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The Clinton New Era, 1890-09-05, Page 6rt.ilatFy was sick, we Rare bar Cssttuie, liiibmit aha was a mold, 440 cried for Castor* 1t40.41x00;00 Wills, 40 cla>#g W gsrrtesfa, pbslt1l40bad_Oltildren, she gee them Castorwa 'BEAT ENGLISH REMEDY lips PURELY VEGETABLE INGREDIENTS a+z��4,11.4 WITHOUT MERCURY, USED BY 7 ',$ ENGLISH PEOPLE FOR 'OVER 120 YEAR , 1S These rills conalst of a careful and peculiar admix- ' VISO of thabest and mildest vegetable aperients and :, Zhe pule extract of Flowers of Chamomile. They will bistound a most efficacious remedy for derangements 4¢f the digestive organa, and for obstructions and tor - d action of the liver and bowels which produce in - y: si;8"o nn and the several varieties of bilious and liver run.h _.Lis. Sold by all Chemists. wilmaseta AGSMs EVANS AND SONS, LIMITED, MONTREAL.. THE BEST 1.KING POWDER Is .4-. !WEARER'S GENUINE Cook's Rielig No Alum. Nothing lnjurioua. AETAIIED EVERYWHERE, GARTH&CO. FACTORY SUPPLIES Valves, iron & Lead Pipe Loose Pulley O'lere, Steam Jet Pumas, Firm Pumps, W!nd M'IL•, Cream Eeparat,:-s, ^piry ard Lauidry 536CRAIG ST:.'E., MONTPE.',L. .I. MANU1 A'• T,uhE.; CARRIAGE,VARNISH' 4 SILVER'MEOAL$� nlONT-E''L' CHADWICK'S SPOOLi COTTON .For Hand and Maclaine Use. :VAS MO SUPERIOR. ASK FOR IT. LEATI{ERCID STEEL -LINED TRUNKS In Sample, Ladies' and all other lipids. r incest and Slrc12vt TRUNKS In the World. J. EVIELEIGH & t;O MONTREAL, Sole Mrs, for the Bolnin'n HOTEL BALMORAL. MONTREAL. Notre Dame St., one of the most central and elegantly furnished Hotels in the Cif? Accommodation for 400 guests. Rates:CI WOODRUFF, ats to $3 per day. • a Manager PEARS' Sohl Af a for Ganata, J.PALMER&SON `Wholesale Imp'trs of . JGGISTS' SUNDRIES 1743 NOTRE DAME ST., MONTREAL SOAP• DOMINION LEATHER BOARD COMPANY. Manufacturers of ASBESTOS !BILLBOARD Stean, Packing. FRICTION PULLEY BOARD, This it a PeifectFriction RECKITT'S BLUE THE BEST FOR LAUN:RY USE. PAPERS Wrapping, Tannin., �O ALL 'Cr SIZES AND <y�WEIGHTS A. To ORDER 444 21 DeBresales Et, lLilIo: .! r) C1oHN FLUIDBEEF OCHE GREAT STRENGTH GIVER ij PERFECT FOOD PFDR THE SICK WARMING & UTO TIOUSOEVERAGE A POWERFUL �.�YIf CPATO R-� ONS FOR f sect\ Stings $:ncote Eyes Eruptions ,;ore Feet Soreness Chafin Bata Bru uts i -les rnr[le _�5Y_Yl t t al . ratsxtu its Ates iYar�. u Y n A 'ALL` �P ••i _t�.n:mlt'l o n. SUEI,STITUTES ATASOTILE VYA PER KSI1.iK4POI EiIS M ;etre''[VW, POND'S EXT'RAC1' COMPA1_i_Y 76 FWTKAVE,NEWYORK. Far Sunday Reading CIinlea'S SYMPATHY WITH TUB WORLD. The great Teacher of the ages whom sgciety would have hound- ed to destructiou was not self. tt,kl@orbed, but could spare time to be kind and genial even to little children. He who found it his meat and drink to do His Father's will was no gloomy egotist, but was fund of showing his sympa- thy fur men by joining them at the social board of the marriage feast. He was so strong as never to yield to to the fiercest tempta- tion, was yat to gentle as to make allowance for sinners. He went about continually doing good ; sought not to be ministered unto but to minister; and declared,that He was ready, like a good shep- herd, to lay down His lite for the sheep. Thus Christ's work from the first was one of recoasiliation. His whole career was sacrificial and atoning. From the very bo - ginning of His ministry He gave Himself unreservedly to the world. His death was but the last and steepest step:of the altar of self-sacrifice He had been so long ascending.