The Clinton New Era, 1890-11-07, Page 7UNV.k;111¢ 'I A.11111.
ruero7,. God, of Iov4
rleh Thy bouetieft ,slot
r'elitl g swoons apt they shove
Peool ars. 'Thy eoeetent Care'
When,iu the bosoin'of'the i arch,
The ilorirer hid the grain
Thy, aaodniaatl ivarktedits secret birth,
And *tint the eerie. rain.
tl a '.a sir* ilifluunee waft Tyue
iplants to be:lty
1
*wit refalgelL )tuns to ohi�tie,:
MA Neild refresb,ing'dew•
Thole varied mercies fret* above
*tared the *walling grata;
.47,001! Harvest crown Thy ,love,
gine lentyfilla the plaint " "
Send+tinge and H9trveaf, Lard, alone
Thee, dost on Man bestow ;
Let lite riot then forget to own ,
'�!ronl whoirn his bleitsinge flow.
..
� !'Q1111tain of love, our pet ise is Thine ;
To Thee our songs we'll raise, •
ria all created nature join,
In sweet, harmonious prase.
-.-Alice Flowerdew
Who kingof medicine—Hood's Sanea-•
it h▪ eum and all other blood diseasrs es. It
NO TIME LIKE THE OLD TIME.
There is no time like the old time,when
you and I were young,
When the bads of April blossomed and
it the birds of springtime sung.
The garden's brightest glories by sum-
mer eune are nursed
But, oh, the sweet, sweet violets, the
flower that opened first !
VIOALERtilip .
Writing from. New York to the
Obivago :herald, Edith 4eooiono
Tupper has this to say about the
wayoor the wotluen of Gotham:,
One of the latest fada for cigar, -
Otte sinolting,- wows is to :hive,
their crest or znontogr'unia stapap.
cd on't evor'y cigarette. Now, 'est
be accused of inventing tbie tale
1 wish to state *hot •I have, hod in
mx hands 4,garettO i nlp'ortud by.
a well.knowni New York woman
,.upon every one'of which 'was a
lady'o, crest, and underneath it
her monogram. The out of town
oorreepondnnte are often accused
by New York papers of deliberate
l - inventing audacious stories
about 4lew York women, but the
feet relnaine that if there lea fein-
inine fair on earth who can think
out startling fads she ie the New
York woman. ,ii think cigarette
smoking among women is con-
stantly on the increase, and after
all why it it any Worse than cock-
tail or poker? At the theatre
the other eight I -sat next two
men who were discussing a lady
in one of the boxes whom I
chanced to know. 'She's a stue-
ner at 'poker,' said one of the men;
'they say she's plays a capital
game.' I felt a little indignant at
the free -any -easy way these men
spoke, but I knew that the lady
in question is in the habit of play-
ing the game a great, deal, and
Q11 Sunday nights too. Women
indulge in these little vices, and I
cannot for the Life of me see
where one can draw the line be-
tween feminine drinking,smoking
and gambling.
There is no place like the old plane,
where you and I were born.
Where we lifted Bret our eyelids on the
• splendors of the morn.
From the milk -white breast that warm-
• ed us, from the clinging arme that
bore,
Where the dear eyes glistened o'er us
ltNat will look on us no more.
There is no friend like the old friend,
who has shared our morning days,
No greeting like his welcome, no hom-
age like his praise.
Fame is the scentless sunflower, with
gaudy crown of gold,
But friendship is the breathing rose,
with sweets in every fold.
There is no love like the old love, that
we courted in our pride ;
Though our leaves are falling, falling,
and we're fading side by side,
There are blossoms all around us, with
' the colors of our dawn,
And.we live in borrowed sunshine when
our day -star is withdrawn,
There are no times like the old times—
they shall neverbe forgot ;
There is no plane like the old place—keep
green the dear old spot !
There are no friends like our old
�•, friende—may heaven prolong their
lives!
There are no loves like our 'old loves—
God bless our loving wives.
—Oliver Wendell Holmes.
