue, when properly bended, form the white ray. The most leather value—beat work.n anshiand Least prom make the Slater Siilae the t d whitest" you've Ivor worn. Goodyear process. Sixteen s 6 widths, tg Ar Black--Tan---Seal Bro�r�mine--and Wine Color. You'll know it by the name and pike stamped on the sole. $3, $4, $5 per pail• LATAI,rpO.Y[ "The Slater Shoe." ( k‘\ WM. TAYLOR & SONS, Sole Agents for Clinton. .i.12 „IV..? • •••u.WAS..'usi..•...e.1.ei.•��e .�. r..:.e.1,e'adr.•,r.• er.a•i.,.... 1 Do You FEEL SICK? Disease commonly comes on with slight symptoms, which when neglected increase in extent and gradually grow dangerous II you SUFFER FROM HEADACHE, DYS- PEPSIA or INDIGESTION, . If you are BILIOUS, CONSTIPATED, or have LIVER COMPLAINT, If your COMPLEXION IS SALLOW, or you SUFFER DISTRESS AFTEftEATiNG, For OFFENSIVE BREATH and ALL DISOR- DERS OF THE STOMACH, • TAKE RIPANS TABULES TAKE RIPANS TABULES TAKE RIPANS TABULES TAKE RIPANS TABULES Ripens Tabules Regulate the System and Preserve the Health. Ripens Tabules act gently hut promptly upon the liver, stor.aeii and intestines ; cleanse the system effectually , dare dyspepsia, habitual constipation, offensive breath and headache. One TARuLit taken et the first Indication of indigestion, biliousness, dizziness, distress after eating or depression of spirits, will surely and quickly remove the whole difficulty. if given n fair trial Ripens Tabules are an infallible cure; they contain nothing injurious and are an ea.nomical remedy, ONE GIVES RELIED EASY TO TAKE—..d.. QUICK TO ACT $spans Tabules are told b b< Chem - feelthe price (If0 cents a box.)1* �� o ifeelVialCompany, 0 u Ala 10 Swum , stew q . A ... �T, „'f'raTl%! % T % 751 s ?va'r; :-... Y T a ip