—Dr. Momerie. THE BIBLE'S INFLUENCE ON RUr;— KIN'S STYLE. Mr Ruskin says : NS -alter Scott and Pope's Homer were reading of my own selection, but my mo- ther force.] me, by steady daily toil, to learn long chapters of the Bible by heart; as well as to read it every syllable through, aloud, bard names and all, from Genesis to the Apocalypse, about once a year; and to that discipline—pati- ent, accurate, and resolute—I owe, not only a knowledge of the Book, which I find occasionally serviceable, but much of my gen- eral power of taking pains, and the best tart of my state in liter- ature. From Walter Scat's no\ elf I might easily, as I grew older,have fallen to other people's novels, and Pope. perhaps, have led me to take Johnson's English, or Gibbon's, as types of language; but, once knowning the 32nd of Deuteronomy, the 110th Psalm, the 15th of' 1st Corinthians, the Sermon on the Mount. and most of the Apocalypse, every sylable by heart, and having always a way of thinking with myself what words meant, it was not possible for me,even in the toolishest times of youth, to write entirely super- ficial English ; and tho affectation of trying to write like Hookerand George Herbert was the most in- nocent I could have fallen into. ('ONSTANT PRAYER. 'It is as impossible for the soul to live and thrive without daily player as for the body to live and thrive without daily food," says Dr. Guthrie. 'Our graces are like plants that need daily water- ing; watches that need daily wind- ing, lamps that need daily filling; bodies that need daily feeding. It is as necessary for the graces of the inner as for the strength, and health,and life of the outward man that we should wait on God to say: 'Give me by day my daily bread.' Newman says: 'When you have given over the practice of stated prayer you gradually become weaker without knowing it. Sampson did not know he had lost his strength till the Philistines came upon him; you will think. yourselves the men you used to be, till suddenly your hdversay will come furiously upon you, and you will as suddenly fall.' Dr Donne says 'When a purnp is frequently used,but little pa ins are necessary to obtain water, the water pours out at the first stroke because it is high ; but if the pump has not been used for a long time, the water gets low,and when you want ityou must pump a long while, and the water conies only after great efforts. It is so with prayer. If we are instant in prayer, every liftle circum- stance awakens the disposition to pray, and desire and words are always ready ; but if' we neglect prayer, it is difficult for us to. pray-. That son] which is ever turned towards God prays some- times when it does not know that it prays.' Kitty Trevelyan says: 'Thinking may drive away many cares and lighten many sorrows; but for suspense, for uncertainty, Gtr anxieties whose issues we cannot know, it scetns to me tllpre is no remedy at all but prayer. Titl'S'l' IN (10!). 13e.iove God now. Trust Ilim now, in face of all that opposes itself. or you may never have so grand a chance to show your trust.. The high glories and the full vision of heaven may not give such an opportunity of glorifying God as you have amid the un- speakable sorrows, the profound darkness and the sometimes aw- ful straits, of your own soul hero in this lower world. What an opportunity to be grasped by the Christian ! Is not this what angels bend to see on earth,—a human soul, deprived of the di- rect, and constant sight of God, encompassed with so much to cause doubt and dark distress, yet proceeding precisely as it would jilts oyes were already on the living God ? Yes, trust can never do anything else than g1 u•- ify God and certainly circum- stances can never again so favor us ih its exercise. We expect no barriers to full vision in heaven ; and trust•comes into play where there are bars iers, where we do not see. OXMS iOF THOUGHT. The pleasure of doing good is the only one that docs