IT I9 A. MISTAKE
To try to cure catarrh by using local
applications. Catarrh is not a local
but a constitutional disease. It is not
a disease of the man's nose, but of the
man. Therefore, to effect a cure, re
quires a constitutional remedy like
Hood's Sarsaparilla, which acting
through the blood, reaches every part
of the system. expelling the taint whioh
pauses the disease, and imparting
health.
"Hello! Tom. Glad to see you, old fellow!
It's almost ten years «ince we were married. Sit
down: let's have an experience meeting. How's
the witef"
"Oh! she's 50.10, same as genal,—always want-
ing something I can't afford."
Well, we an want something more than we've
--got. Don't you t"
"Yee : but I gueeewant will be my master.' I
started to keep down expellees ; and now Ln says
I'm 'mean,' and she's tired of saving and neves
'' ]laving anything to show for it. I saw your wife
down and she looked as happy as a queen 1"
"I think she 1s ; and we are economical, too;—
bave to be. My wife can make a little go farther
than anyone Lever knew yet she's a ways sur-
prising me with some dainty contrivance -that
adds to the comfort and beauty of our little home,
and she's always ' merry es a lark.' When I ask
bow she manages it, she always laughs and Bays;
'Oh 1 that's my secret 1' But I think I've die -
covered her 'secret' When we married, wo both
knew we should have to be very careful but she
made one condition: ebewould have her Magazine.
.And she was right ! I wouldn't do withoutit my-
eelt•for double the eubecription price. We read
it together, from the title -page to the last word :
the stories keep our hearts young ; the synopsis
of important events and scientific matters keeps
ine posted so that I can talk tmderetandingly of
what is going on,; my wife is always trying so
Ile Idea from te household department;
e all her dreebee:anti those. for the 'child
Oho bell s t erne fox nothing, with: he
Ma Me Josavlten hewn k
int th ern , by dein , net as direr in e
Bahl nDepartmenti ' oabalft"
4:1
'Whatwondertnl Magazine
andL" -
Demoreet'l Pamir, bMa nra'ne,
"What! Why that's what Lil wanted so bad,
and I told her it was an extravagsnce."
"Well, my friend, that's where yon endo a
grand mistake, and one you'd better rectify as
Boon as yon can. I'll take your 'sob.' right here,
oa mywite's account: she's bound to have a china
tea -set in time for our tin wedding next month.
7iy gold watch was the premium I got for getting
iv a club. Here's a copy, with the new Premium
last for crabs—the biggest thingontl If youdon't
see in it *what yon want, you've only to write to
4. the publisher and tell him what you want, whether
It le a tack -hammer or a new carriage, and he will
•muco special terms for yon, either for a club, or for
part cash, Better subscribe right off and the
rat iTom.
ism nthe. Or year—will
ar-w entevdlrect tootths
Spublisher, W..Tenninge Dem0rest, 15 East 14th
treet, Now York, for a specimen copy containing
tha.Premium Ltet."
star knew* is the rapidity uth
which, children wear nut ahoeui.
Only one thing approptCttel it
— the . Vigil pt'itio_ ooff v'ht dren`e
iihoea, I never could uuderetautt
bow, with all,, tho, civilization of
the, age and. the ,domatnds for.
.Cheaper r'esultel ettiblrcn's; ahoee
have not been t^edlue,.d 14 pt ion.
The human shoe is a failure. No,
man not rich cel;, Afford to buy
shoos for a family, find if ;hue; it
to 4o . AvoQ14, 04 In atoo1.
where neither horses, mules,
cartels nor men aro' shod.
THE OLD RELIABLB.
1 these daya..of Hsi apbug itieta relief
io.hesro 'ao a iiogtbatbican bedepend
ed, upon W ljglh't ,wild griersy hast
been eat d, pts a remedi fgl lbs lure rtf
alt diseases of the Throat Cheat and:
linage for tws
twenty years, with uch duo"
Cees es to earn for Itself the title of the.
01d Reliable care for Coughs, Colds,'
Croup, Asthma, Bronchitis and other
affections of the respiratory eyetem.
See that you get the genuine, In,white
wrapper. Sold by all druggists.
Minard's Linimentlumberman's friend
A young man who was employ-
ed by a St Louis firm, from which
he stole $70,000, wee located at
Toronto, confessed, refunded $45-
000 and left for home on the
-understanding that be would not
be prosecuted.
Catarrh is a forerunner of con-
sumption. The prompt use of
Nasal Balm may save you from
an untimely grave. It has cured
others; it will cure you. Try it.
WHAT A FAMILY COSTS.
What does it cost -to bring up u
family? A gentleman, whose ex-
perience will be recognised as
having points in common with
other householders, has preserved
an account of the expense to
which he has been rearing a fam-
ily of four children. To -day he
enterer' the following statement
in bis diary. It might be a val-
uable fact for the census takers.
'To -day I close my diary.
Twenty-six years ago to day I
undertook to keep an accurate
statement of all my earnings and
expenses, so that I might know
actually bow much it cost to live
in a maeried--state. Then all was
anticipation. I and my young
wife counted our resources and
our expectations. I received $15
a week, with the promise of more.
I owned a house comfortable
enough for frugal young people
to begin life in. We were spared'
house rent, therefore, and our
expenses have never included this
item. Retrospectively, I see that
we have brought up four children
in comparatively easy circlrm-
stances. My health has been
good,and my earnings I have con-
stantly received. 1 now receive
$30 a week, and we still own the
homestead, withont any great
additions to its wealth except in
an increased amount of furniture.
I have little more money than I
had when first married. Perhaps
all told, I have $3,500 now of
assets, then 1 bad perhaps $2,500.
We have never wanted for bread.
Sometimes we have felt in need
of mere money. Three of the
children are now making their
own way. Next week the fourth
graduates at the high school, hav-
ing received the same schooling
that the others have bad, and will
begin to look out for himself.
'I shall not necessarily be at
any more expense on account of
my children, and the diary prop-
erly ends now. Would I be able
to go through the same expe-
rience again of raising a fam-
ily ? I asked my companion,who
had borne the greater part, this
question, and I know that she
spoke with a heart full of love,
but was compelled to say : 'Not
for all that money could buy
would I go through again what
has been necessary to rear a fam-
ily.
'Expressed in dollars the totals
are these: In 26 years we have
received from my wages and in-
cidental moneys, $40,900—or say
$40,000—besides the amount of
increase in the permanent assets
Given a plant of about $3,000 and
two employes, a man and wife, it
has taken,therefore, about $10,000
to each man produced. This, of
coarse, included all employes' ex-
penses. The plant is slightly
enhanced in value. but the em-
ployes have seen their best days.
The quality of the goods cis yet
to be demonstrated. Prospects
happily point to cessation of labor
and an increase of receipts, but
there is no certainty about this.
The employes are proud of their
work, but don't want another job.
'Some of the items have been
these: Doctor's bills • (27 years)
82,100 (and all paid, probably the
onlo instance on record); groceries
average per week first five years,
$7; next three $9; remainder of
the 26 years, $18 a week. For
J ears it has taken on an average
ono pair t f shoes per week for the
fatldil ,ineludin Myself' and wife.
�" g y
OE (MEAT ENGLISH', REMEDY
I•PURELY vEGurentu INGREDIENTS
ip Attt 'WITHOUT MERCURY, USED BY
THE ENGLISH PEOPLE POR
ovElt 120 YEARS, Is
lOO]XPdtttt'b
,,D�totts
note I'ille cook* ofaeattfuland Walla.
aad'tnlldeet vegetable aperients and
'heave's nrrtractof Viewers Of C afI mile. They will
befbtuidamoet delcahlous remedy for derangements
or the ditgzetttvd crasher and for obetntotione and tor- '
e ose Gild the *Wand
dtdarbtetfcb Of bilihmi preclude
r nd liver
,owpleinte• 6141)41.411 Che'tnleta
*MUMMA IloitNte
mos An SONS, ITED,n
SHIFTLESS TRICKS r OR A
FARMER.