not wear out. Anger ,s like rain, which breaks. itself upon that on which it falls. Life is not so short but there is always time enough .for cour- tesy. The brigbfe,t lightning comes from the blackest clouds, and the purest faith from the severest trials. The acquisition of knowledge is not the chief end of man, but is a noble end, and the interest of the pursuit is inexhaustible. All honor should be given to those who bear failures bravely and rise up from them with un- daunted energy for fresh endea- vors. Whatever tends to draw men together in bonds of affection and harmony' will also enable them both to give and to receive an oc- casional rebuke in the spirit which alone can make it eflective is do. ing good. Take the hand of the friendless; smile on the sad and dejected ; sympathize with those in trouble; strive everywhere to diffuse around you sulishine and joy. if you do :his, you will be sure to bo beloved. Although a young couple are said to be married as soon as the lady has changed her name, the truth is that the real marriage is a long slow inter-growth,like that of two trees planted quite close to- gether in the forest. The foundation of domestic hap- piness is faith in the virtuous qualities of woman. Tho found- ation of political happiness is faith in the integrity of' man. The foundation of all happiness, temp< r.tl.,or eternal, is faith in the goodness, the righteousness, the mercy, and the love of G,ld. A cheerful disposition 'is a gens of great price, and proceeds from the storehouse of heart within. Unlike other gems, which are useless except to the possessor, it sheds its beams on all around it, imparting warmth, light and lite to all within the sphere of its be- nign influence. Religion is of no yalue to a mechanic unless it keeps him from putting up a ceiling he knows will crack in six months; or to a far- mer unless it keeps him from put- ting the only sound pippins on top of the barrel. Tho greatest man is he who chooses the right with invincible resolution; who resists the sorest temptations from within and without; who bears the heaviest burdens cheerfully,who is calmest in storms, and most fearless un- der menace and frowns,and whose reliance on truth, virtue, and on God is most unfaltering. How often is it difficult to be wisely charitable—to do good without multiplying the sources of evil I To give alms is nothing unless you give thought also. It is not written, 'Blessed is he that feedeth the poor,' but, 'Blessed is he that conside:'eth the poor.' A little thought and a little kind- ness are often worth more than a great deal of money. GETTING INTO ONE'S PLACE. 'Tilers are so many who are content to be without being any- thing,' says Mr Emerson in one of his humorous ments. Every- where we find these people,existing but not living, good in a certain negative way,but notgoofor any- thing in particular; and the most startling thought of' all is that each of these lay figures was in- tended by the Creator for some purpose, was born for something, was designed f'or a place: or in the words of the great essayist, 'Each man and woman is born with an aptitude to do something impos- sible to any other.' ' I1' this is so, and it is only stat- ing in modern phrase the Scrip- ture truth of Goa's plan and pur- pose for every man, it is the first question which every child ofGod should put to himself,'Am 1 doing my God -ordained work ?' It may be sweeping rooms or washing dishes:it may be cal Tying a hod or a sceptre; it' may be nursing a baby or writing a sermon,—the question is just as applicable, 'Am 1 doing my work,'—not criticising somebody else, not longing for a bolter chance, not waiting for something to turn up; but doing my work as well as 