To try to farm without manure.
To plant more acres than can
be taken care of.
To work with poor tools, and to
sow poor seed.
To buy at public sales what is
not needed, because It sells cheap.
It is shiftless to keep poor
stock. A poor cow eats as ranch
as a good one.
To lounge about stoles and gro-
ceries when it is possible to be
doing something at home.
To raise frogs and mosquitoes
in the front yard. To have a
pig wallow in the mid near :he
gate.
To allow the bogs and sheep to
wander at their own sweet will
over their owner's and his neigh-
bor's premises.
To allow the barn -yard to drain
into tha public road, or into a
stream. .A good many farmers
are guilty of this.
To cut the wood for the kitchen
fire day by day and then burn it
green. It is worse to leave it for
the wife,to cut.
To let the cattle fodder them
selver at the haystack. It saves
a little labor, but the waste will
make their owner poor.
To have the privy and well
near each other. They should
never be less than 200 feet apart:
The privy should be below, not
above the well.
To leave tools of any kind lying
out in the weather; to put them
away uncleaned, or to loan them
to shiftless and careless neighbors.
To tarn cattle out into the bare
fields in cold weather when there
is nothing for them to eat there,
and they lose flesh shivering in
the cold.
It is shiftless to allow weeds to
occupy ,any part of the farm, and
very shiftless to allow bushes to
occupy several rod of ground
along the fence rows.
To plant an orchard and then
to allow cattle to browse the
trees; to leave vacant places in a
young orchard; to allow a young
orchard to remain in grass.
l t is a short-sighted policy to
elect to the township and county
offices the men who cannot sup-
port themselves in the ordinary
pursuit of life. It is also costly.
It is thoughtless and a very
dangerous thing for a farmer to
put his name on any paper pre-
sented by a stranger. Also, to
go on the notes of friends and
neighbors.
It is reckless to buy trees of an
utter stranger, also, groceries,
spices, and such articles as can be
easily adulterated. Nine times
out of ten one will be cheated by
so doing.
It is a shiftless trick to employ
the teacher who will work for the
least wages. It is as bad to leave
a family of boys and girls to grow
up without good books and
papers.
To wade through mud to the
barn and outbuildings when good
dry paths can so easily be made.,
To pay heavy doctor's bills for
wife and children because their
feet became wet through lack of
good paths.
It is a heartless thing for a
farmer to allow his wife to work
sixteen or eighteen hours, when
his own work is completed in ten
hours. On the farm as elsewhere
hneband and wife should be 'equal
partners.'..
To have no garden and to buy
stale vegetables of a huckster. It
is nearly as bad to have a miser-
able little garden, which the good
wits and her girt. painfully weed,.
and secure a few stunted vege-
tables, when large crops could -be
had with little trouble, if the
garden were eultivated by horse
SEVEN
1r" Do you ,Durpos
ut1. Organ or Piano?,
buying
2. Do yon wish to rent a
Piano or Organ 2
3. Do you want a reliable
Tuner to take care of your Pi-
ano by the year ?
4. Have you a Piano to
move?
5. Have you seen our beau-
tiful Six -Octave Piano -Cased
Organ.
6. Do you know that G. F.
OAKES is the only man in the
county of Huron of whom you
can purchase the splendid Or-
gans built by the Oakes Organ
Company.
7. Do you know that by writ-
ing a card and directing it to
G. F. Oakes, Box 11, Clinton,
you can procure a splendid il-
lustrated catalogue of Organs
and Pianos.
The meet annoying thing 1 hove 'pot er,
t..ra_ ZA..ill rn.•d.
c or � aria or Pita
at prioerit that
suit purchase
'Se
cnos tartdMhandorent 'l
A reliable Elan
tuner sent to
part of the cos
Pianos' o e .
damaged
Six -Octave Pia
cases, handsomer
in Canada,
Music furnis `e
for church open
ings &' entert ►,:'
meats, &c: 'r u
for c %talogue . to
a-E0ERiG�
RELIABLE ORGAN DEALER,
BOX 11, , CI 11\TT0 N ,
4
D'Avignon's Cream of Witch -Hazel
-
• THE NEW TOILET LOTION.
Softens the skin, removes !roughness, eruptions and irritation fromthe face and
hands, and gives freshness and tone to the complexion.
tris an invaluable application after shaving. Don't mistake thissuperior pre -
elation for any paints, enamels or injurious cosmetics or inferior complexion
otions. It prevents eruptions, abrasions, roughness, redness, chapping, col -
sores, and pain resulting to sensitive skin from exposure to wind and cold. In
sehort D'AVIONON's CREAM OF WtTCH-HAZELis at once a remedy and a preventfor
very form ofsurface inflammation or irritation. Price 25 cents per bottltai
Manufactured by
JAMES H. C4c)3/1]3Ts.,
CHEMIST AND DRUOGIST, CLINTON . 41N1
At Columbus, Ind., Thomas
Tagger, a well known farmer,con-
fessed to baying murdered and
robbed Thomas Jameson, an Ohio
man, in 1855. Themurderer died
in a few minutes after the confes-
sion.
Frank Wilkinson, grain buyer at
Hamilton, says : "I used several medi-
cines and found no relief until I tried
Wilson's Compound Syrup, Wild
Cherry." Leas than one bottle cured
him of a long standing and painful
cough, with tightness of chest and short
A four year old child of Mr R.
McNanghton, Tilbury West,Ont.,
was Tuesday pounced upon by a
vicious bull dog belonging to her
father,and frightfully bitten about
the face. The dog has been de-
stroyed.
Itch, Mange and Scratches of every
kind, on human or animals, cured in 30
minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion.
This never fails. Sold by J. H. Combe
Druggist. June27-3m.,
The body found at Rondeau on
Monday bas been identified as
that of W. J. Farr ell, a young
married man, of Grimsby. It is
tbought leis gun was discharged
accidentally, making a hole in the
boat, through which water came
in, and that Farrell became ex-
cited and tried to swim ashore.
C. C. RICHARDS BG Co. •
GENTS—I have used your MINARD'S
LINIMENT in my family for 'some
years and believe it the best medicine
in the market as it does all it recom-
mended to do.
Cannaan Forks, N. B., D. KISReTEAD.
John Mader, Mahone Bay, informs
vs that he was cured of a very severe
attack of rheumatism by useing MIN-
ARD'S LINIMENT.
A Pueblo, Col., despatch says:
Jay Gould arrived here Saturday
on an inspection tour, When be
was here a year ago some land
was offered .to the Missouri Paci-
fic system, on conditions that Mr
Gould would improve it. The of-
fer was refs sed, on the ground
that it would never be more than
an alfalfa corral. When MrGould
arrived in Pueblo on Saturday, he
was surprised to see miners work-
ing on the land digging out coal.
The ground that last year was of-
fered to Mr Gould free could not
now be purchased for $1,000,000.
English Spavin Liniment removes
all hard, soft or calloused Lumps and
Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavin,
Curbs, Ring Bone, Sweeney, Stifles,
Sprains, Sore and Swollen Throat,
Couhs, etc. Save $50 by use of one
bottle. Warranted the most wonderful
Blemish Cure ever 'known. Sold by
J. II. bombe, Druggist. June 27, 1 yr
Windrow' Cry for
' P tcher's Castortitto,
BIBLES & TESTAMENTS AT COST
The Clinton Bran,•h Bible Society nave for
sale at DR WORTHINGTON'S DRUG
STORE. Albert Street. a fine assortment of
Bibles and Testaments.
TESTAMENTS FROM 8otS. UPWARD
BIBLES FROM Mete UPWAItDS.
COME AND SEE. 1,R WORTHINGTON, De-
pository.
S. WILSON,
GENERAL DEALER IN TINWARE.
HURON STREET, ('LINT° N
Repairing of all kinds promptly attended
reasonah'e rates. A trial solicited.