1 know how to do it? If ono can answer that Ilucstio:h in the affirmative, he has answer- ed one of the greatest questions that a man is ever called upon to face. To be in one's place and do one's work is supremely satisfy- ing,to be out of one's proper place at last will be agony, because it will take one away from God. TheChristian,is growing more and more in harmony with his envir- onment because he is growing in- to harmony with the will of God. If a man who is meant to bo a physician is miserable as a law yet; if a useful and prosperous far- mer is sometime spoiled to make an unhappy and second-rate prea- cher,—what will be the agony of living for an eternity out of one's element, or in other words, away from one's God ? Tobd something and the right something, may be the high ambition of every humble child of God, and ho may bo sure that at last he will certainly reach th' vet summit of his am- bit ion.—Golden Rale. n CASTOR IA for Infants and Children. "QMturlaissowefadaptediochn that Lewes gone, 000mIpation. 1reoOmmeednag superior toany proscription Sour Stomach. Diarrhoea, lilrttutation. taws 1Amnia, N.1. D., =it eWsgqorms, gives sleep, and promotes di- tome." 8a. Oaten' 8G. Drooktyo, N. Y. WI= injurious medication. Ta>s CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 Murray Street, N. Y. V 1 CURE FITS! THOUSANDS OF BOTTLES CIYEN AWAY YEARLY. When 1 say Cure 1 do not meati merely to stop them for a time, and then have them return again. 1 MEAN A R A D I CA L C U R E. 1 have made the disease of Flte, Epilepsy or Falling Sickness a 1. .long study. 1 warrant my remedy to Cure the worst cases. Because others have fai:t.d is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send r'. once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of my Infallible Remedy. Give Express an 1 Post Office. It costs you nothing for a trial, and it will cure you Address:—H. O. ROLL, Branch Offce, 186 WEST ADELAIDE STREET, 'TORONTO. — SPECIALTIES . BINDER TWINE, HARVEST ! (►i )Ls, BARBED WIRE, BLACK FENCE WIRI•:,, 1'.11tH GREEN 10 CARS} JUST CuMIN(: 1N, STOVE CtCOAL.NCtin cARsOAL COAL NO. 4 COA L i Quality the ].lest and prices the lowest. 1)1111-1. e'trly HARLAND BROS., Iron and Hardware Merchants, Clinton TOLTON Pea Harvester. The most perfect and durable Pea Harvester of the day Guaranteed to give Satisfaction or 110 sale Persons requiring this article, will please place their orders at once, as late orders cannot be filled. Already four times the number sold this year that were last. All orders 1::ft with THOSI !fIPLff CIiot�oo Will be attended to ' T. BROWN, Agt, Seafol'th. I„ 111.E i'TY, Agent, Varna. New Firm N F«' GOODS, New Prices COOPER& O�. N GROCERS. are in the liel,l with Bargains in now Black, Green and Japan Teas, Cof'ccs: Slays. &c Try our '1E1 N ECTA R and SECRET IILEN U '1'I \ -; they cannot l.0 excelled in price 1! ,lil!:!\'. CROCKS 17 --We have a fine assortment in Dinner, Tea and l.I� lJ 1J11 Chamber Sets, in all the latest designs and colorings, and at prices to suit everybody. Come and inspect them and Le convinced. We also have a line assortment of GLASSWARE. and cheaper than the cheapest \Ve have secured another Sewing Machine, which we will give away with 1 lb. Baking Powder. Coote and have . at chance before it is too late . - Special attention given to Family Trade. Goods promptly delivered. Deal with us and get the newest, cheapest and freshest goods. COOPER & LOGAN, — Clinton NEXT TO COUCII'S. Best and Cheapest Fence STEEL ROOS—IRON FOUNDATION. BUILDERS' IRON WORK, Office Railings, lawn Furniture AND FOUNTAINS, ETC. • BR HllM Wire A&elroil Works (I,I2i.6ITE3D). WALKERVILLE, ONTARIO. ►'ATAI.O(iuTES SENT ON APPLi►'A'I'it►\. The OENTRAL