Enjoy Goo 1 Health
CASES Sarsaparilla BITTERS
Cores every kink of Unhealthy Humor*
and Disease caused from Impurity of
the Blood.
PURIFY
This valuable compound cures Kidney
and Liver Complaints, Pimples, Erup-
tions of the skin, Boils, Constipation,
Bilioneness, Dyspepsia Sick Stomach,
Loss of Sleep, Neuralgia, Pains in the
Bones and Baok, Loss of Appetite, Lan-
gour, Female Weakness,Dizziness,Gen-
eral Debility.
YOUR
It is a gentle regulating purgative, as
well as a tonin, possessing the peculiar
merit of acting as a powerfuf agent in
relieving Congestion and Chronic In-,
flammation of the Liver and all the
Visceral :Organs.
BLOOD
'This valuable preparation excites
the whole system to a new and vigor-
ous action, giving tone and strength to
the system debilitated by disease, and
affords a great proteotion from attacks
that originate in changes of the seasons,
of climate, and of life.
The:best spring medicine sold.
Full Directions with Each Bottle.
Price 50o. and $1 per Bottls.
Hamilton, Ont.
Sold by J..11. COMBE & F. JORDAN
REFJSE ALL SUBSTITUTES.
THE WONDER OF THE A®E
tO%S%*VflOt cuaF�
TO THE EDITOR:
Please Inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above tlatblit
disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I abort
breglad to send two bottles of my remedy FREE to any of your readers who have con.
semption if they will send me their Express and Post Office Address. Respe
T. A. SLOCUM, M.C., 186 West Adelaide St.. TORONTO. ONTARIO. ,.. "v;,.;1'
The People's Grocery,
Business Chane
The undersigned desires to intimate to his former patrons and £rinds
that he has repurchased his former business, and will continual:
the old stand,
Corner of Albert and Ontario Stree•
ts
He intends to go out of the Crockery and Glassware line entireti4.
balance of which will be sold cheap, and will devote himself exclul• ^
sively to
GROCERIES, Fine Fruits, Confectionary
Of which he will keep ,nothing but first-class goods. The=bnsinc
will be conducted on a strictly cash basis, and prices will be fixed
cordingly. By giving close personal attention to the business'
hopes to merit and receive the same liberal patronage that he enjoys
hitherto.
JOHN CUNINGHAME, - - CLINTON
ctacI
B.
Should be tried by any person needing glass as they are undoubtedly the MO*
superior spectacle manufactured in Canada. The Laurance Patent Test u;iti'.
fitting. For sale only at•
i9.
COOP Li R'S BooKSID ort
• CiLINTCON .
HAYUTARD' ROAD C
OUR ROAD CARTS are admitted to bo' the very best that are
manufactured. They are built on scientific principles, the*ripgi!_
being so adjusted as to lessen to the greatest possible )extent ani`',
vibration or jar. We guarantee them to be satisfactory int, l>lillra--
spects. Prices are as low as they can be placed. Persons
try them are at liberty to hitch on and see how easy they hide. -
Carry either one or two persons. They will be on exhibition at
Hero n Central Fair. In the mean time if you want one call at Pat for
0 they vehicles such as Buggies, Wagons,'Cntter ,
&c. built to order and kept In stock
REPAIRING OF ALL KINDS A SPECIALTY.
HA YWARD'S CARRIAGE FACTO
CJ LI1\1 TON''
A NEW IMPROVED DVS'
P01 HOME DYEING.
Only' atsr required, in tiring.
0 41144 age� Por etie everriitiorc. ft
4 coed dealer:
does and nfeeturerrs,'
• 0O'r'1"1N811*M, fineettridNtti. 64,
Best and Cheapest Row,
Suet. Robs--IRoN rowsprAtiOId.
BUILDERS' IRON WORK
Office Railings, Lawn fatuity*1
AND FOUNTAINS,
Aboarlti
Ito
BBoutsWire & i�
WA4lfttlll%1L4, ONTA'R1O ,
t1A'lt�A1',O 17+ t1ENTT. Oil! NittreettlATtOle; -