GROCER]' OPPOSmTE THE POST OFFICE. McMurray & Wiltse Return thanks for the patronage accorded them since starting business, and an- nounce that they will Continue to give satisfaction to all who may favor them with their orders. They will keep a full stock of the very best R-oods ih their line. And as they buy exclusively for cosh, will give na good value an any in the trade We refuse to give one line at cost or under, and !take the profits. nut of some other line you may want, but for general family supplies we will not be undersold Patronage reapectfnlly solicited. Remember the place—Walker's old stand. McMURRAY & WILTSE, - CLINTON a To make room for New Importations, we will, until Dee. let. GIVE TEN PEES, CENT DISCOUNT FOR CASK on our large stook of CROCKERY, CHINA AND . GLASSWARE. DECORATED DINNER AND TEA SETS 10 PIECE TOILET SETS. Parties in need of anything in this line should not miss the opportunity of se. oaring cheap bargains, ae we are bound to reduce our stock. We Offer NEW SEASON JAPAN TEA at 40 cents, worth 0 We Offer NEW SEASON SLAC$ TEA at 25 cents, worth 40. We Offer NEW SEASON GREEN TEA at 25 cents, worth 35. NEW CUEBANTS and RAISINS, cheap, 2 BROOMS for 25c. FRESH FINAN HADDIE, SISCOS, HERRING, BLOATERS, &c. Goode promptly delivered to any part of the town. Give ns a call. BUTTER AND EGGS TAKEN AS CASH. N. ROBSON. CHINA HALL. JUST RECEIVED A Fine Assortment of PLAIN and STAMPED GOODS, TRAY CLOTHS SIDEBOARD DRAPES, TOILET SETS, SPLASHERS, STAND COVERS &c., Also a large stock of RUBBER BALLS, BASE BALLS, SHIPPING ROPES, HAMMOCKS, EXPRESS WAGGONS. Call and see our stock bei fore buying, as we want to clear out our present stock of WALL PAPER CEILING DECORATIONS, nc. We offer them cheap, call and see fo yourselves. WORTILINGTON'S BOOK and DRUG STORE The LATEST STYLE IN English and American Hard and Sott Hats To please everybody. Call and see all the latest shapes. We are constantly offering bargains. We are showing a stock that is wonderful in quantity, quality and style. We also keep on hand a magnificent assortment of FINE STRAW HATS SUMMER TOP SHIRTS, TIES, LINEN/ 1111(1. Rtrbbereen Collars and Cuffs Our stock is complete and well assorted. We invite your inspection. • REMEMBER THE STAND—ONE DOOR NORTH OF THE DRY GOODS PALACE -_ =THE CLINTON NEW ERA R. HOLMES, - - Publisher, CLINTON, - - ONT. THE NEW ERA is published 'every Friday ; it gives about Thirty-two Columns of Fresh Reading Matter Every Week ; Correct Market Reports from Toronto and in this neighborhood ; has a Large Circulation and is Unsurpassed as an Ad vertising'Medium. Will be sent to any address for $1.50 a year, in advance. JOB DEPARTM ENT We have all the latest styles of type for Circulars, dale Bills, and any kind of printing that can be desired. Prices the Lowes, Work the Finest and satis- faction guaranteed. One trial is certain to bring another. R. HOLMES, BOX 74. CLINTON. Per Ct cash Discount Having become agent for the celebrated 13. LAIIRANCE SPECTACLES and EYE -GLASSES, and procured the Lawrence test, all those with failing eyesight, young or old, weak or strong, can be perfectly fitted here. Call and examine IhIPll38S, Grocery, Crockery, Hardware, Jeweller, And all other lines are complete, and as cheap as the cheapest place in the coun- ty. I have a few of those first-class PRUNES left, at 5c per Ib, and a GREEN 'rEA you should try, at 40c. per single 1b, 81.75 for 5 lb. C`tddy, worth at least 50 cents per lb. 5 per cent discount for cash on all purchases of $1 and upward GEO. NEWTON LONDESBORO FARMERS AND THRESHERS CY1,TNDEIt AND— - SHOULD USE McCOLL BROS. LARDINE OIL, 1VOt)L OILS SF.i-: THAT •1'111' BARRELS ARE BRANDED —AND - --BOILF.R— PURGER McCOLL BROS., DIINT . - rr()RUIN T0,